enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Kingdom of Sweden (800–1521) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Sweden_(800–1521)

    Scandinavia was formally Christianized by 1100 AD. The period 1050 to 1350—when the Black Death struck Europe—is considered the Older Middle Ages. The Kalmar Union between the Scandinavian countries was established in 1397 and lasted until King Gustav Vasa ended it upon seizing power during the Swedish War of Liberation, which concluded in ...

  3. Monarchy of Sweden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monarchy_of_Sweden

    Scandinavian peoples have had kings since prehistoric times. As early as the 1st century CE, Tacitus wrote that the Suiones had a king, but the order of Swedish regnal succession up until King Eric the Victorious (died 995), is known almost exclusively through accounts in historically controversial Norse sagas (see Mythical kings of Sweden and ...

  4. Kalmar Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalmar_Union

    The Kalmar Union [a] was a personal union in Scandinavia, agreed at Kalmar in Sweden as designed by Queen Margaret of Denmark. From 1397 to 1523, [1] it joined under a single monarch the three kingdoms of Denmark, Sweden (then including much of present-day Finland), and Norway, together with Norway's overseas colonies [b] (then including Iceland, Greenland, [c] the Faroe Islands, and the ...

  5. List of Swedish monarchs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Swedish_monarchs

    The early and then medieval Swedish kingdom was an elective monarchy, with kings being elected from particularly prominent families; [9] this practice did however often result in de facto dynastic succession [10] and the formation of royal dynasties, such as those of Eric (intermittently c. 1157–1250) and Bjelbo (1250–1364) as well as ...

  6. Union between Sweden and Norway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_between_Sweden_and...

    Sweden and Norway or Sweden–Norway (Swedish: Svensk-norska unionen; Norwegian: Den svensk-norske union(en)), officially the United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway, and known as the United Kingdoms, was a personal union of the separate kingdoms of Sweden and Norway under a common monarch and common foreign policy that lasted from 1814 until its peaceful dissolution in 1905.

  7. Politics of Sweden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Politics_of_Sweden

    Sweden is formally a monarchy with a monarch holding symbolic power. Sweden has a typical Western European history of democracy, beginning with the old Viking age Ting electing kings, ending with a hereditary royal power in the 14th century, that in periods became more or less democratic depending on the general European trends.

  8. Swedish royal family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_royal_family

    The Swedish Royal Family (including extended family members) in 1905.. A Swedish royal family, as closely related to a head of state, has been able to be identified as existent from as early as the 10th century A.D., with more precise detail added during the two or three centuries that followed.

  9. Succession to the Swedish throne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Succession_to_the_Swedish...

    The Silver Throne, used by Swedish monarchs since 1650. The line of succession to the Swedish throne is determined by the Act of Succession (Swedish: Successionsordningen), originally approved jointly by the Riksdag of the Estates assembled in Örebro and King Charles XIII in 1810.