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Charles XII of Sweden

Charles XII, sometimes Carl XII (Swedish: Karl XII) or Carolus Rex (17 June 1682 – 30 November 1718 O.S.[1]), was King of Sweden (including current Finland) from 1697 to 1718. He belonged to the House of Palatinate-Zweibrücken, a branch line of the House of Wittelsbach. Charles was the only surviving son of Charles XI and Ulrika Eleonora the Elder. He assumed power, after a seven-month caretaker government, at the age of fifteen.[2]

Charles XII
Portrait by Hyacinthe Rigaud c. 1715
King of Sweden
Reign5 April 1697 – 30 November 1718 O.S.[1]
Coronation14 December 1697
PredecessorCharles XI
SuccessorUlrika Eleonora
RegentHedwig Eleonora of Holstein-Gottorp (5 April – 15 December 1697)
Born17 June 1682
Tre Kronor, Stockholm, Sweden
Died30 November 1718(1718-11-30) (aged 36)[1]
Fredrikshald, Denmark-Norway
Burial26 February 1719
HousePalatinate-Zweibrücken
FatherCharles XI of Sweden
MotherUlrika Eleonora of Denmark
ReligionLutheran
Signature

In 1700, a triple alliance of Denmark–Norway, SaxonyPoland–Lithuania and Russia launched a threefold attack on the Swedish protectorate of Holstein-Gottorp and provinces of Livonia and Ingria, aiming to draw advantage as the Swedish Empire was unaligned and ruled by a young and inexperienced king, thus initiating the Great Northern War. Leading the Swedish army against the alliance, Charles won multiple victories despite being significantly outnumbered. A major victory over a Russian army some three times the size in 1700, at the Battle of Narva, compelled Peter the Great to sue for peace, an offer that Charles subsequently rejected. By 1706, Charles, now 24 years old, had forced all of his foes into submission including, in that year, a decisively devastating victory by Swedish forces under general Carl Gustav Rehnskiöld over a combined army of Saxony and Russia at the Battle of Fraustadt. Russia was now the sole remaining hostile power.

Charles's subsequent march on Moscow met with initial success as victory followed victory, the most significant of which was the Battle of Holowczyn where the smaller Swedish army routed a Russian army twice the size. The campaign ended with disaster when the Swedish army suffered heavy losses to a Russian force more than twice its size at Poltava. Charles had been incapacitated by a wound prior to the battle, rendering him unable to take command. The defeat was followed by the Surrender at Perevolochna. Charles spent the following years in exile in the Ottoman Empire before returning to lead an assault on Norway, trying to evict the Danish king from the war once more in order to aim all his forces at the Russians. Two campaigns met with frustration and ultimate failure, concluding with his death at the Siege of Fredriksten in 1718. At the time, most of the Swedish Empire was under foreign military occupation, though Sweden itself was still free. This situation was later formalized, albeit moderated in the subsequent Treaty of Nystad. The result was the end of the Swedish Empire, and also of its effectively organized absolute monarchy and war machine, commencing a parliamentary government unique for continental Europe, which would last for half a century until royal autocracy was restored by Gustav III.[3]

Charles was an exceptionally skilled military leader and tactician as well as an able politician, credited with introducing important tax and legal reforms. As for his famous reluctance towards peace efforts, he is quoted by Voltaire as saying upon the outbreak of the war: "I have resolved never to start an unjust war but never to end a legitimate one except by defeating my enemies". With the war consuming more than half his life and nearly all his reign, he never married and fathered no children. He was succeeded by his sister Ulrika Eleonora, who in turn was coerced to hand over all substantial powers to the Riksdag of the Estates and opted to surrender the throne to her husband Friedrich of Hesse-Kassel, who became King Frederick I of Sweden.[4]

Royal title edit

 
The 15-year-old Charles in 1697 as king of the Swedish Empire

His title in full as the king of Sweden was as follows:

The Sovereign and Supreme Lord, His Majesty, Charles XII, by the Grace of God, King of Sweden, the Goths and the WendsGrand Prince of FinlandDuke of Uppland, Västergötland, Småland, Östergötland, Skåne, Södermanland, Västmanland, Dalarna, Northern Finland, Southern Finland, Estonia, Livonia, Karelia, Bremen, Verden, Stettin, Pomerania, Rostock, Kassuben and Wenden;  Count to Hälsingland, Närke, Värmland, Bohuslän, Dalsland, Halland, Blekinge, Gotland, Öland, Ångermanland, Westrobothnia, Gästrikland, Jämtland, Medelpad, Tavastland, Nyland, Ostrobothnia, Åland, Ösel, Savolax and LaplandPrince of RügenLord of Ingeria, Kexholm, Wismar and Narva;  so and Count Palatine by the Rhine;  Duke in Bavaria;  Count of ZweibrückenKleeburg;  as well as Duke of Jülich, Cleves and Berg;  Count of Veldenz, Sponnheim and Ravensberg;  Lord of Ravenstein etc. etc.. etc...[5][6][7]

The fact that Charles was crowned as Charles XII does not mean that he was the 12th king of Sweden by that name. Swedish kings Erik XIV (1560–1568) and Charles IX (1604–1611) gave themselves numerals after studying a mythological history of Sweden. He was actually the 6th King Charles.[8]

Great Northern War edit

Early campaigns edit

 
Monument to Charles XII in Stockholm, with Charles pointing towards Russia. Stockholmers call this statue "the lion among four pots" ("Lejonet mellan fyra krukor") referring to the mortars. This contrasts with a nearby statue of Charles XIII, which has lions similarly arranged; that statue is known as "the pot among four lions" ("Krukan mellan fyra lejon"), referring to a Swedish slang expression for a klutz.[9]

Around 1700, the monarchs of Denmark–Norway, Saxony (ruled by elector August II of Poland, who was also the king of Poland-Lithuania) and Russia united in an alliance against Sweden, mainly through the efforts of Johann Reinhold Patkul, a Livonian nobleman who turned traitor when the "great reduction" of Charles XI in 1680 stripped much of the nobility of lands and properties. In late 1699, Charles sent a minor detachment to reinforce his brother-in-law Duke Frederick IV of Holstein-Gottorp, who was attacked by Danish forces the following year. A Saxon army simultaneously invaded Swedish Livonia, and in February 1700 surrounded Riga, the most populous city of the Swedish Empire. Russia also declared war (August 1700), but stopped short of an attack on Swedish Ingria until September 1700.[10]

