KALMAR UNION
Five heads of state - the Danish Queen with Prince
Henrik, the Swedish and Norwegian royal couples and the Finnish and Icelandic
presidents with their wives, joined 20 000 Swedes and 200 journalists
to celebrate the 600th anniversary of the Kalmar Union.
At one time Kalmar, in the south of Sweden, was the
capital of the largest state in Europe. This state was composed of Denmark,
Norway and Iceland and Sweden and Finland. And it was all thanks to a
strong woman called Margrethe. She became regent of Norway, Sweden and
Denmark through extraordinary manipulation amid most unusual circumstances.
She came to be widely respected, often admired, but not much loved. Although
she was a woman of royal parentage, she was never to rule from a throne
simply because she was a woman. And it was ironically only when the present
Queen of Denmark, Margrethe decided to be known as Margrethe II that the
first Margrethe of the 14th century was elevated to royal status posthumously.
Margrethe embarked on her remarkable, nearly incredible,
rise to power at the tender age of six. A treaty between her father King
Valdemar Atterdag of Denmark and Magnus Erikson, the King of Sweden, pledged
her to Magnus's 18-year-old son Haakon who had inherited the throne of
Norway through his mother, the granddaughter of Haakon V. Margrethe and
Haakon did not live together as man and wife until she reached the age
of 16. In 1371 Margrethe gave birth to her only son, Oluf.
King Valdemar died in 1375 the following year leaving
Margrethe as his only surviving child. She was successful in having her
son Oluf proclaimed King of Denmark with herself as regent. Five years
later, when Haakon died, Oluf was recognized as both king of Norway and
of Denmark while Margrethe became regent of Norway also.
Soon thereafter, Margrethe was called in by the Swedish
nobility to help it topple the hated King Albrekt of Mecklenburg. She
was able to establish Oluf as the legitimate claimant to the Swedish throne.
Now Margrethe became regent to all three countries.
The sudden death of the 17-year-old Oluf in 1387 undid
the stability Margrethe had managed to achieve. But she acted quickly
to secure her position as royal guardian. She also quickly adopted the
six-year-old son of her niece who was married to the Duke of Pomerania
and chose him, Erik, as her successor. After being declared the regent
of the Danish and Norwegian kingdoms, she formed common cause with the
Swedish nobles and having had the distinct advantage of having consistently
demonstrated outstanding qualities of royal administration and integrity,
she did not have too much problem in being hailed as the rightful ruler
of Sweden. Now „he commanded all of northern Europe.
Margrethe went on to propose a coronation ceremony for
Erik. She called a special meeting of the powerful nobles, the clergy
and magnates of Sweden and got their consent. In June of 1397, the Archbishops
of Lund and Uppsala crowned Erik King of Denmark, Norway and Sweden in
the town of Kalmar. Why Kalmar? It is important to remember that the borders
looked somewhat different from what they do today and the Swedish provinces
of Skåne, Blekinge and Halland belonged to Denmark. Kalmar was actually
very close to Denmark being on the southern coast of Sweden.
After Erik's crowning ceremony, Margrethe proceeded
to negotiate a "union document". The document declared that
Erik, having been elected King of Denmark, Norway and Sweden had further
been elected King of the one consolidated combined Kingdom of Norway-Sweden-Denmark.
And it is the 600th anniversary of this Union that is
being celebrated this year. This was a truly Nordic union as Iceland and
Finland were also included.
Margrethe died of the plague aboard a ship in Flensborg
Fjord in 1412 at the age of 59. She now lies in the Roskilde Cathedral
as the symbol that united the three kingdoms for over one hundred and
twenty-five years.
The Union experienced its heyday during the fast half
of the 15th century under the rule of Erik of Pomerania. However the peaceful
period did not last too long. It was disturbed mostly by the Swedish nobility
that felt that Denmark was too domineering. The bickering from Sweden
did not sit well with King Kristian I of Denmark who retaliated by sending
a fleet of ships to Stockholm. But he experienced defeat here and the
union was somewhat eroded. Some new life was blown into the union by another
group of Swedes but it came to a final end with the advent of Gustav Vasa
who declared himself king of Sweden in 1523.
Today petty squabbling still goes on between the five
countries. The latest squabble actually involves Margrethe. The Danish
Minister of Culture Ebbe Lundgaard wants Swedes to hand back some war
bounty. One of the items is a dress dating back to the 14th century belonging
to Margrethe that was stolen by Sweden before the peace treaty in Roskilde
and that has been kept in the Uppsala Cathedral since. The dress is actually
right now in Denmark for the National Museum's exhibition about the Kalmar
Union. And the Danes like it so much they want it back.
Issue 3, 1997 Scandinavian Press