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Haakon IV

Haakon IV Haakonsson (c. March/April 1204 – 16 December 1263; Old Norse: Hákon Hákonarson [ˈhɑːˌkon ˈhɑːˌkonɑrˌson]; Norwegian: Håkon Håkonsson), sometimes called Haakon the Old in contrast to his namesake son, was King of Norway from 1217 to 1263. His reign lasted for 46 years, longer than any Norwegian king since Harald Fairhair.[2] Haakon was born into the troubled civil war era in Norway, but his reign eventually managed to put an end to the internal conflicts. At the start of his reign, during his minority, Earl Skule Bårdsson served as regent. As a king of the Birkebeiner faction, Haakon defeated the uprising of the final Bagler royal pretender, Sigurd Ribbung, in 1227. He put a definitive end to the civil war era when he had Skule Bårdsson killed in 1240, a year after he had himself proclaimed king in opposition to Haakon. Haakon thereafter formally appointed his own son as his co-regent.

Haakon IV
Haakon's seal, from a 1247/48 letter (with reverse). The seal itself was given to Haakon as a gift from Henry III of England in 1236.[1]
King of Norway
ReignJune 1217 – 16 December 1263
Coronation29 July 1247 (Bergen)
PredecessorInge II
SuccessorMagnus VI
Junior kings
Bornc. March/April 1204
Folkenborg, Norway
Died16 December 1263(1263-12-16) (aged 59)
Kirkwall, Orkney, Norway
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1225)
Issue
among others...
HouseSverre
FatherHaakon III of Norway
MotherInga of Varteig

Under Haakon's rule, medieval Norway is considered to have reached its zenith or golden age. His reputation and formidable naval fleet allowed him to maintain friendships with both the pope and the Holy Roman Emperor, despite their conflict. He was at different points offered the imperial crown by the pope, the High Kingship of Ireland by a delegation of Irish kings, and the command of the French crusader fleet by the French king. He amplified the influence of European culture in Norway by importing and translating contemporary European literature into Old Norse, and by constructing monumental European-style stone buildings. In conjunction with this he employed an active and aggressive foreign policy, and at the end of his rule added Iceland and the Norse Greenland community to his kingdom, leaving the Norwegian realm at its territorial height. Although he for the moment managed to secure Norwegian control of the islands off the northern and western shores of Scotland, plus the Isle of Man, he fell ill and died when wintering in Orkney following some military engagements with the expanding Kingdom of Scotland.

Historical sources edit

The main source of information concerning Haakon is the Saga of Haakon Haakonsson, which was written in the years immediately following his death. Commissioned by his son Magnus, it was written by the Icelandic writer and politician Sturla Þórðarson (nephew of the famous historian Snorri Sturluson).[3] Having come into conflict with the royal representative in Iceland, Sturla came to Norway in 1263 in an attempt to reconcile with Haakon. When he arrived, he learned that Haakon was in Scotland, and that Magnus ruled Norway in his place. While Magnus initially took an unfriendly attitude towards Sturla, his talents as a story-teller and skald eventually won him the favour of Magnus and his men.[4] The saga is considered the most detailed and reliable of all sagas concerning Norwegian kings, building on both written archive material and oral information from individuals who had been close to Haakon. It is nonetheless written openly in support of the political program of the House of Sverre, and the legitimacy of Haakon's kingship.[5]

Background and childhood edit

Haakon was born in Folkenborg (now in Eidsberg) to Inga of Varteig in the summer of 1204, probably in March or April.[2] The father was widely regarded to have been King Haakon Sverresson, as Inga had been with Haakon in his hostel in Borg (now Sarpsborg) in late 1203. Haakon Sverresson was the leader of the Birkebeiner faction in the ongoing civil war against the Bagler faction. Haakon Sverresson was dead by the time his son Haakon was born (many believed to have been poisoned by his Swedish stepmother Margaret), but Inga's claim was supported by several of Haakon Sverresson's followers. Haakon was born in Bagler-controlled territory, and his mother's claim placed them in a dangerous position. When the Baglers started hunting Haakon, a group of Birkebeiners fled with the child in the winter of 1205/06, heading for King Inge Bårdson, the new Birkebeiner king in Nidaros (now Trondheim). As the party was struck by a blizzard, two of the best Birkebeiner skiers, Torstein Skevla and Skjervald Skrukka, carried on with the child over the mountain from Lillehammer to Østerdalen. They eventually managed to bring Haakon to safety with King Inge; this particular event is commemorated in modern-day Norway by the popular annual skiing event Birkebeinerrennet.[2][6] Haakon's dramatic childhood was often parallelled with that of former king Olaf Tryggvasson (who introduced Christianity to Norway),[7] as well as with the gospels and Child Jesus, which served an important ideological function for his kingship.[2]

In the saga, Haakon is described as bright and witty, and as being small for his age.[6][7] When he was three years old, Haakon was captured by the Baglers but refused to call the Bagler king Philip Simonsson his lord (he nonetheless came from the capture unharmed). When he learned at the age of eight that the Birkebeiner King Inge Bårdsson and his brother Earl Haakon the Crazy had made an agreement for the succession to the throne that excluded himself, he pointed out that the agreement was invalid due to his attorney not having been present. He subsequently identified his attorney as "God and Saint Olaf."[7] Haakon was notably the first Norwegian king to receive formal education at a school. From the late civil war era, the government administration relied increasingly on written communication, which in turn demanded literate leaders. When Haakon was in Bergen under the care of Haakon the Crazy, he began his education at the age of seven, likely at the Bergen Cathedral School. He continued his education under King Inge at the Trondheim Cathedral School after the Earl's death in 1214.[6][8] Haakon was brought up alongside Inge's son Guttorm, and they were treated as the same.[9] When he was eleven, some of Haakon's friends provoked the king by asking him to give Haakon a region to govern. When Haakon was approached by the men and was urged to take up arms against Inge, he rejected it in part because of his young age and its bad prospects, as well as because he believed it would be morally wrong to fight Inge and thus split the Birkebeiner. He instead said that he prayed that God would give him his share of his father's inheritance when the time was right.[10]

Reign edit

Succession struggle edit

After King Inge's death in 1217, a succession dispute erupted. Haakon was supported by the majority of Birkebeiners, including the veterans who had served under his father and grandfather. Other candidates included Inge's illegitimate son Guttorm (who dropped out very soon); Inge's half-brother Earl Skule Bårdsson, who had been appointed leader of the king's hird at Inge's deathbed and was supported by the Archbishop of Nidaros as well as part of the Birkebeiners; and Haakon the Crazy's son, Knut Haakonsson.[5][11][12] With his widespread popular support in Trøndelag and western Norway, Haakon was proclaimed king at Øyrating in June 1217. He was later the same year hailed as king at Gulating in Bergen, and at Haugating, Borgarting and local things east of Elven (Göta Älv).[5] While Skule's supporters initially had attempted to cast doubt about Haakon's royal ancestry, they eventually suspended open resistance to his candidacy. As the dispute could have divided the Birkebeiners, Skule settled on becoming regent for Haakon during his minority.[5]

 
 
Two coins (bracteates) from Haakon's reign. While a few of his coins included the inscription "REX HACV" (when with Earl Skule "REX ET COMES"), most only contained images of animals, a crowned head, a crown, a castle, or single letters.[13]

In connection with the dispute over the royal election, Haakon's mother Inga had to prove his parentage through a trial by ordeal in Bergen in 1218.[6] The result of the trial strengthened the legal basis for his kingship, and improved his relationship with the Church.[14] The saga's claim that Haakon already had been generally accepted as king in 1217/18 has however been contested by modern historians such as Sverre Bagge.[15] Skule and Haakon increasingly drifted apart in their administration, and Skule focused mainly on governing Eastern Norway after 1220, which he had gained the right to rule in 1218 as his third of the Norwegian kingdom.[6] From 1221 to 1223, Haakon and Skule separately issued letters as rulers of Norway, and maintained official contacts abroad.[16] In 1223 a great meeting of bishops, clergy, secular nobles, and other high-ranking figures from all across the country was held in Bergen to decide finally on Haakon's right to the throne. Other candidates to the throne were present either personally or through attorneys, but Haakon was in the end unanimously confirmed as King of Norway by the court.[14]