Charles's first campaign was against Denmark–Norway, ruled by his cousin Frederick IV of Denmark. For this campaign Charles secured the support of England and the Netherlands, both maritime powers concerned with Denmark's threats too close to the Sound. Leading a force of 8,000 and 43 ships in an invasion of Zealand, Charles rapidly compelled the Danes to submit to the Peace of Travendal in August 1700, which indemnified Holstein.[11] Having forced Denmark–Norway to make peace within months, King Charles turned his attention upon the two other powerful neighbors, King August II (cousin to both Charles XII and Frederick IV of Denmark–Norway) and Peter the Great of Russia, who also had entered the war against him, ironically on the same day that Denmark came to terms.[10]

Russia had opened their part of the war by invading the Swedish-held territories of Livonia and Estonia. Charles countered this by attacking the Russian besiegers at the Battle of Narva (November 1700). The Russians outnumbered the Swedish army of ten thousand men by almost four to one. Charles attacked under cover of a blizzard, effectively splitting the Russian army in two and won the battle. Many of Peter's troops who fled the battlefield drowned in the Narva River. The total number of Russian fatalities reached about 10,000 at the end of the battle, while the Swedish forces lost 667 men.[12]

Charles did not pursue the Russian army. Instead, he turned against Poland-Lithuania, which was formally neutral at this point, thereby disregarding Polish negotiation proposals supported by the Swedish parliament. Charles defeated the Polish king Augustus II and his Saxon allies at the Battle of Kliszow in 1702 and captured many cities of the Commonwealth. After the deposition of Augustus as king of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, Charles XII put Stanisław Leszczyński as his puppet on the Polish throne (1704).[13]

Russian resurgence edit

 
Charles XII and Mazepa at the Dnieper River after Poltava by Gustaf Cederström

While Charles won several decisive battles in the Commonwealth and ultimately secured the coronation of his ally Stanisław Leszczyński and the surrender of Saxony, the Russian Tsar Peter the Great embarked on a military reform plan that improved the Russian army, using the effectively organized Swedes and other European armies as role models. Russian forces managed to penetrate Ingria, where they established a new city, Saint Petersburg. Charles planned an invasion of the Russian heartland, allying himself with Ivan Mazepa, Hetman of the Ukrainian Cossacks. The size of the invading Swedish army was peeled off as Charles left Leszczyński with some 24,000 German and Polish troops, departing eastwards from Saxony in late 1707 with some 35,000 men, adding a further 12,500 under Adam Ludwig Lewenhaupt marching from Livonia. Charles left the homeland with a defense force of approximately 28,800 men, with a further 14,000 in Swedish Finland, as well as other garrisons in the Baltic and German provinces.[14][15]

After securing his "favorite" victory in the Battle of Holowczyn, despite being outnumbered over three to one by the new Russian army, Charles opted to march eastwards on Moscow rather than try to seize Saint Petersburg, founded from the Swedish town of Nyenskans five years earlier.[16] Peter the Great managed, however, to ambush Lewenhaupt's army at Lesnaya before Charles could combine his forces, thus losing valuable supplies, artillery and half of Lewenhaupt's men. Charles' Polish ally, Stanisław Leszczyński, was facing internal problems of his own. Charles expected the support of a massive Cossack rebellion led by Mazepa in Ukraine, with estimates suggesting Mazepa was able to muster about 40,000 troops. However, the Russians subjugated the rebellion and destroyed its capital, Baturin, before the arrival of the Swedish troops. The harsh climate took its toll as well, because Charles marched his troops to winter camp in Ukraine.[17]

By the time of the decisive Battle of Poltava, in July 1709, Charles had been wounded, one-third of his infantry was dead, and his supply train had been destroyed. The king was incapacitated by a gunshot wound to the foot and was unable to lead the Swedish forces. With the numbers of Charles' army reduced to some 23,000, with many wounded or involved on the siege of Poltava, his general Carl Gustav Rehnskiöld had a clearly inferior force to face the fortified and modernized army of Tsar Peter, with some 45,000 men.[18] The Swedish assault ended in disaster, and the king fled south to the Ottoman Empire with a small entourage, and set up camp at Bender with some 1,000 of his Caroleans ("Karoliner" in Swedish). The remainder of the army surrendered days later at Perevolochna under Lewenhaupt's command, most of them (including Lewenhaupt himself) spending the rest of their days in Russian captivity.

The Swedish defeat at Poltava marked the downfall of the Swedish Empire,[19] as well as the founding of the Russian Empire.[20]

Exile in the Ottoman Empire edit

 
Royal Monogram

The Ottomans initially welcomed the Swedish king, where he went to Abdurrahman Pasha, the commander of the Özü Castle, as he was about to fall into the hands of the Russian army, and he was able to take refuge in the castle at the last moment. Afterward, he settled in Bender at the invitation of its governor, Ağa Yusuf Pasha.

In the meantime, Charles sent Stanislaw Poniatowski and Thomas Funck [sv] as his messengers to Constantinople.[21] They managed to indirectly contact with Gülnuş Sultan, mother of Sultan Ahmed III, who became intrigued by Charles, in which she took an interest in his cause, and even corresponded with him in Bender.[21]

His expenses during his long stay in the Ottoman Empire were covered by the Ottoman state budget, as part of the fixed assets (Demirbaş in Turkish), hence his nickname Demirbaş Şarl (Fixed Asset Charles) in Turkey.[a]

Eventually, a small village named Karlstad (Varnița) had to be built near Bender to accommodate the ever-growing Swedish population there.[23]

Gülnuş Sultan convinced her son to declare war against Russia, as she thought that Charles was a man worth taking a risk for. Later on, the Ottomans and Russians signed the Treaty of the Pruth and Treaty of Adrianople to end the hostilities between them. The treaties dissatisfied the pro-war party, supported by King Charles and Stanislaw Poniatowski who failed to reignite the conflict.

