Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This list records the monarchs of Sweden, from the late Viking Age to the present day. Sweden has continuously been a monarchy since the country's consolidation in the Viking Age and early Middle Ages, for over a thousand years. [1] The incumbent royal dynasty of Sweden is the House of Bernadotte, established on the throne in 1818.
King of England and Ireland King of Scotland England Scotland Ireland: 1688–1701† France: Chakdor Namgyal: King of Sikkim Sikkim: 1700–1707 Tibet: Charles XII: King of Sweden Sweden: 1709–1714 Ottoman Empire: Vakhtang VI: King of Kartli: Kingdom of Kartli: 1724–1737† Russian Empire: Theodore I: King of Corsica: Kingdom of Corsica ...
This is a list of Swedish governments and rulers, from the end of the Kalmar Union until the breakthrough of parliamentarism. 1521-1523 : Regent Gustaf Eriksson Vasa ( Continued as king ) 1523-1560 : King Gustaf I of Sweden
Sweden Turkey United Kingdom United States; 20 October 2011 Operation Unified Protector: Protests against Gaddafi in Libya began during the Arab Spring and were coordinated by the National Transitional Council, which escalated into civil war following violent repression from the government.
Kingdom of Sweden: King of Sweden: 1405 (deposed 1389) Margaret: Go-Komatsu: Japan: Emperor of Japan: 5 October 1412 Shōkō: Gregory XII Papal States: Pope: 4 July 1415 Martin V: Murad II Ottoman Empire: Ottoman Sultan: August 1444 Mehmed II: Go-Hanazono: Japan: Emperor of Japan: 21 August 1464 Go-Tsuchimikado: Charles I: Norway: King of ...
These are lists of political office-holders in Ireland. Heads of states High Kings of Ireland ... Heads of government. Presidents of the Executive Council (1922–1937)
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland (1171–1922) Governor of Northern Ireland (1922–1972) (Abolished under the Northern Ireland Constitution Act 1973) Prime Minister of Northern Ireland (1922–1972) Secretaries of state for Northern Ireland (1972– 1998, 2002–2007) First Minister and Deputy First Minister [1998–2002, 2007–present]
With its own burghers in charge, Sweden's economic strength grew rapidly, and by 1544 Gustav controlled 60% of the farmlands in all of Sweden. Sweden now built the first modern army in Europe, supported by a sophisticated tax system and an efficient bureaucracy. [16] At the death of King Gustav I in 1560, he was succeeded by his oldest son Eric ...