The last Bagler king Philip Simonsson died in 1217. Speedy political and military manoeuvering by Skule led to a reconciliation between the Birkebeiners and Baglers, and thus the reunification of the kingdom.[17] However, some discontented Baglers found a new royal pretender, Sigurd Ribbung, and launched a new rising from 1219. The rising only gained support in parts of Eastern Norway, and was did not gain control of Viken and Opplandene as the Baglers formerly had done.[18] In the summer of 1223, Skule forced the Ribbungar to surrender. However, The great meeting in Bergen soon after renewed the division of the Norwegian kingdom, with Skule gaining control of the northern third of the country instead of the east, in what marked a setback despite his military victory. In 1224, Sigurd escaped from Skule's custody, and Haakon was left to fight him alone as the new ruler of Eastern Norway. Skule remained passive throughout the rest of the war, and his support for Haakon was lukewarm at best.[19] Assuming the military lead in the fight, Haakon nevertheless defeated Ribbung through comprehensive and organisationally demanding warfare over the next few years.[18] As part of the campaign, Haakon additionally led a large army into the Värmland district of Sweden in 1225, to punish the inhabitants for their support of Sigurd. Sigurd died in 1226, and the revolt was finally quashed in 1227 with the surrender of its last leader, Haakon the Crazy's son Knut Haakonsson.[20] This left Haakon more or less uncontested monarch.[18]

 
Haakon and Skule Bårdsson, from the 14th century Icelandic Flateyjarbók.

Haakon's councillors had sought to reconcile Haakon and Skule by proposing marriage between Haakon and Skule's daughter Margaret in 1219. Haakon accepted the proposal (although he did not think it would change much politically), but the marriage between Haakon and Margrete did not take place before 1225, partly due to the conflict with Sigurd.[19] The relationship between Haakon and Skule nevertheless deteriorated further during the 1230s, and attempted settlements at meetings in 1233 and 1236 only distanced them more from each other.[21] Periodically, the two nonetheless reconciled and spent a great amount of time together, only to have their friendship destroyed - according to the saga, by intrigues derived from rumours and slander by men who played the two against each other.[22] Skule was the first person ever in Norway to be titled duke (hertug) in 1237, but instead of control over a region, gained the rights to the incomes from a third of the syssels scattered across the whole of Norway. This was part of an attempt by Haakon to limit Skule's power. In 1239 the conflict between the two erupted into open warfare when Skule had himself proclaimed king. Although he had some support in Trøndelag, Opplandene, and eastern Viken, he could not stand up to Haakon's forces.[21] The rebellion ended when Skule was killed in 1240, leaving Haakon the undisputed king of Norway.[6] This revolt is generally taken to mark the final end of Norway's civil war era.[18]

Recognition by the Pope edit

 
 
Coats of arms accorded to Haakon by Matthew Paris.[23]

While the Church in Norway initially had refused to recognise Haakon as King of Norway, it had largely turned to support his claim to the throne by the 1223 meeting, although later disagreements occurred.[24] Despite being the undisputed ruler of Norway after 1240, Haakon was still not approved as king by the pope due to his illegitimate birth. He nonetheless had a strong personal desire to be approved fully as a European king.[6] Several papal commissions were appointed to investigate the matter, and Haakon declared his legitimate son Haakon the Young his successor instead of an older living illegitimate son.[21] Although Haakon had children with his mistress Kanga the Young prior to his marriage with Margrete, it was his children with Margrete who were designated as his successors in accordance with a papal recognition. The Catholic principle of legitimacy was thus established in the Norwegian order of succession, although Haakon's new law still maintained that illegitimate children could be designated as successor in the absence of any legitimate children or grandchildren—contrary to Catholic principles. While his strong position allowed him to set boundaries to the Church's political influence, he was on the other hand prepared to give the Church much autonomy in internal affairs and relations with the rural society.[6][25]

Haakon also attempted to strengthen his ties with the papacy by taking a vow to go on Crusade.[6] In 1241 he converted this into a vow of waging war against pagan peoples in the north in light of the Mongol invasion of Europe. When a group of Karelians ("Bjarmians") had been forced westwards by the Mongols, Haakon allowed them to stay in Malangen and had them Christianized—something that would please the papacy.[26] Later, in 1248, Louis IX of France proposed (by Matthew Paris as messenger) to Haakon to join him for a Crusade, with Haakon as commander of the fleet, but Haakon declined.[27] While Haakon had been unsuccessful in gaining the recognition of Pope Gregory IX, he quickly gained the support from Pope Innocent IV who sought alliances in his struggle with Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II. Haakon finally achieved royal recognition by Pope Innocent in 1246, and Cardinal William of Sabina was sent to Bergen and crowned Haakon in 1247.[28]

Cultural influence and legal reforms edit

 
Haakon's Hall in Bergen, constructed in the mid-13th century.

After consolidating his position in 1240, Haakon focused on displaying the supremacy of the kingship, influenced by the increasingly closer contact with European culture. He built several monumental royal buildings, primarily in the royal estate in Bergen, where he built a European-style stone palace. He used a grand fleet with stately royal ships when meeting with other Scandinavian rulers, and actively sent letters and gifts to other European rulers; his most far-reaching contact was achieved when he sent gyrfalcons with an embassy to the sultan of Tunis.[6]

The royal court in Bergen also started importing and translating the first true European literature that became available to a wider Norwegian audience. The literature which was popular then was heroic-romantic literature derived from the French and, in turn, English courts, notably chansons de geste around Charlemagne (the Matter of France) and tales of King Arthur (the Matter of Britain). The first work that was translated into Old Norse was reportedly the Arthurian romantic story Tristan and Iseult, which was finished in 1226 after orders from the young and newly-wed Haakon. Haakon's programme seems to have been the spark for the emergence of a new Norse genre of chivalric sagas.[29]

Haakon also had the popular religious text Visio Tnugdali translated into Old Norse as Duggals leiðsla. The literature also appealed to women, and both Haakon's wife Margrete and his daughter Kristina owned richly illustrated psalters.[29]

Haakon also initiated legal reforms which were crucial for the development of justice in Norway. Haakon's "New Law", written around 1260, was a breakthrough for both the idea and practice of public justice, as opposed to the traditional Norwegian customs of feuds and revenge. The influence of the reforms is also apparent in Haakon's Konungs skuggsjá ("King's Mirror"), an educational text intended for his son Magnus, which was probably written in cooperation with the royal court in the mid-1250s.[30]

Involvements abroad edit

Relations were hostile with both Sweden and Denmark from the start of his reign. During Haakon's rivalry with Earl Skule, Skule sought the support of Valdemar II of Denmark, but any aid was made impossible after Valdemar's capture by one of his vassals. Since the Danes wanted overlordship of Norway and supported the Guelphs (those supporting the Pope over the Holy Roman Emperor), Haakon in turn sought closer ties with the Ghibelline Emperor Frederick II, who sent ambassadors to Norway. As Haakon had gained a powerful reputation due to the strength of his fleet, other European rulers wanted to benefit from his friendship. Despite the struggle between the Pope and the Emperor, Haakon was able to maintain friendships with both. According to an English chronicler, the Pope wanted Haakon to become Holy Roman Emperor.[31] It has been suggested that Haakon hesitated to leave Norway due to the Mongol threat.[32]

Haakon pursued a foreign policy that was active in all directions (although foremost to the west and south-east).[33] In the north-east, the relationship with Novgorod had been tense due to a dispute over the right to tax the Sami people, as well as raiding from both Norwegian and Karelian sides. Eventually, the Mongol invasion of Rus' drove Prince Alexander Nevsky to negotiations with Haakon that likely strengthened Norwegian control of Troms and Finnmark.[26] An embassy from Novgorod one time asked for the hand of Haakon's daughter Christina, but Haakon refused due to the Mongol threat.[34] With Norwegian ships from the port of Elven were active in the waters south of Sweden and into the Baltic Sea, Norway increasingly relied on Baltic grain from Lübeck. This trade was halted in the late 1240s by the plundering of Norwegian ships in Danish seas by ships from Lübeck. In 1250, Haakon made a peace and trade agreement with Lübeck, which eventually also opened the city of Bergen to the Hanseatic League.[6][33] During the conflict, Haakon had reportedly been offered control over the city by Emperor Frederick II.[26] In any case, Haakon's policy regarding Northern German ports largely derived from his strategy of attempting to exploit the internal turmoil in Denmark after the death of King Valdemar II in 1241.[33]