 
Portrait by Hyacinthe Rigaud c. 1715

However, the Sultan Ahmed III's subjects in the empire eventually got tired of Charles' scheming. His entourage also accumulated huge amounts of debts with Bender merchants. Eventually, "crowds" of townspeople attacked the Swedish colony at Bender and Charles had to defend himself against the mobs and the Ottoman Janissaries involved. This uprising was called "kalabalık" (Turkish for crowd) which afterward found a place in Swedish lexicon referring to a ruckus. The Janissaries did not shoot Charles during the skirmish at Bender, but captured him and put him under house-arrest at Dimetoka (nowadays Didimoticho) and Constantinople. During his semi-imprisonment the King played chess and studied the Ottoman Navy and the naval architecture of the Ottoman galleons. His sketches and designs eventually led to the famous Swedish war ships Jarramas (Yaramaz) and Jilderim (Yıldırım).[citation needed]

Meanwhile, Russia and Poland regained and expanded their borders. Great Britain, an adversary of Sweden, defected from its alliance obligations while Prussia attacked Swedish holdings in Germany. Russia occupied Finland (the Greater Wrath 1713–1721). After defeats of the Swedish army, consisting mainly of Finnish troops in the Battle of Helsinki (1713), the Battle of Pälkäne 1713 and the Battle of Storkyro 1714, the military, administration and clergymen escaped from Finland, which fell under Russian military regime.[24]

During his five-year stay in the Ottoman Empire, Charles XII corresponded with his sister (and eventual successor), Ulrika Eleonora. According to Mrs. Ragnhild Marie Hatton, a Norwegian-British historian, in some of those letters Charles expressed his desire for a peace treaty which would be defensible in the future Swedish generations' eyes. However, he emphasized that only a greater respect for Sweden in Europe would enable him to achieve such a peace treaty. Meanwhile, the Swedish Council of State (government) and Estates/Diet (Parliament) tried to keep the beleaguered Sweden somehow organized and independent. Eventually, in the autumn of 1714, their warning letter reached him. In it, those executive and legislative bodies told the absentee King that unless he quickly returned to Sweden, they would independently conclude an achievable peace treaty with Russia, Poland and Denmark. This stark admonition prompted Charles to rush back to Sweden.[25]

Charles traveled back to Sweden with a group of Ottomans, soldiers such as escorts and businessmen to whom he promised to repay his debts during his stay in the Ottoman Empire, but they had to wait several years before that happened. According to the prevailing church law in Sweden at that time, all who lived in the country, but were not members of the Swedish state church, would be baptized. In order for the Jewish and Muslim creditors to avoid this, Charles wrote a "free letter" so that they could practice their religions without being punished. The soldiers chose to remain in Sweden instead of difficult trips home. They were called "Askersson" (the word asker in Turkish means soldier).[26] However, there are accounts implying that following the long stay for Charles to repay his debts, they got paid and left the country.[27]

Pomerania and Norway edit

 
Karl XII, 1707. Skokloster Castle.
 
Uniform worn by Charles XII in Frederikshall on 30 November 1718. Shown in The Royal Armoury in Stockholm.
 
Bringing Home the Body of King Charles XII. A romanticized painting by Gustaf Cederström, 1884

Charles agreed to leave Constantinople and returned to Swedish Pomerania. He made the journey on horseback, riding across Europe in just fifteen days. He traveled across the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary to Vienna and arrived at Stralsund. A medal with Charles on horseback, his long hair flying in the wind, was struck in 1714 to commemorate the speedy ride. It reads Was sorget Ihr doch? Gott und Ich leben noch. (What worries you so? God and I live still.).[28]

After five years away, Charles arrived in Sweden to find his homeland at war with Russia, Saxony, Hannover, Great Britain and Denmark. Sweden's western enemies attacked southern and western Sweden while Russian forces traveled across Finland to attack the Stockholm district. For the first time, Sweden found itself in a defensive war. Charles' plan was to attack Denmark by striking at her possessions in Norway. It was hoped that by cutting Denmark's Norwegian supply lines the Danes would be compelled to withdraw their forces from Swedish Scania.[citation needed]

Charles invaded Norway in 1716 with a combined force of 7,000 men. He occupied the capital of Christiania, (modern Oslo), and laid siege to the Akershus fortress there. Due to a lack of heavy siege cannons he was unable to dislodge the Norwegian forces inside. After suffering significant losses of men and materiel, Charles was forced to retreat from the capital on 29 April. In the following mid-May, Charles invaded again, this time striking the border town of Fredrikshald, now Halden, in an attempt to capture the fortress of Fredriksten. The attacking Swedes came under heavy cannon fire from the fortress and were forced to withdraw when the Norwegians set the town of Fredrikshald on fire. Swedish casualties in Fredrikshald were estimated at 500 men. While the siege at Fredrikshald was underway, the Swedish supply fleet was attacked and defeated by Tordenskjold in the Battle of Dynekilen.[29]

In 1718, Charles once more invaded Norway. With a main force of 40,000 men, he again laid siege to the fortress of Fredriksten overlooking the town of Fredrikshald. Charles was shot in the head and killed during the siege, while he was inspecting trenches. The invasion was abandoned, and Charles' body was returned to Sweden. A second force, under Carl Gustaf Armfeldt, marched against Trondheim with 10,000 men but was forced to retreat. In the march that ensued, many of the 5,800 remaining men perished in a severe winter storm.

Death edit

While in the trenches close to the perimeter of the fortress on 30 November (11 December New Style), 1718, Charles was struck in the head by a projectile and killed. The shot struck the left side of his skull and exited from the right. He died instantly.[30]

The definitive circumstances around Charles's death remain unclear. Despite multiple investigations of the battlefield, Charles's skull and his clothes, it is not known where and when he was hit, or whether the shot came from the ranks of the enemy or from his own men.[31] There are several hypotheses as to how Charles died, though none have strong enough evidence to be deemed true. Although there were many people around the king at the time of his death, there were no known witnesses to the actual moment he was hit. A likely explanation has been that Charles was killed by Dano-Norwegians as he was within reach of their guns.[32] There are two possibilities that are usually cited: that he was killed by a musket shot, or that he was killed by grapeshot from the nearby fortress.

