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  1. The Treaty of Roskilde [1] was negotiated at Høje Taastrup Church and signed (concluded on 26 February ( OS ), or 8 March 1658) ( NS) [2] during the Second Northern War between Frederick III of Denmark–Norway and Karl X Gustav of Sweden in the Danish city of Roskilde.

  2. Hòa ước Roskilde. Hòa ước Roskilde là hòa ước được ký tại thành phố Roskilde (Đan Mạch) ngày 26.2.1658 theo lịch Julius (8 tháng 3 theo lịch Gregory), giữa một bên là Thụy Điển và bên kia là Đan Mạch, và là hậu quả của Cuộc chiến tranh Thụy Điển - Đan Mạch (1657 - 1658).

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  4. The Treaties of Roskilde of 18 and 22 November 1568 were peace treaties between the kingdoms of Denmark–Norway and the allied Free and Hanseatic City of Lübeck on one side, and the Swedish kingdom on the other side, supposed to end the Northern Seven Years' War after the de facto succession of the later king John III of Sweden.

  5. By the Treaty of Roskilde (1658), Denmark ceded all its holdings in southern Sweden, the county of Trondheim in Norway, and the island of Bornholm. The treaty was seen by the Swedes as a move toward control of The Sound (Öresund), The Sound toll, and trade in…

  6. A treaty between Sweden and Denmark, named after a port in eastern Denmark. After the defeat of Frederick II of Denmark by Charles X of Sweden, this treaty expelled the Danes once and for all from the Swedish mainland: they surrendered Halland, Scania, Blekinge (provinces), and the island of Bornholm, as well as the Norwegian territories of ...

  7. In any case, the Treaty of Roskilde was a landmark in Scandinavian history, and it defined the political #Borders that we know today. You can find all information at the Swedish Riksarkivet and on Archives Portal Europe.

  8. Article History. Treaty of Copenhagen, (1660), treaty between Sweden and Denmark- Norway that concluded a generation of warfare between the two powers. Together with the Treaty of Roskilde, the Copenhagen treaty largely fixed the modern boundaries of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden.

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