In Scandinavia, Haakon regularly met with neighbouring rulers in the border-area around Elven from the late 1240s through the 1250s. He sent grand fleets as embassies; some reportedly numbered over 300 ships.[33] Haakon also reconciled with the Swedes when he his son Haakon the Young married Rikissa, a daughter of Swedish leader Earl Birger.[35] Haakon sought to expand his kingdom southwards of Elven into the Danish province of Halland. He thus looked for alliance with the Swedes, as well as ties with opponents of the ruling line of monarchs of Denmark. In 1249, Haakon allied with Earl Birger for a joint Swedish-Norwegian invasion into Halland and Scania, but the agreement was eventually abandoned by the Swedes (see Treaty of Lödöse). Haakon claimed Halland in 1253, and finally invaded the province on his own in 1256, demanding it as compensation for the looting of Norwegian ships in Danish seas. But he was forced to renounce this claim in a 1257 peace agreement with Christopher I of Denmark. Haakon thereafter negotiated a marriage between his only remaining son, Magnus, and Christopher's niece Ingeborg.[36] Haakon's Nordic policies initiated the build-up to the later personal unions (called the Kalmar Union), that in the end had dire consequences for Norway as it did not have the economic and military resources to persevere and maintain Haakon's aggressive policies.[6]

More distantly, Haakon sought an alliance with Alfonso X of Castile (a potential next Holy Roman emperor) chiefly as it would guarantee new supplies of grain to Castile in light of rising prices in England, and possibly giving access to Baltic grain through Norwegian control of Lübeck. Alfonso in turn sought to expand his influence in Northern Europe, as well as to gain Norwegian naval assistance for the campaign or crusade he had proposed in Morocco[37][38] (seeing that the Iberian Moors received backing overseas from North Africa).[26] Haakon could thus potentially also fulfill his papal vow of crusade, although he likely did not intend to.[37] He sent an embassy to Castile in 1255. A Castilian ambassador to Norway returned with the embassy, and proposed to establish the "strongest ties of friendship" with Haakon.[39] At the request of Alfonso, Haakon sent his daughter Christina to Castile to marry one of Alfonso's brothers. However, Christina died four years later without children, which marked the effective end of the short-lived alliance,[37][39] and the proposed crusade fell into the blue.[27]

The Scottish expedition and death edit

 
Medieval Norway at its greatest extent, around the time of Haakon's death.

Haakon employed an active and aggressive foreign policy to strengthen Norwegian ties in the west.[40] His policy relied on friendship and trade with the King of England; the first known Norwegian trade agreements were made with England in the years 1217–23 (England's first commercial treaties were also made with Norway), and the friendship with Henry III of England was a cornerstone of Haakon's foreign policy.[41][42] As they had become kings around the same time, Haakon wrote to Henry in 1224 that he wished they could maintain the friendship that had existed between their fathers.[43] Haakon sought to defend the Norwegian sovereignty over islands in the west, namely the Hebrides and Man (under the Kingdom of Mann and the Isles), Shetland and Orkney (under the Earldom of Orkney), and the Faroe Islands.[6] Further, the Norse community in Greenland agreed to submit to the Norwegian crown in 1261, and in 1262 Haakon achieved one of his long-standing ambitions when he incorporated Iceland into his kingdom by exploiting the island's internal conflicts in his favour. The dependency on Norwegian maritime trade and their subordination to the Nidaros ecclesiastical province were some of the key reasons which allowed Haakon to assert sovereignty over the islands.[44] The Norwegian kingdom was at the largest it has ever been by the end of Haakon's reign.[6]

Norwegian control over the Faroe Islands and Shetland was strong due to the importance of Bergen as a trading centre, while Orkney, the Hebrides, and Man had more natural ties with the Scottish mainland. Although traditionally having had ties with the community of Norse settlers in northern Scotland, Scottish rulers had increasingly asserted their sovereignty over the entire mainland.[45] Haakon had at the same time gained stronger control of the Hebrides and Man than any Norwegian ruler since Magnus Barefoot.[46] As part of a new development the Scottish king Alexander II claimed the Hebrides and asked to buy the islands from Norway, but Haakon staunchly rejected the proposals. Following Alexander II's death, his son Alexander III continued and stepped up his father's policy by sending an embassy to Norway in 1261, and thereafter attacking the Hebrides.[47]

In 1263, the dispute with the Scottish king over the Hebrides induced Haakon to undertake an expedition to the islands. Haakon learned in 1262 that Scottish nobles had raided the Hebrides and that Alexander III planned to conquer the islands. In 1263 Haakon mounted an expedition with his formidable leidang fleet of at least 120 ships.[46] He had become accustomed to negotiating while backed by an intimidating fleet.[33] The fleet left Bergen in July, and reached Shetland and Orkney in August, where they were joined by chieftains from the Hebrides and Man. Alexander started negotiations after Norwegian landings on the Scottish mainland, but the Scots purposely prolonged the talks.[46] The Scots waited until September and October for weather that would be trouble for Haakon's fleet. A Scottish force met a smaller Norwegian force at the Battle of Largs (2 October). Although the battle was inconclusive, Haakon withdrew to Orkney for the winter.[46][48] A delegation of Irish kings invited Haakon to become the High King of Ireland and expel the Anglo-Norman settlers in Ireland, but this was apparently rejected against Haakon's wish.[49][50][51]

Haakon over-wintered at the Bishop's Palace in Kirkwall, Orkney, with plans to resume his campaign the next year.[52] During his stay in Kirkwall he however fell ill, and died in the early hours of 16 December 1263.[53][54] Haakon was buried in the St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall for the winter; in spring, his body was exhumed and taken back to Norway,[52] where he was buried in the Old Cathedral in his capital Bergen.[6] Centuries later, in 1531, the cathedral was demolished by the commander of Bergenhus, Eske Bille, for military purposes[55][56] in connection with the Protestant Reformation, and the graves of Haakon and other Norwegian kings buried there might have been destroyed in the process or moved to another location.[6][57]

Evaluation edit

Norwegian historians have held differing views on Haakon's reign. In the 19th century, P. A. Munch portrayed Haakon as a mighty, almost flawless ruler, which in turn influenced Henrik Ibsen in his 1863 play The Pretenders. In the early 20th century, poet Hans E. Kinck countered and viewed Haakon as an insignificant king subordinated to forces outside of his control, a view which influenced historians such as Halvdan Koht and Edvard Bull, Sr.[6][58] Haakon has often been compared with Skule Bårdsson, and historians have taken sides in the old conflict. While Munch saw Skule as a traitor to the rightful Norwegian king, Koht viewed Skule as a heroic figure. On more sketchy grounds, Kinck praised Skule as representing the original and dying Norse culture, and Haakon as a superficial emulator of foreign culture.[58] Since the 1960s, historians including Narve Bjørgo, Per Sveaas Andersen, Knut Helle, Svein Haga, and Kåre Lunden have in turn professed a reaction against Koht's view. According to Sverre Bagge, modern historians tend to follow Koht when it comes to see Skule's rebellion as a last desperate attempt to stop Haakon from encroaching on Skule's power, but lean closer to Munch's overall evaluation of the two men.[59]

Knut Helle interprets the saga to leave an impression of Skule as a skilled warrior and politician, while noting that the author of the saga purposely created a diffuse image of his role in the conflict with Haakon. On the other hand, Helle notes that Skule was outmaneuvered with relative ease by Haakon's supporters in the years immediately after 1217, and that this may suggest some limited abilities. While neither giving a clear picture of Haakon, Helle maintains that Haakon "obviously" learned to master the political game in his early years. He interprets Haakon as an independent and strong-willed ruler to whom he assigns a "significant personal responsibility" for the policies pursued during his reign: notably regarding the internal consolidation of the kingship, the orientation towards European culture and the aggressive foreign policy.[58] In his article in Norsk biografisk leksikon, Knut Helle acknowledges that Haakon was empowered by the strong institutional position of the kingship at the end of his reign (which he had developed himself), and that his policies were not always successful. Helle nonetheless recognises the substantial political abilities and powerful determination Haakon must have had in order to progress from the difficult position in which he started his reign.[6]

Children and marriage edit

 
Haakon, Margreta and Haakon the Young, as seen in a psalter owned by Margrete.