More theories claim he was assassinated: one is that the killer was a Swedish compatriot and asserts that enemy guns were not firing at the time Charles was struck.[32] Suspects in this claim range from a nearby soldier tired of the siege and wanting to put an end to the war, to an assassin hired by Charles's own brother-in-law, who profited from the event by subsequently taking the throne himself as Frederick I of Sweden, that person being Frederick's aide-de-camp, André Sicre. Sicre confessed during what was claimed to be a state of delirium brought on by fever but later recanted.[32] It has also been suspected that a plot to kill Charles may have been put in place by a group of wealthy Swedes who would benefit from the blocking of a 17% wealth tax that Charles intended to introduce.[32] In the Varberg Fortress museum there is a display with a lead-filled brass button of Swedish origin that is claimed by some to be the projectile that killed the king.

Another odd account of Charles's death comes from Finnish writer Carl Nordling, who states that the king's surgeon, Melchior Neumann, dreamed the king had told him that he was not shot from the fortress but from "one who came creeping".[32]

 
From the autopsy of Charles XII in 1917 [33]
 
Charles XII's sarcophagus in Riddarholmen Church, Stockholm

Charles's body has been exhumed on three occasions to ascertain the cause of death; in 1746, 1859 and 1917.[32] The 1859 exhumation found that the wound was in accordance with a shot from the Norwegian fort. In 1917, his head was photographed and x-rayed. Peter Englund asserted in his essay "On the death of Charles XII and other murders[34]" that the mortal wound sustained by the King, with a smaller exit wound than entry wound, would be consistent with being hit by a bullet with a speed not exceeding 150 m/s, concluding that Charles was killed by stray grapeshot from the nearby fortress. A 2022 study also found that iron grapeshot was likely to have killed the king, citing evidence from ballistic experiments as well as the absence of lead fragments in Charles's skull.[35]

Academic research from University of Oulu and University of Helsinki concluded that Charles XII was likely killed by an enemy projectile.[36][35]

Charles was succeeded to the Swedish throne by his sister, Ulrika Eleonora. As his duchy of Palatine Zweibrücken required a male heir, Charles was succeeded as ruler there by his cousin Gustav Leopold. Georg Heinrich von Görtz, Charles' minister, was beheaded in 1719.

Personal life edit

Charles never married and fathered no children of whom historians are aware. In his youth, he was particularly encouraged to find a suitable spouse in order to secure the succession, but he would frequently avoid the subject of sex and marriage. Possible candidates included Princess Sophia Hedwig of Denmark, Louisa Maria Stuart and Princess Maria Elisabeth of Holstein-Gottorp – but of the latter he pleaded that he could never wed someone "as ugly as Satan and with such a devilish big mouth".[37] Instead, he made it clear that he would marry only someone of his own choice, and for love rather than dynastic pressures. His lack of mistresses may have been due to a strong religious faith.[38] Charles himself suggested in conversation with Axel Löwen that he actively resisted any match until peace could be secured[39] and was in some sense "married" to the military life.[40][41] But that he was "chaste" occasioned speculation in his lifetime. Much later speculation that he was a hermaphrodite was quelled in 1917 when his coffin was opened and he was shown to have beard growth.[42]

 
Portrait of King Charles XII. Johan David Schwartz, 1706

In his conversations with Löwen, he also stated that he did not lack taste for beautiful women, but that he held in his sexual desires for fear that they would get out of control if unchecked, and that if he committed to something like that, it would be forever.[39][43] Some historians suggest that he resisted a marriage with Denmark which could have caused a family rift between those who dynastically favoured Holstein-Gottorp.[44] Historians such as Blanning and Montefiore believe he was in fact homosexual.[45][46] Certainly a letter from Reuterholm suggested that Charles had indicated a closeness to the Elector Prince of Saxony, Maximilian Emanuel of Württemberg-Winnental, whom Charles described as "very pretty". But writing in the 1960s, Hatton argues that Württemberg was very much heterosexual and the relationship is just as likely to have been that of teacher-pupil.[42]

Legacy edit

 
Charles XII by Johann Heinrich Wedekind

Exceptional for abstaining from alcohol and sex, he felt most comfortable during warfare. Contemporaries report of his seemingly inhuman tolerance for pain and his utter lack of emotion. His brilliant campaigning and startling victories brought his country to the pinnacle of her prestige and power, although the Great Northern War resulted in Sweden's defeat and the end of the empire within years of his own death.[citation needed] In his youth, renowned Russian general Alexander Suvorov considered Charles XII his hero together with Julius Caesar.[47] Like Charles XII, Suvorov adopted an aggressive style of tactics and campaigning, seemingly inspired by the Swedish king.[48]

Charles's death marked the end of autocratic kingship in Sweden, and the subsequent Age of Liberty saw a shift of power from the monarch to the parliament of the estates.[49] Historians of the late 18th and early 19th centuries viewed Charles' death as the result of an aristocratic plot, and Gustav IV Adolf, the king who refused to settle with Napoleon Bonaparte, "identified himself with Charles as a type of righteous man struggling with iniquity" (Roberts).[50] Throughout the 19th century's romantic nationalism Charles XII was viewed as a national hero. He was idealized as a heroic, virtuous young warrior king, and his fight against Peter the Great was associated with the contemporary Swedish-Russian enmity.[51] Examples of the romantic hero idolatry of Charles XII in several genres are Esaias Tegnér's song Kung Karl, den unge hjälte (1818), Johan Peter Molin's statue[51] in Stockholm's Kungsträdgården (unveiled on 30 November 1868, the 150th anniversary of Charles's death)[52] and Gustaf Cederström's painting Karl XII:s likfärd ("Funeral procession of Charles XII", 1878).[53] The date of Charles's death was chosen by a student association in Lund for annual torch marches beginning in 1853.[54]

In his 1901 play Karl XII, August Strindberg broke with the heroization practice by showing an introverted Charles XII in conflict with his impoverished subjects.[55] In the so-called Strindberg feud (1910–1912), his response to the "Swedish cult of Charles XII" (Steene)[56] was that Charles had been "Sweden's ruin, the great offender, a ruffian, the rowdies' idol, a counterfeiter."[57] Verner von Heidenstam however, one of his opponents in the feud, in his book Karolinerna instead "emphasized the heroic steadfastness of the Swedish people in the somber years of trial during the long-drawn-out campaigns of Karl XII" (Scott).[58]

In the 1930s, the Swedish Nazis held celebrations on the date of Charles XII's death, and shortly before the outbreak of World War II, Adolf Hitler received from Sweden a sculpture of the king at his birthday.[59] In the late 20th century, Swedish nationalists and neo-Nazis had again used 30 November as a date for their ceremonies, however these were regularly interrupted by larger counter-demonstrations and were abandoned.[60]

Scientific contributions edit

Apart from being a monarch, the King's interests included mathematics, and anything that would be beneficial to his warlike purposes. He is credited with having invented an octal numeral system, as well as a more elaborate one with the base 64, which he considered more suitable for war purposes because all the boxes used for materials such as gunpowder were cubic. According to a report by contemporary scientist Emanuel Swedenborg, the King had sketched a model of his thoughts on a piece of paper and handed it to him at their meeting in Lund in 1716. The paper was reportedly still in existence a hundred years later but has since been lost.[61]

Literature edit

Charles fascinated many in his time. In 1731, Voltaire wrote a biography of Charles XII, History of Charles XII. Voltaire portrays the Swedish king in a positive light, against the brutal nature of Peter the Great.[62] The English man of letters Samuel Johnson wrote of Charles in his poem "The Vanity of Human Wishes":[citation needed]

On what Foundation stands the warrior's pride,
How just his hopes let Swedish Charles decide;
A frame of adamant, a soul of fire,
No dangers fright him, and no labours tire;
O'er love, o'er fear, extends his wide domain,
Unconquered lord of pleasure and of pain;
No joys to him pacific sceptres yield;
War sounds the trump, he rushes to the field;
Behold surrounding kings their power to combine,
And one capitulate, and one resign;
Peace courts his hand, but spreads her charms in vain;
"Think nothing gained", he cries, "till nought remain,
On Moscow's walls till Gothic standards fly,
And all be mine beneath the polar sky."
The march begins in military state,
And nations on his eye suspended wait;
Stern Famine guards the solitary coast,
And Winter barricades the realms of Frost;
He comes, not want and cold his course delay; -
Hide, blushing Glory, hide Pultowa's day:
The vanquished hero leaves his broken bands,
And shows his miseries in distant lands;
Condemned a needy supplicant to wait,
While ladies interpose, and slaves debate.
But did not Chance at length her error mend?
Did no subverted empire mark his end?
Did rival monarchs give the fatal wound?
Or hostile millions press him to the ground?
His fall was destined to a barren strand,
A petty fortress, and a dubious hand;
He left the name, at which the world grew pale,
To point a moral or adorn a tale.

Swedish author Frans G. Bengtsson and Professor Ragnhild Hatton have written biographies of Charles XII of Sweden.[63][64][65]

In 1938 E. M. Almedingen wrote The Lion of the North: Charles XII, King of Sweden.[66]

Charles XII figures quite prominently in Robert Massie's magnum opus Peter the Great.[67]

Ancestors edit

 
Coat of Arms of the House of Palatinate-Zweibrücken

In popular culture edit

He is referred to in the anime Legend of the Galactic Heroes as the Swedish Meteor; whose similarity to Reinhard von Lohengramm may portend the dynasty dying out without a successor.

August Strindberg's 1901 play Carl XII is about him.

The 1925 Swedish film Charles XII is a two-part silent epic starring Gösta Ekman the Elder portraying his reign.

In the 1968 Polish film Hrabina Cosel, Charles XII is portrayed by Daniel Olbrychski.

In the 1983 Swedish comedy film Kalabaliken i Bender [sv], Charles XII is portrayed by Gösta Ekman the Younger.

In 2007, Charles XII was portrayed by Eduard Flerov in the Russian drama The Sovereign's Servant.

Charles XII appears in the absurdist comedy A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence (2014), in which his army passes a modern-day cafe on their way to, and retreating from, the Battle of Poltava. He is played by Viktor Gyllenberg.[68][69]

The Swedish power metal band Sabaton wrote an album named after him, which includes several songs about his life.[70][71]

Battles of Charles XII edit

Date Action Type[b] Location[c] Warring Opponent/s Outcome
Danish–Holstein War of 1700
1. 4 Aug 1700 Humlebæk Landing Denmark–Norway
(Denmark)
  Jens Rostgaard Victory
Baltic campaigns of 1700–1701
2. 27 Nov 1700 Pyhajoggi [de] Skirmish Swedish Estonia
(Estonia)
  Boris Sheremetev Victory
3. 30 Nov 1700 Narva Battle Swedish Estonia
(Estonia)
  Charles de Croÿ Victory
4. 19 Jul 1701 Düna Battle Swedish Livonia
(Latvia)
 
 
Adam von Steinau
Anikita Repnin
Victory
Polish–Lithuanian campaigns of 1701–1706
5. 15–16 Nov 1701 Tryszki Skirmish Duchy of Lithuania
(Lithuania)
  Grzegorz Ogiński Victory
6. 19 Jul 1702 Kliszów Battle Kingdom of Poland
(Poland)
 