Haakon had three illegitimate children with his mistress Kanga the Younger av Folkindberg (who is only known by name) (1198–1225), before 1225.[6] They were:[60]

  • Sigurd (died 1252).[60]
  • Cecilia (died 1248). Married lendmann Gregorius Andresson, a nephew of the last Bagler king Philip Simonsson in 1241. Widowed in 1246, she married Harald Olafsson, King of Mann and the Isles in 1248. They both drowned the same year on the return voyage to Great Britain.[35]
  • Kone (c. 1225 -), married Toralde Gunnarsson Hvite, until Gulsvik (Buskerud, c. 1220 – Gulsvik, Flå, Buskerud, d. 1260), mentioned on a 1258 document, and had issue.

Haakon married Margrete Skulesdatter on 25 May 1225, daughter of his rival Earl Skule Bårdsson.[6] Their children were:[60]

  1. Olav (born 1226). Died in infancy.[60]
  2. Haakon the Young (1232–1257). Married Rikissa Birgersdotter, daughter of the Swedish statesman Earl Birger in 1251. Appointed king and co-ruler by his father in 1240, but predeceased his father.[61]
  3. Christina (1234–1262). Married Infante Philip of Castile, brother of Alfonso X of Castile in 1258. Died childless.[62]
  4. Magnus VI of Norway (1238–1280). Married Ingeborg, daughter of Eric IV of Denmark in 1261. Appointed king and co-ruler after the death of Haakon the Young. Succeeded his father as King of Norway.

Popular culture edit

 
19th-century impression of the birkebeiner bringing the infant Haakon to safety (Knud Bergslien).

Håkon and Kristin were the mascots of the 1994 Winter Olympics. Håkon is named after Haakon IV of Norway and Kristin after Christina of Norway.[63]

In The Last King (2016), the infant Håkon IV is portrayed by Jonathan Oskar Dahlgren.

References edit

  1. ^ Helle, 1995, p. 183.
  2. ^ a b c d Guhnfeldt, Cato (19 October 2011). "Da birkebeinerne skapte historie". Aftenposten (in Norwegian). Retrieved 11 April 2012.
  3. ^ Helle, 1995, p. 74.
  4. ^ Bagge, 1996, p. 91.
  5. ^ a b c d Helle, 1995, p. 75.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t "Haakon 4 Haakonsson". Norsk biografisk leksikon (in Norwegian). Store norske leksikon. Retrieved 1 April 2012.
  7. ^ a b c Bagge, 1996, p. 95.
  8. ^ Helle, 1995, pp. 169–170.
  9. ^ Bagge, 1996, pp. 95–96.
  10. ^ Bagge, 1996, p. 96.
  11. ^ Keyser, 1870, p. 184.
  12. ^ Bagge, 1996, pp. 96–97.
  13. ^ "Issuing Authorities: Håkon Håkonsson's coinage". University of Oslo's Coin Cabinet exhibition. University of Oslo. 1995. Retrieved 22 April 2012.
  14. ^ a b Helle, 1995, p. 76.
  15. ^ Bagge, 1996, pp. 98–102.
  16. ^ Bagge, 1996, p. 99.
  17. ^ Helle, 1995, pp. 75–76.
  18. ^ a b c d Helle, 1995, p. 77.
  19. ^ a b Bagge, 1996, pp. 108–109.
  20. ^ Bagge, 1996, pp. 129–130.
  21. ^ a b c Helle, 1995, p. 180.
  22. ^ Bagge, 1996, pp. 110–111.
  23. ^ Lewis, 1987, pp. 456, 467.
  24. ^ Bagge, 1996, pp. 119–120.
  25. ^ Helle, 1995, pp. 181–183.
  26. ^ a b c d Helle, 1995, p. 198.
  27. ^ a b Helle, 1995, p. 199.
  28. ^ Helle, 1995, pp. 180–181.
  29. ^ a b Helle, 1995, pp. 171–172.
  30. ^ Bagge, 1996, pp. 149–150.
  31. ^ Per G. Norseng: Håkon 4 Håkonsson (in Norwegian) Store Norske Leksikon, retrieved 18 March 2013
  32. ^ Orfield & Boyer, 2002, pp. 137–138.
  33. ^ a b c d e Helle, 1995, p. 197.
  34. ^ Bagge, 1996, pp. 121–122.
  35. ^ a b Orfield & Boyer, 2002, p. 138.
  36. ^ Helle, 1995, pp. 197–198.
  37. ^ a b c O'Callaghan, 2011, p. 17.
  38. ^ O'Callaghan, 1993, p. 202.
  39. ^ a b O'Callaghan, 1993, p. 203.
  40. ^ Helle, 1995, p. 194.
  41. ^ Helle, 1995, pp. 194–195.
  42. ^ Orfield & Boyer, 2002, p. 137.
  43. ^ "Diplomatarium Norvegicum XIX". Dokumentasjonsprosjektet (in Norwegian). University of Oslo. p. 117. Retrieved 12 April 2012.
  44. ^ Helle, 1995, pp. 195–196.
  45. ^ Derry, 2000, p. 48.
  46. ^ a b c d Helle, 1995, p. 196.
  47. ^ Bagge, 1996, p. 126.
  48. ^ Derry, 2000, p. 49.
  49. ^ Barrow, 1981 p. 118.
  50. ^ Lydon, 1998, p. 78.
  51. ^ Fry & Fry, 1991, p. 85.
  52. ^ a b Forte, Oram, & Pedersen, 2005, p. 262.
  53. ^ Helle, 1995, p. 173.
  54. ^ Barrow, 1981 p. 119.
  55. ^ "Eske Bille" (in Norwegian). Store norske leksikon. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  56. ^ "Tord Roed". Norsk biografisk leksikon (in Norwegian). Store norske leksikon. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  57. ^ Guhnfeldt, Cato (19 October 2011). "En norsk kongegrav". Aftenposten (in Norwegian). Retrieved 12 April 2012.
  58. ^ a b c Helle, 1995, p. 181.
  59. ^ Bagge, 1996, pp. 111–112.
  60. ^ a b c d Keyser, 1870, p. 230.
  61. ^ Line, 2007, p. 589.
  62. ^ "Kristin Håkonsdatter". Norsk biografisk leksikon (in Norwegian). Store norske leksikon. Retrieved 12 April 2012.
  63. ^ Les mascottes des Jeux Olympiques d’hiver d’Innsbruck 1976 à Sotchi 2014 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Olympic.org (in French)

Bibliography edit

  • Bagge, Sverre (1996). From Gang Leader to the Lord's Anointed: Kingship in Sverris saga and Hakonar saga Hakonarsonar. The Viking Collection: Studies in Northern civilization. Vol. 8. Odense University. ISBN 8778381088. ISSN 0108-8408.
  • Barrow, G. W. S. (1981). Kingship and Unity: Scotland 1000-1306. Edinburgh University. ISBN 9780748601042.
  • Derry, T. K. (2000). A history of Scandinavia: Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, and Iceland. University of Minnesota. ISBN 9780816637997.
  • Forte, Angelo; Oram, Richard D.; Pedersen, Frederik (2005). Viking Empires. Cambridge University. ISBN 9780521829922.
  • Fry, Plantagenet Somerset; Fry, Fiona Somerset (1991). A History of Ireland. Routledge. ISBN 9780415048880.
  • Helle, Knut (1995). Under kirke og kongemakt: 1130-1350 [Under church and royal power: 1130-1350]. Aschehougs Norgeshistorie (in Norwegian). Vol. 3. Aschehoug. ISBN 8203220312.
  • Keyser, Rudolf (1870). Norges historie. Vol. 2. Christiania (Oslo): P. T. Malling.
  • Lewis, Suzanne (1987). The art of Matthew Paris in the Chronica majora. University of California. ISBN 9780520049819.
  • Lydon, James F. (1998). The Making of Ireland: From Ancient Times to the Present. Routledge. ISBN 9780415013482.
  • Line, Philip (2007). Kingship and state formation in Sweden, 1130-1290. BRILL. ISBN 9789004155787.
  • O'Callaghan, Joseph F. (1993). "The Norwegian Alliance". The Learned King: The Reign of Alfonso X of Castile. University of Pennsylvania. pp. 202–204.
  • O'Callaghan, Joseph F. (2011). The Gibraltar Crusade: Castile and the Battle for the Strait. University of Pennsylvania. ISBN 9780812243024.
  • Orfield, Lester B.; Boyer, Benjamin F. (2002) [First published 1953]. The Growth of Scandinavian Law. The Lawbook Exchange. ISBN 9781584771807.