 
Augustus II
Adam von Steinau
Hieronim Lubomirski
Victory
7. 1 May 1703 Pułtusk Battle Kingdom of Poland
(Poland)
  Adam von Steinau Victory
8. 26 May – 14 Oct 1703 Thorn Siege Kingdom of Poland
(Poland)
  Christoph von Kanitz [de] Victory
9. 6 Sep 1704 Lemberg Assault Kingdom of Poland
(Ukraine)
   Franciszek Gałecki [pl] Victory
10. 7 Nov 1704 Poniec Battle Kingdom of Poland
(Poland)
  Johann von Schulenburg Victory
11. 9 Nov 1704 Oderbeltz [sv] Battle Lower Silesia
(Poland)
  Unknown Victory
12. 26 Jan – 10 Apr 1706 Grodno Blockade Duchy of Lithuania
(Belarus)
  Georg Ogilvy [ru] Victory
Russian invasion of 1708–1709
13. 6–7 Feb 1708 Grodno Skirmish Duchy of Lithuania
(Belarus)
  Peter I Victory
14. 14 Jul 1708 Holowczyn Battle Duchy of Lithuania
(Belarus)
    Boris Sheremetev Victory
15. 10 Sep 1708 Malatitze Battle Duchy of Lithuania
(Belarus)
    Peter I
Mikhail Golitsyn
Victory
16. 20 Sep 1708 Rajovka Skirmish Duchy of Lithuania
(Russia)
    Peter I
Christian Bauer
Victory
17. 11–13 Nov 1708 Desna Operation Cossack Hetmanate
(Ukraine)
  Ludwig von Hallart [de] Victory
18. 17 Jan 1709 Veprik Assault Cossack Hetmanate
(Ukraine)
   William Fermor Victory
19. 8 Feb 1709 Oposhnya Skirmish Cossack Hetmanate
(Ukraine)
   Otto von Schaumburg [ru] Victory
20. 19 Feb 1709 Khukhra[72][73] Skirmish Tsardom of Russia
(Ukraine)
  Unknown Victory
21. 21 Feb 1709 Krasnokutsk–Gorodnoye Battle Tsardom of Russia
(Ukraine)
    Carl von Rönne Victory
22. 8 Jul 1709 Poltava Battle Cossack Hetmanate
(Ukraine)
    Peter I
Boris Sheremetev
Defeat
Turkish exile in 1709–1714
23. 31 Jan – 1 Feb 1713 Bender Assault Ottoman Empire
(Moldova)
  Ismail Pasha [tr] Defeat
German campaigns of 1714–1715
24. 21–27 Apr 1715 Usedom[74][75] Operation Swedish Pomerania
(Germany / Poland)
  Captain Rohr Victory
25. 31 Jul – 22 Aug 1715 Usedom[74][75] Operation Swedish Pomerania
(Germany / Poland)
 
 
Georg von Arnim [de]
Louis of Württemberg-Winnental
Defeat
26. 12 Jul – 24 Dec 1715 Stralsund Siege Swedish Pomerania
(Germany)
 
 
 
Leopold of Anhalt-Dessau
August von Wackerbarth [de]
Jobst von Scholten
Defeat
27. 16 Nov 1715 Stresow Battle Swedish Pomerania
(Germany)
    Leopold of Anhalt-Dessau Defeat
Norwegian campaigns of 1716 and 1718
28. 9 Mar 1716 Høland Skirmish Denmark–Norway
(Norway)
  Ulrik Kruse [dk] Victory
29. 21 Mar 1716 Christiania [sv] Skirmish Denmark–Norway
(Norway)
  Jørgen von Klenow Victory
30. 22 Mar – 30 Apr 1716 Akershus Fortress [no] Siege Denmark–Norway
(Norway)
  Jørgen von Klenow Defeat
31. 3–5 Jun 1716 Sponvika Sconce[76] Siege Denmark–Norway
(Norway)
  Hans Günter Victory
32. 3–4 Jul 1716 Fredrikshald [de] Assault Denmark–Norway
(Norway)
  Hans Brun [dk] Defeat
33. 15 Jul – 16 Nov 1718 Iddefjord [no] Operation Denmark–Norway
(Norway)
  Barthold Landsberg Victory
34. 20 Nov – 14 Dec 1718 Fredriksten Siege Denmark–Norway
(Norway)
  Barthold Landsberg Defeat  

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Demirbaş, the Turkish word for fixed asset, is literally "ironhead" (demir as "iron", baş as "head"), which is the reason why this nickname has often been translated as Ironhead Charles. However, it should be said, that this translation is wrong and does not reflect the truth. Although, written separately, demir baş really means "iron head", the whole word demirbaş means "inventory",[22] which reflects Charles' long stay in Ottoman Bender at expenses of sultan's exchequer.
  2. ^ In this table, the following criteria applies: "Landing" refers to a contested amphibious operation; "skirmish" refers to a limited engagement, either by parts of an army or a smaller force, with minor strategic impact or losses; "battle" refers to a larger engagement in which one or both sides fights in battle-formation to defeat the other army, with considerable strategic impact or losses; "siege" refers to a contested fortification or larger settlement, where any attempts to storm were indecisive; "assault" refers to a contested or uncontested fortification or larger settlement, where an assault played the decisive role; "blockade" refers to an attacker's attempt to starve out the garrison of a fortification or larger settlement; "operation" refers to a pre-planned military operation to seize a larger area of strategic value, in which several minor engagements are fought.
  3. ^ Contemporary location written at the top; present-day location written inside parentheses.