External links edit

  • The Norwegian account of Haco's expedition against Scotland, A.D. MCCLXIII at Project Gutenberg
  • "Haakon" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.
Haakon Haakonsson
Cadet branch of the Fairhair dynasty
Born: 1204 Died: 16 December 1263
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Norway
1217–1263
with Haakon the Young (1240–1257)
Magnus VI (1257–1263)
Succeeded by

haakon, hakon, hakonarson, redirects, here, researcher, hakon, hakonarson, scientist, haakonsson, march, april, 1204, december, 1263, norse, hákon, hákonarson, ˈhɑːˌkon, ˈhɑːˌkonɑrˌson, norwegian, håkon, håkonsson, sometimes, called, haakon, contrast, namesake. Hakon Hakonarson redirects here For the researcher see Hakon Hakonarson scientist Haakon IV Haakonsson c March April 1204 16 December 1263 Old Norse Hakon Hakonarson ˈhɑːˌkon ˈhɑːˌkonɑrˌson Norwegian Hakon Hakonsson sometimes called Haakon the Old in contrast to his namesake son was King of Norway from 1217 to 1263 His reign lasted for 46 years longer than any Norwegian king since Harald Fairhair 2 Haakon was born into the troubled civil war era in Norway but his reign eventually managed to put an end to the internal conflicts At the start of his reign during his minority Earl Skule Bardsson served as regent As a king of the Birkebeiner faction Haakon defeated the uprising of the final Bagler royal pretender Sigurd Ribbung in 1227 He put a definitive end to the civil war era when he had Skule Bardsson killed in 1240 a year after he had himself proclaimed king in opposition to Haakon Haakon thereafter formally appointed his own son as his co regent Haakon IVHaakon s seal from a 1247 48 letter with reverse The seal itself was given to Haakon as a gift from Henry III of England in 1236 1 King of NorwayReignJune 1217 16 December 1263Coronation29 July 1247 Bergen PredecessorInge IISuccessorMagnus VIJunior kingsHaakon the Young 1240 1257 Magnus VI 1257 1263 Bornc March April 1204 Folkenborg NorwayDied16 December 1263 1263 12 16 aged 59 Kirkwall Orkney NorwayBurialSt Magnus Cathedral Kirkwall until 1264 Old Cathedral of Bergen destroyed in 1531 SpouseMargaret Skulesdatter m 1225 wbr Issueamong others ill Cecilia Queen of the Isles Haakon the Young Christina Lady of Valdecorneja Magnus VI of NorwayHouseSverreFatherHaakon III of NorwayMotherInga of VarteigUnder Haakon s rule medieval Norway is considered to have reached its zenith or golden age His reputation and formidable naval fleet allowed him to maintain friendships with both the pope and the Holy Roman Emperor despite their conflict He was at different points offered the imperial crown by the pope the High Kingship of Ireland by a delegation of Irish kings and the command of the French crusader fleet by the French king He amplified the influence of European culture in Norway by importing and translating contemporary European literature into Old Norse and by constructing monumental European style stone buildings In conjunction with this he employed an active and aggressive foreign policy and at the end of his rule added Iceland and the Norse Greenland community to his kingdom leaving the Norwegian realm at its territorial height Although he for the moment managed to secure Norwegian control of the islands off the northern and western shores of Scotland plus the Isle of Man he fell ill and died when wintering in Orkney following some military engagements with the expanding Kingdom of Scotland Contents 1 Historical sources 2 Background and childhood 3 Reign 3 1 Succession struggle 3 2 Recognition by the Pope 3 3 Cultural influence and legal reforms 3 4 Involvements abroad 3 5 The Scottish expedition and death 4 Evaluation 5 Children and marriage 6 Popular culture 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistorical sources editThe main source of information concerning Haakon is the Saga of Haakon Haakonsson which was written in the years immediately following his death Commissioned by his son Magnus it was written by the Icelandic writer and politician Sturla THordarson nephew of the famous historian Snorri Sturluson 3 Having come into conflict with the royal representative in Iceland Sturla came to Norway in 1263 in an attempt to reconcile with Haakon When he arrived he learned that Haakon was in Scotland and that Magnus ruled Norway in his place While Magnus initially took an unfriendly attitude towards Sturla his talents as a story teller and skald eventually won him the favour of Magnus and his men 4 The saga is considered the most detailed and reliable of all sagas concerning Norwegian kings building on both written archive material and oral information from individuals who had been close to Haakon It is nonetheless written openly in support of the political program of the House of Sverre and the legitimacy of Haakon s kingship 5 Background and childhood editHaakon was born in Folkenborg now in Eidsberg to Inga of Varteig in the summer of 1204 probably in March or April 2 The father was widely regarded to have been King Haakon Sverresson as Inga had been with Haakon in his hostel in Borg now Sarpsborg in late 1203 Haakon Sverresson was the leader of the Birkebeiner faction in the ongoing civil war against the Bagler faction Haakon Sverresson was dead by the time his son Haakon was born many believed to have been poisoned by his Swedish stepmother Margaret but Inga s claim was supported by several of Haakon Sverresson s followers Haakon was born in Bagler controlled territory and his mother s claim placed them in a dangerous position When the Baglers started hunting Haakon a group of Birkebeiners fled with the child in the winter of 1205 06 heading for King Inge Bardson the new Birkebeiner king in Nidaros now Trondheim As the party was struck by a blizzard two of the best Birkebeiner skiers Torstein Skevla and Skjervald Skrukka carried on with the child over the mountain from Lillehammer to Osterdalen They eventually managed to bring Haakon to safety with King Inge this particular event is commemorated in modern day Norway by the popular annual skiing event Birkebeinerrennet 2 6 Haakon s dramatic childhood was often parallelled with that of former king Olaf Tryggvasson who introduced Christianity to Norway 7 as well as with the gospels and Child Jesus which served an important ideological function for his kingship 2 In the saga Haakon is described as bright and witty and as being small for his age 6 7 When he was three years old Haakon was captured by the Baglers but refused to call the Bagler king Philip Simonsson his lord he nonetheless came from the capture unharmed When he learned at the age of eight that the Birkebeiner King Inge Bardsson and his brother Earl Haakon the Crazy had made an agreement for the succession to the throne that excluded himself he pointed out that the agreement was invalid due to his attorney not having been present He subsequently identified his attorney as God and Saint Olaf 7 Haakon was notably the first Norwegian king to receive formal education at a school From the late civil war era the government administration relied increasingly on written communication which in turn demanded literate leaders When Haakon was in Bergen under the care of Haakon the Crazy he began his education at the age of seven likely at the Bergen Cathedral School He continued his education under King Inge at the Trondheim Cathedral School after the Earl s death in 1214 6 8 Haakon was brought up alongside Inge s son Guttorm and they were treated as the same 9 When he was eleven some of Haakon s friends provoked the king by asking him to give Haakon a region to govern When Haakon was approached by the men and was urged to take up arms against Inge he rejected it in part because of his young age and its bad prospects as well as because he believed it would be morally wrong to fight Inge and thus split the Birkebeiner He instead said that he prayed that God would give him his share of his father s inheritance when the time was right 10 Reign editSuccession struggle edit After King Inge s death in 1217 a succession dispute erupted Haakon was supported by the majority of Birkebeiners including the veterans who had served under his father and grandfather Other candidates included Inge s illegitimate son Guttorm who dropped out very soon Inge s half brother Earl Skule Bardsson who had been appointed leader of the king s hird at Inge s deathbed and was supported by the Archbishop of Nidaros as well as part of the Birkebeiners and Haakon the Crazy s son Knut Haakonsson 5 11 12 With his widespread popular support in Trondelag and western Norway Haakon was proclaimed king at Oyrating in June 1217 He was later the same year hailed as king at Gulating in Bergen and at Haugating Borgarting and local things east of Elven Gota Alv 5 While Skule s supporters initially had attempted to cast doubt about