References edit

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  5. ^ "Sweden and Finland. Titles of European hereditary rulers". eurulers.altervista.org. from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 28 April 2016.
  6. ^ Liljegren 2000, p. 11
  7. ^ "riksbanér". samlingar.shm.se (in Swedish). Retrieved 21 July 2023.
  8. ^ Article Karl 30 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine in Nordisk familjebok.
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  15. ^ Karl XII by Bengt Liljegren, pp. 151, 163.
  16. ^ Svenska slagfält, p. 280.
  17. ^ Svenska folkets underbara öden, book four by Carl Grimberg, about the numbers of Mazepa's army.
  18. ^ Bra Böckers Lexikon, the article of Karl XII.
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  22. ^ "Demirbaş – Yandex Çeviri: İngilizce – Türkçe, Rusça – Türkçe, Almanca – Türkçe ve diğer diller için sözlük ve çevrimiçi çeviri servisidir". ceviri.yandex.com.tr. from the original on 13 March 2022. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
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  30. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  31. ^ Lindqvist, Herman (29 November 2009). "Karl XII:s död ger inte forskarna någon ro". Aftonbladet. from the original on 8 March 2014. Retrieved 26 February 2012.
  32. ^ a b c d e f Mike Dash (17 September 2012). "Past Imperfect". Smithsonian Magazine. Archived from the original on 28 August 2016. Retrieved 25 September 2012.
  33. ^ Dash, Mike. "The Blazing Career and Mysterious Death of 'The Swedish Meteor'". Smithsonian. from the original on 8 October 2021. Retrieved 24 December 2017.
  34. ^ Förflutenhetens landskap ("The Landscape of Times Past") (1991), collection of essays, pp. 126–129.
  35. ^ a b Juho-Antti Junno; et al. (November 2022). "The death of King Charles XII of Sweden revisited". PNAS Nexus. 1 (5): pgac234. doi:10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac234. PMC 9802245. PMID 36712377.
  36. ^ "Tutkijat ratkaisivat yli 300 vuotta vanhan mysteerin: Kaarle XII ei kuollutkaan omien luodista, vaan vihollisen ampumana". 23 November 2022. from the original on 23 November 2022. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
  37. ^ R. M. Hatton, Charles XII of Sweden, 1968, p. 89.
  38. ^ Frans Bengtsson, The Life of Charles XII, p. 38.
  39. ^ a b Liljegren, Karl XII: en biografi.
  40. ^ R. M. Hatton, Charles XII of Sweden, 1968, p. 210.
  41. ^ Frans Bengtsson, The Life of Charles XII, p. 469.
  42. ^ a b R. M. Hatton, Charles XII of Sweden, 1968, p. 219.
  43. ^ R. M. Hatton, Charles XII of Sweden, 1968, p. 220.
  44. ^ Byron Nordstrom, Dictionary of Scandinavian History, p. 317.
  45. ^ Tim Blanning, Frederick the Great, 2015, p. 152.
  46. ^ Simon Sebag Montefiore, The Romanovs: 1613–1918, 2016, p. 451.
  47. ^ Anthing, Frederic (1799). History of the campaigns of Count Alexander Suworow Rymnikski. London: J. Wright. p. 7. OCLC 901339492.
  48. ^ Essame, Hubert (1961). Military review the professional journal of the United States Army (January): The Suvorov Legend. Kansas: Command and General Staff School. p. 17.
  49. ^ Massengale, James (1996). "The Enlightenment and the Gustavian Age". In Warme, Lars G. (ed.). A History of Swedish literature. University of Nebraska Press. pp. 102, 104–105. ISBN 978-0803247505.
  50. ^ Roberts, Michael (1991). From Oxenstierna to Charles XII. Four Studies. Cambridge University Press. p. 164. Repr. 2003.
  51. ^ a b Roberts, Michael (1991). From Oxenstierna to Charles XII. Four Studies. Cambridge University Press. pp. 164–165. Repr. 2003.
  52. ^ Lindblom, Andreas (1946). Sveriges konsthistoria från forntid till nutid. Vol. 3. Nordisk rotogravyr. p. 1210.
  53. ^ Scott, Franklin Daniel (1988). Sweden, the nation's history. SIU Press. p. 560.
  54. ^ Lööw, Heléne (1998). Nazismen i Sverige 1980–1997. Ordfront.
  55. ^ Steene, Brigitta (1996). "Strindberg and the transition to Modernism". In Warme, Lars G. (ed.). A History of Swedish literature. University of Nebraska Press. p. 267. ISBN 978-0803247505.
  56. ^ Steene, Brigitta (1996). "Strindberg and the transition to Modernism". In Warme, Lars G. (ed.). A History of Swedish literature. University of Nebraska Press. p. 271. ISBN 978-0803247505.
  57. ^ Moers, Gerald (2000). "Im Gemeindewald der Geschichte". In Schöning, Udo (ed.). Internationalität nationaler Literaturen. Wallstein. pp. 285–286, fn. 83.
  58. ^ Scott, Franklin Daniel (1988). Sweden, the nation's history. SIU Press. p. 551.
  59. ^ Oredsson, Sverker (2000). "Gustav II. Adolf in Geschichtsschreibung und Kult". In Petersson, Rikke (ed.). Damals, als Schweden eine Großmacht war ... LIT. p. 59.
  60. ^ "Karl XII-firare ligger lågt i år". Dagens Nyheter. DN. 27 November 2011. from the original on 30 January 2012. Retrieved 27 February 2012. "Nationalists abandon 'warrior king' anniversary". TheLOcal. 28 November 2011. from the original on 30 November 2011. Retrieved 27 February 2012. On the use of Charles XII by nationalists and Nazis in general . Peter Englund, in Expressen 30 November 1994. Archived from the original on 21 April 2012.
  61. ^ Donald Knuth, The Art of Computer Programming
  62. ^ Voltaire (1740). The History of Charles XII. King of Sweden ... Seventh edition... p. 1.
  63. ^ Bengtsson, Frans G. (1994). Karl XII:s Levnad. Norstedts. ISBN 978-9119418326.
  64. ^ Hatton, Ragnhild Marie (1968). Charles XII of Sweden. London. ISBN 978-0297748267.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  65. ^ Voltaire (1731). History of Charles XII, King of Sweden.
  66. ^ The lion of the north : Charles XII – King of Sweden (Book, 1938). OCLC 1063928075.
  67. ^ Massie, Robert K. (1981). Peter the Great: His Life and World. New York City: Ballantine Books. pp. Part 3–4. ISBN 0-345-29806-3.
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  72. ^ Nordberg, Jöran (1740). Konung Carl den XII:tes Historia, volume 1. Stockholm: Pet. Momma. pp. 892–893. OCLC 256604521.
  73. ^ Quennerstedt, August (1901). Karolinska krigares dagböcker jämte andra samtida skrifter, volume 1. Lund: Gleerupska univ. bokhandeln. pp. 343–344. OCLC 186563462.
  74. ^ a b Poetzsch, Johnny (2018). Phoenix – den återuppståndne: Försvaret av Stralsund och de svenska provinserna i Nordtyskland 1710–1716. Bålsta: Poetzsch Historia. pp. 457–458, 487–491, 511–517. ISBN 9789198448405.
  75. ^ a b Tuxen, August; With-Seidelin, Carl (1922). Bidrag til den store nordiske krigs historie: Erobringen af Sverigs tyske provinser 1715–1716. Copenhagen: Det Nordiske forlag. pp. 39–40, 104–106. OCLC 1140275292.
  76. ^ Lagermark, Johan August (1883). Karl XII:s krig i Norge 1716. Uppsala: Edv. Berling. p. 66. OCLC 457320804.