Haakon s royal ancestry they eventually suspended open resistance to his candidacy As the dispute could have divided the Birkebeiners Skule settled on becoming regent for Haakon during his minority 5 nbsp nbsp Two coins bracteates from Haakon s reign While a few of his coins included the inscription REX HACV when with Earl Skule REX ET COMES most only contained images of animals a crowned head a crown a castle or single letters 13 In connection with the dispute over the royal election Haakon s mother Inga had to prove his parentage through a trial by ordeal in Bergen in 1218 6 The result of the trial strengthened the legal basis for his kingship and improved his relationship with the Church 14 The saga s claim that Haakon already had been generally accepted as king in 1217 18 has however been contested by modern historians such as Sverre Bagge 15 Skule and Haakon increasingly drifted apart in their administration and Skule focused mainly on governing Eastern Norway after 1220 which he had gained the right to rule in 1218 as his third of the Norwegian kingdom 6 From 1221 to 1223 Haakon and Skule separately issued letters as rulers of Norway and maintained official contacts abroad 16 In 1223 a great meeting of bishops clergy secular nobles and other high ranking figures from all across the country was held in Bergen to decide finally on Haakon s right to the throne Other candidates to the throne were present either personally or through attorneys but Haakon was in the end unanimously confirmed as King of Norway by the court 14 The last Bagler king Philip Simonsson died in 1217 Speedy political and military manoeuvering by Skule led to a reconciliation between the Birkebeiners and Baglers and thus the reunification of the kingdom 17 However some discontented Baglers found a new royal pretender Sigurd Ribbung and launched a new rising from 1219 The rising only gained support in parts of Eastern Norway and was did not gain control of Viken and Opplandene as the Baglers formerly had done 18 In the summer of 1223 Skule forced the Ribbungar to surrender However The great meeting in Bergen soon after renewed the division of the Norwegian kingdom with Skule gaining control of the northern third of the country instead of the east in what marked a setback despite his military victory In 1224 Sigurd escaped from Skule s custody and Haakon was left to fight him alone as the new ruler of Eastern Norway Skule remained passive throughout the rest of the war and his support for Haakon was lukewarm at best 19 Assuming the military lead in the fight Haakon nevertheless defeated Ribbung through comprehensive and organisationally demanding warfare over the next few years 18 As part of the campaign Haakon additionally led a large army into the Varmland district of Sweden in 1225 to punish the inhabitants for their support of Sigurd Sigurd died in 1226 and the revolt was finally quashed in 1227 with the surrender of its last leader Haakon the Crazy s son Knut Haakonsson 20 This left Haakon more or less uncontested monarch 18 nbsp Haakon and Skule Bardsson from the 14th century Icelandic Flateyjarbok Haakon s councillors had sought to reconcile Haakon and Skule by proposing marriage between Haakon and Skule s daughter Margaret in 1219 Haakon accepted the proposal although he did not think it would change much politically but the marriage between Haakon and Margrete did not take place before 1225 partly due to the conflict with Sigurd 19 The relationship between Haakon and Skule nevertheless deteriorated further during the 1230s and attempted settlements at meetings in 1233 and 1236 only distanced them more from each other 21 Periodically the two nonetheless reconciled and spent a great amount of time together only to have their friendship destroyed according to the saga by intrigues derived from rumours and slander by men who played the two against each other 22 Skule was the first person ever in Norway to be titled duke hertug in 1237 but instead of control over a region gained the rights to the incomes from a third of the syssels scattered across the whole of Norway This was part of an attempt by Haakon to limit Skule s power In 1239 the conflict between the two erupted into open warfare when Skule had himself proclaimed king Although he had some support in Trondelag Opplandene and eastern Viken he could not stand up to Haakon s forces 21 The rebellion ended when Skule was killed in 1240 leaving Haakon the undisputed king of Norway 6 This revolt is generally taken to mark the final end of Norway s civil war era 18 Recognition by the Pope edit nbsp nbsp Coats of arms accorded to Haakon by Matthew Paris 23 While the Church in Norway initially had refused to recognise Haakon as King of Norway it had largely turned to support his claim to the throne by the 1223 meeting although later disagreements occurred 24 Despite being the undisputed ruler of Norway after 1240 Haakon was still not approved as king by the pope due to his illegitimate birth He nonetheless had a strong personal desire to be approved fully as a European king 6 Several papal commissions were appointed to investigate the matter and Haakon declared his legitimate son Haakon the Young his successor instead of an older living illegitimate son 21 Although Haakon had children with his mistress Kanga the Young prior to his marriage with Margrete it was his children with Margrete who were designated as his successors in accordance with a papal recognition The Catholic principle of legitimacy was thus established in the Norwegian order of succession although Haakon s new law still maintained that illegitimate children could be designated as successor in the absence of any legitimate children or grandchildren contrary to Catholic principles While his strong position allowed him to set boundaries to the Church s political influence he was on the other hand prepared to give the Church much autonomy in internal affairs and relations with the rural society 6 25 Haakon also attempted to strengthen his ties with the papacy by taking a vow to go on Crusade 6 In 1241 he converted this into a vow of waging war against pagan peoples in the north in light of the Mongol invasion of Europe When a group of Karelians Bjarmians had been forced westwards by the Mongols Haakon allowed them to stay in Malangen and had them Christianized something that would please the papacy 26 Later in 1248 Louis IX of France proposed by Matthew Paris as messenger to Haakon to join him for a Crusade with Haakon as commander of the fleet but Haakon declined 27 While Haakon had been unsuccessful in gaining the recognition of Pope Gregory IX he quickly gained the support from Pope Innocent IV who sought alliances in his struggle with Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II Haakon finally achieved royal recognition by Pope Innocent in 1246 and Cardinal William of Sabina was sent to Bergen and crowned Haakon in 1247 28 Cultural influence and legal reforms edit nbsp Haakon s Hall in Bergen constructed in the mid 13th century After consolidating his position in 1240 Haakon focused on displaying the supremacy of the kingship influenced by the increasingly closer contact with European culture He built several monumental royal buildings primarily in the royal estate in Bergen where he built a European style stone palace He used a grand fleet with stately royal ships when meeting with other Scandinavian rulers and actively sent letters and gifts to other European rulers his most far reaching contact was achieved when he sent gyrfalcons with an embassy to the sultan of Tunis 6 The royal court in Bergen also started importing and translating the first true European literature that became available to a wider Norwegian audience The literature which was popular then was heroic romantic literature derived from the French and in turn English courts notably chansons de geste around Charlemagne the Matter of France and tales of King Arthur the Matter of Britain The first work that was translated into Old Norse was reportedly the Arthurian romantic story Tristan and Iseult which was finished in 1226 after orders from the young and newly wed Haakon Haakon s programme seems to have been the spark for the emergence of a new Norse genre of chivalric sagas 29 Haakon also had the popular religious text Visio Tnugdali translated into Old Norse as Duggals leidsla The literature also appealed to women and both Haakon s wife Margrete and his daughter Kristina owned richly illustrated psalters 29 Haakon also initiated legal reforms which were crucial for the development of justice in Norway Haakon s New Law written around 1260 was a breakthrough for both the idea and practice of public justice as opposed to the traditional Norwegian customs of feuds and revenge The influence of the reforms is also apparent in Haakon s Konungs skuggsja King s Mirror an educational text intended for his son Magnus which was probably written in cooperation with the royal court in the mid 1250s 30 Involvements abroad edit Relations were hostile with both Sweden and Denmark from the start of his reign During Haakon s rivalry with Earl Skule Skule sought the support of Valdemar II of Denmark but any aid was made impossible after Valdemar s capture by one of his vassals Since the Danes wanted overlordship of Norway and supported the Guelphs those supporting the Pope over the Holy Roman Emperor Haakon in turn sought closer ties with the Ghibelline Emperor Frederick II who sent ambassadors to Norway As Haakon had gained a powerful reputation due to the strength of his fleet other European rulers wanted to benefit from his friendship Despite the struggle between the Pope and the Emperor Haakon was able to maintain friendships with both According to an English chronicler the Pope wanted Haakon to become Holy Roman Emperor 31 It has been suggested that Haakon hesitated to leave Norway due to the Mongol threat 32 Haakon pursued a foreign policy that was active in all directions although foremost to the west and south east 33 In the north east the relationship with Novgorod had been tense due to a dispute over the right to tax the Sami people as well as raiding from both Norwegian and Karelian sides Eventually the Mongol invasion of Rus drove Prince Alexander Nevsky to negotiations with Haakon that likely strengthened Norwegian control of Troms and Finnmark 26 An embassy from Novgorod one time asked for the hand of Haakon s daughter Christina but Haakon refused due to the Mongol threat 34 With Norwegian ships from the port of Elven were active in the waters south of Sweden and into the Baltic Sea Norway increasingly relied on Baltic grain from Lubeck This trade was halted in the late 1240s by the plundering of Norwegian ships in Danish seas by ships from Lubeck In 1250 Haakon made a peace and trade agreement with Lubeck which eventually also opened the city of Bergen to the Hanseatic League 6 33 During the conflict Haakon had reportedly been offered control over the city by Emperor Frederick II 26 In any case Haakon s policy regarding Northern German ports largely derived from his strategy of attempting to exploit the internal turmoil in Denmark after the death of King Valdemar II in 1241 33 In Scandinavia Haakon regularly met with neighbouring rulers in the border area around Elven from the late 1240s through the 1250s He sent grand fleets as embassies some reportedly numbered over 300 ships 33 Haakon also reconciled with the Swedes when he his son Haakon the Young married Rikissa a daughter of Swedish leader Earl Birger 35 Haakon sought to expand his kingdom southwards of Elven into the Danish province of Halland He thus looked for alliance with the Swedes as well as ties with opponents of the ruling line of monarchs of Denmark In 1249 Haakon allied with Earl Birger for a joint Swedish Norwegian invasion into Halland and Scania but the agreement was eventually abandoned by the Swedes see Treaty of Lodose Haakon claimed Halland in 1253 and finally invaded the province on his own in 1256 demanding it as compensation for the looting of Norwegian ships in Danish seas But he was forced to renounce this claim in a 1257 peace agreement with Christopher I of Denmark Haakon thereafter negotiated a marriage between his only remaining son Magnus and Christopher s niece Ingeborg 36 Haakon s Nordic policies initiated the build up to the later personal unions called the Kalmar Union that in the end had dire consequences for Norway as it did not have the economic and military resources to persevere and maintain Haakon s aggressive policies 6 More distantly Haakon sought an alliance with Alfonso X of Castile a potential next Holy Roman emperor chiefly as it would guarantee new supplies of grain to Castile in light of rising prices in England and possibly giving access to Baltic grain through Norwegian control of Lubeck Alfonso in turn sought to expand his influence in Northern Europe as well as to gain Norwegian naval assistance for the campaign or crusade he had proposed in Morocco 37 38 seeing that the Iberian Moors received backing overseas from North Africa 26 Haakon could thus potentially also fulfill his papal vow of crusade although he likely did not intend to 37 He sent an embassy to Castile in 1255 A Castilian ambassador to Norway returned with the embassy and proposed to establish the strongest ties of friendship with Haakon 39 At the request of Alfonso Haakon sent his daughter Christina to Castile to marry one of Alfonso s brothers However Christina died four years later without children which marked the effective end of the short lived alliance 37 39 and the proposed crusade fell into the blue 27 The Scottish expedition and death edit nbsp Medieval Norway at its greatest extent around the time of Haakon s death Haakon employed an active and aggressive foreign policy to strengthen Norwegian ties in the west 40 His policy relied on friendship and trade with the King of England the first known Norwegian trade agreements were made with England in the years 1217 23 England s first commercial treaties were also made with Norway and the friendship with Henry III of England was a cornerstone of Haakon s foreign policy 41 42 As they had become kings around the same time Haakon wrote to Henry in 1224 that he wished they could maintain the friendship that had existed between their fathers 43 Haakon sought to defend the Norwegian sovereignty over islands in the west namely the Hebrides and Man under the Kingdom of Mann and the Isles Shetland and Orkney under the Earldom of Orkney and the Faroe Islands 6 Further the Norse community in Greenland agreed to submit to the Norwegian crown in 1261 and in 1262 Haakon achieved one of his long standing ambitions when he incorporated Iceland into his kingdom by exploiting the island s internal conflicts in his favour The dependency on Norwegian maritime trade and their subordination to the Nidaros ecclesiastical province were some of the key reasons which allowed Haakon to assert sovereignty over the islands 44 The Norwegian kingdom was at the largest it has ever been by the end of Haakon s reign 6 Norwegian control over the Faroe Islands and Shetland was strong due to the importance of Bergen as a trading centre while Orkney the Hebrides and Man had more natural ties with the Scottish mainland Although traditionally having had ties with the community of Norse settlers in northern Scotland Scottish rulers had increasingly asserted their sovereignty over the entire mainland 45 Haakon had at the same time gained stronger control of the Hebrides and Man than any Norwegian ruler since Magnus Barefoot 46 As part of a new development the Scottish king Alexander II claimed the Hebrides and asked to buy the islands from Norway but Haakon staunchly rejected the proposals Following Alexander II s death his son Alexander III continued and stepped up his father s policy by sending an embassy to Norway in 1261 and thereafter attacking the Hebrides 47 In 1263 the dispute with the Scottish king over the Hebrides induced Haakon to undertake an expedition to the islands Haakon learned in 1262 that Scottish nobles had raided the Hebrides and that Alexander III planned to conquer the islands In 1263 Haakon mounted an expedition with his formidable leidang fleet of at least 120 ships 46 He had become accustomed to negotiating while backed by an intimidating fleet 33 The fleet left Bergen in July and reached Shetland and Orkney in August where they were joined by chieftains from the Hebrides and Man Alexander started negotiations after Norwegian landings on the Scottish mainland but the Scots purposely prolonged the talks 46 The Scots waited until September and October for weather that would be trouble for Haakon s fleet A Scottish force met a smaller Norwegian force at the Battle of Largs 2 October Although the battle was inconclusive Haakon withdrew to Orkney for the winter 46 48 A delegation of Irish kings invited Haakon to become the High King of Ireland and expel the Anglo Norman settlers in Ireland but this was apparently rejected against Haakon s wish 49 50 51 Haakon over wintered at the Bishop s Palace in Kirkwall Orkney with plans to resume his campaign the next year 52 During his stay in Kirkwall he however fell ill and died in the early hours of 16 December 1263 53 54 Haakon was buried in the St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall for the winter in spring his body was exhumed and taken back to Norway 52 where he was buried in the Old Cathedral in his capital Bergen 6 Centuries later in 1531 the cathedral was demolished by the commander of Bergenhus Eske Bille for military purposes 55 56 in connection with the Protestant Reformation and the graves of Haakon and other Norwegian kings buried there might have been destroyed in the process or moved to another location 6 57 Evaluation editNorwegian historians have held differing views on Haakon s reign In the 19th century P A Munch portrayed Haakon as a mighty almost flawless ruler which in turn influenced Henrik Ibsen in his 1863 play The Pretenders In the early 20th century poet Hans E Kinck countered and viewed Haakon as an insignificant king subordinated to forces outside of his control a view which influenced historians such as Halvdan Koht and Edvard Bull Sr 6 58 Haakon has often been compared with Skule Bardsson and historians have taken sides in the old conflict While Munch saw Skule as a traitor to the rightful Norwegian king Koht viewed Skule as a heroic figure On more sketchy grounds Kinck praised Skule as representing the original and dying Norse culture and Haakon as a superficial emulator of foreign culture 58 Since the 1960s historians including Narve Bjorgo Per Sveaas Andersen Knut Helle Svein Haga and Kare Lunden have in turn professed a reaction against Koht s view According to Sverre Bagge modern historians tend to follow Koht when it comes to see Skule s rebellion as a last desperate attempt to stop Haakon from encroaching on Skule s power but lean closer to Munch s overall evaluation of the two men 59 Knut Helle interprets the saga to leave an impression of Skule as a skilled warrior and politician while noting that the author of the saga purposely created a diffuse image of his role in the conflict with Haakon On the other hand Helle notes that Skule was outmaneuvered with relative ease by Haakon s supporters in the years immediately after 1217 and that this may suggest some limited abilities While neither giving a clear picture of Haakon Helle maintains that Haakon obviously learned to master the political game in his early years He interprets Haakon as an independent and strong willed ruler to whom he assigns a significant personal responsibility for the policies pursued during his reign notably regarding the internal consolidation of the kingship the orientation towards European culture and the aggressive foreign policy 58 In his article in Norsk biografisk leksikon Knut Helle acknowledges that Haakon was empowered by the strong institutional position of the kingship at the end of his reign which he had developed himself and that his policies were not always successful Helle nonetheless recognises the substantial political abilities and powerful determination Haakon must have had in order to progress from the difficult position in which he started his reign 6 Children and marriage edit nbsp Haakon Margreta and Haakon the Young as seen in a psalter owned by Margrete Haakon had three illegitimate children with his mistress Kanga the Younger av Folkindberg who is only known by name 1198 1225 before 1225 6 They were 60 Sigurd died 1252 60 Cecilia died 1248 Married lendmann Gregorius Andresson a nephew of the last Bagler king Philip Simonsson in 1241 Widowed in 1246 she married Harald Olafsson King of Mann and the Isles in 1248 They both drowned the same year on the return voyage to Great Britain 35 Kone c 1225 married Toralde Gunnarsson Hvite until Gulsvik Buskerud c 1220 Gulsvik Fla Buskerud d 1260 mentioned on a 1258 document and had issue Haakon married Margrete Skulesdatter on 25 May 1225 daughter of his rival Earl Skule Bardsson 6 Their children were 60 Olav born 1226 Died in infancy 60 Haakon the Young 1232 1257 Married Rikissa Birgersdotter daughter of the Swedish statesman Earl Birger in 1251 Appointed king and co ruler by his father in 1240 but predeceased his father 61 Christina 1234 1262 Married Infante Philip of Castile brother of Alfonso X of Castile in 1258 Died childless 62 Magnus VI of Norway 1238 1280 Married Ingeborg daughter of Eric IV of Denmark in 1261 Appointed king and co ruler after the death of Haakon the Young Succeeded his father as King of Norway Popular culture edit nbsp 19th century impression of the birkebeiner bringing the infant Haakon to safety Knud Bergslien Hakon and Kristin were the mascots of the 1994 Winter Olympics Hakon is named after Haakon IV of Norway and Kristin after Christina of Norway 63 In The Last King 2016 the infant Hakon IV is portrayed by Jonathan Oskar Dahlgren References edit Helle 1995 p 183 a b c d Guhnfeldt Cato 19 October 2011 Da birkebeinerne skapte historie Aftenposten in Norwegian Retrieved 11 April 2012 Helle 1995 p 74 Bagge 1996 p 91 a b c d Helle 1995 p 75 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Haakon 4 Haakonsson Norsk biografisk leksikon in Norwegian Store norske leksikon Retrieved 1 April 2012 a b c Bagge 1996 p 95 Helle 1995 pp 169 170 Bagge 1996 pp 95 96 Bagge 1996 p 96 Keyser 1870 p 184 Bagge 1996 pp 96 97 Issuing Authorities Hakon Hakonsson s coinage University of Oslo s Coin Cabinet exhibition University of Oslo 1995 Retrieved 22 April 2012 a b Helle 1995 p 76 Bagge 1996 pp 98 102 Bagge 1996 p 99 Helle 1995 pp 75 76 a b c d Helle 1995 p 77 a b Bagge 1996 pp 108 109 Bagge 1996 pp 129 130 a b c Helle 1995 p 180 Bagge 1996 pp 110 111 Lewis 1987 pp 456 467 Bagge 1996 pp 119 120 Helle 1995 pp 181 183 a b c d Helle 1995 p 198 a b Helle 1995 p 199 Helle 1995 pp 180 181 a b Helle 1995 pp 171 172 Bagge 1996 pp 149 150 Per G Norseng Hakon 4 Hakonsson in Norwegian Store Norske Leksikon retrieved 18 March 2013 Orfield amp Boyer 2002 pp 137 138 a b c d e Helle 1995 p 197 Bagge 1996 pp 121 122 a b Orfield amp Boyer 2002 p 138 Helle 1995 pp 197 198 a b c O Callaghan 2011 p 17 O Callaghan 1993 p 202 a b O Callaghan 1993 p 203 Helle 1995 p 194 Helle 1995 pp 194 195 Orfield amp Boyer 2002 p 137 Diplomatarium Norvegicum XIX Dokumentasjonsprosjektet in Norwegian University of Oslo p 117 Retrieved 12 April 2012 Helle 1995 pp 195 196 Derry 2000 p 48 a b c d Helle 1995 p 196 Bagge 1996 p 126 Derry 2000 p 49 Barrow 1981 p 118 Lydon 1998 p 78 Fry amp Fry 1991 p 85 a b Forte Oram amp Pedersen 2005 p 262 Helle 1995 p 173 Barrow 1981 p 119 Eske Bille in Norwegian Store norske leksikon Retrieved 26 April 2012 Tord Roed Norsk biografisk leksikon in Norwegian Store norske leksikon Retrieved 26 April 2012 Guhnfeldt Cato 19 October 2011 En norsk kongegrav Aftenposten in Norwegian Retrieved 12 April 2012 a b c Helle 1995 p 181 Bagge 1996 pp 111 112 a b c d Keyser 1870 p 230 Line 2007 p 589 Kristin Hakonsdatter Norsk biografisk leksikon in Norwegian Store norske leksikon Retrieved 12 April 2012 Les mascottes des Jeux Olympiques d hiver d Innsbruck 1976 a Sotchi 2014 Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Olympic org in French Bibliography editBagge Sverre 1996 From Gang Leader to the Lord s Anointed Kingship in Sverris saga and Hakonar saga Hakonarsonar The Viking Collection Studies in Northern civilization Vol 8 Odense University ISBN 8778381088 ISSN 0108 8408 Barrow G W S 1981 Kingship and Unity Scotland 1000 1306 Edinburgh University ISBN 9780748601042 Derry T K 2000 A history of Scandinavia Norway Sweden Denmark Finland and Iceland University of Minnesota ISBN 9780816637997 Forte Angelo Oram Richard D Pedersen Frederik 2005 Viking Empires Cambridge University ISBN 9780521829922 Fry Plantagenet Somerset Fry Fiona Somerset 1991 A History of Ireland Routledge ISBN 9780415048880 Helle Knut 1995 Under kirke og kongemakt 1130 1350 Under church and royal power 1130 1350 Aschehougs Norgeshistorie in Norwegian Vol 3 Aschehoug ISBN 8203220312 Keyser Rudolf 1870 Norges historie Vol 2 Christiania Oslo P T Malling Lewis Suzanne 1987 The art of Matthew Paris in the Chronica majora University of California ISBN 9780520049819 Lydon James F 1998 The Making of Ireland From Ancient Times to the Present Routledge ISBN 9780415013482 Line Philip 2007 Kingship and state formation in Sweden 1130 1290 BRILL ISBN 9789004155787 O Callaghan Joseph F 1993 The Norwegian Alliance The Learned King The Reign of Alfonso X of Castile University of Pennsylvania pp 202 204 O Callaghan Joseph F 2011 The Gibraltar Crusade Castile and the Battle for the Strait University of Pennsylvania ISBN 9780812243024 Orfield Lester B Boyer Benjamin F 2002 First published 1953 The Growth of Scandinavian Law The Lawbook Exchange ISBN 9781584771807 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Haakon IV of Norway The Norwegian account of Haco s expedition against Scotland A D MCCLXIII at Project Gutenberg Haakon Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Haakon HaakonssonHouse of SverreCadet branch of the Fairhair dynastyBorn 1204 Died 16 December 1263Regnal titlesPreceded byInge II King of Norway1217 1263with Haakon the Young 1240 1257 Magnus VI 1257 1263 Succeeded byMagnus VI Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haakon IV amp oldid 1197140917, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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