Further reading edit

  • Bain, Robert Nisbet (1911). "Charles XII." . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). pp. 929–931.
  • Bain, Robert Nisbet. Charles XII and the Collapse of the Swedish Empire, 1682–1719 (1899) online.
  • Bengtsson, F. G. The Life of Charles XII, King of Sweden, 1697–1718 (1960). also published as The sword does not jest. The heroic life of King Charles XII of Sweden (St. Martin's Press 1960).
  • Browning, Oscar. Charles XII of Sweden (London: Hurst and Blackett, 1899).
  • Fielding, Henry (Translator), The Military History of Charles XII. King of Sweden, Written by the Express Order of His Majesty, by M. Gustavus Adlerfeld, to Which Is Added, an Exact Account of the Battle of Pultowa, Illustrated with Plans in Three Volumes (London: printed for J. and P. Knapton; J. Hodges; A. Millar; and J. Nourse, 1740). Reprinted by Gale Ecco, Print Editions (2010).
  • Gade, John (Translator), Charles the Twelfth King of Sweden: Translated from the manuscript of Carl Gustafson Klingspor (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1916). Reprinted by Merkaba Press (2017).
  • Glaeser, Michael. By Defeating My Enemies: Charles XII of Sweden and the Great Northern War, 1682–1721 (Helion & Co Ltd, 2020).
  • Hattendorf, J. B., Åsa Karlsson, Margriet Lacy-Bruijn, Augustus J. Veenendaal Jr., and Rolof van Hövell tot Westerflier, Charles XII: Warrior King (Rotterdam: Karwansaray, 2018).
  • Hatton, R. M. Charles XII of Sweden (1968).
  • Hone, Michael. Charles XII of Sweden: Versus Peter the Great of Russia (Createspace Independent Pub., 2016).
  • Liljegren, Bengt (2000). Karl XII : en biografi. Lund: Historiska media. ISBN 978-9188930996.
  • Peterson, Gary Dean. Warrior kings of Sweden: the rise of an empire in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries (McFarland, 2007).
  • Voltaire, Francois Marie Arouet de. History of Charles XII, King of Sweden (translated by W.H. Dilworth, 1760). Reprinted by True World of Books (2020).

External links edit

  •   Media related to Charles XII of Sweden at Wikimedia Commons
  • The Swedish Meteor: the blazing career and mysterious death of Charles XII Smithsonian summary of assassination theories.
  • Charles XII: on the centenary of his death 1818 The original Swedish text by Esaias Tegner, as well as parallel translations by J.E.D. Bethune (1848) and Charles Harrison-Wallace (1998) and a comment by the latter.
  • (in Swedish)
  • BBC News item: Who killed Sweden's Warrior King?
  • "Charles XII" . The New Student's Reference Work . 1914.
  • "Charles XII" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
  • "Charles XII" . The American Cyclopædia. 1879.
Charles XII of Sweden
Cadet branch of the House of Wittelsbach
Born: 17 June 1682 Died: 30 November 1718
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Sweden
Duke of Bremen and Verden

1697–1718
Succeeded by
Duke of Palatine Zweibrücken
1697–1718
Succeeded by

charles, sweden, carolus, redirects, here, other, uses, carolus, disambiguation, this, article, about, 18th, century, king, sweden, 1925, swedish, film, charles, film, horse, charles, twelfth, charles, sometimes, carl, swedish, karl, carolus, june, 1682, novem. Carolus Rex redirects here For other uses see Carolus Rex disambiguation This article is about the 18th century king of Sweden For the 1925 Swedish film see Charles XII film For the horse see Charles the Twelfth Charles XII sometimes Carl XII Swedish Karl XII or Carolus Rex 17 June 1682 30 November 1718 O S 1 was King of Sweden including current Finland from 1697 to 1718 He belonged to the House of Palatinate Zweibrucken a branch line of the House of Wittelsbach Charles was the only surviving son of Charles XI and Ulrika Eleonora the Elder He assumed power after a seven month caretaker government at the age of fifteen 2 Charles XIIPortrait by Hyacinthe Rigaud c 1715King of SwedenReign5 April 1697 30 November 1718 O S 1 Coronation14 December 1697PredecessorCharles XISuccessorUlrika EleonoraRegentHedwig Eleonora of Holstein Gottorp 5 April 15 December 1697 Born17 June 1682Tre Kronor Stockholm SwedenDied30 November 1718 1718 11 30 aged 36 1 Fredrikshald Denmark NorwayBurial26 February 1719Riddarholmen Church StockholmHousePalatinate ZweibruckenFatherCharles XI of SwedenMotherUlrika Eleonora of DenmarkReligionLutheranSignatureIn 1700 a triple alliance of Denmark Norway Saxony Poland Lithuania and Russia launched a threefold attack on the Swedish protectorate of Holstein Gottorp and provinces of Livonia and Ingria aiming to draw advantage as the Swedish Empire was unaligned and ruled by a young and inexperienced king thus initiating the Great Northern War Leading the Swedish army against the alliance Charles won multiple victories despite being significantly outnumbered A major victory over a Russian army some three times the size in 1700 at the Battle of Narva compelled Peter the Great to sue for peace an offer that Charles subsequently rejected By 1706 Charles now 24 years old had forced all of his foes into submission including in that year a decisively devastating victory by Swedish forces under general Carl Gustav Rehnskiold over a combined army of Saxony and Russia at the Battle of Fraustadt Russia was now the sole remaining hostile power Charles s subsequent march on Moscow met with initial success as victory followed victory the most significant of which was the Battle of Holowczyn where the smaller Swedish army routed a Russian army twice the size The campaign ended with disaster when the Swedish army suffered heavy losses to a Russian force more than twice its size at Poltava Charles had been incapacitated by a wound prior to the battle rendering him unable to take command The defeat was followed by the Surrender at Perevolochna Charles spent the following years in exile in the Ottoman Empire before returning to lead an assault on Norway trying to evict the Danish king from the war once more in order to aim all his forces at the Russians Two campaigns met with frustration and ultimate failure concluding with his death at the Siege of Fredriksten in 1718 At the time most of the Swedish Empire was under foreign military occupation though Sweden itself was still free This situation was later formalized albeit moderated in the subsequent Treaty of Nystad The result was the end of the Swedish Empire and also of its effectively organized absolute monarchy and war machine commencing a parliamentary government unique for continental Europe which would last for half a century until royal autocracy was restored by Gustav III 3 Charles was an exceptionally skilled military leader and tactician as well as an able politician credited with introducing important tax and legal reforms As for his famous reluctance towards peace efforts he is quoted by Voltaire as saying upon the outbreak of the war I have resolved never to start an unjust war but never to end a legitimate one except by defeating my enemies With the war consuming more than half his life and nearly all his reign he never married and fathered no children He was succeeded by his sister Ulrika Eleonora who in turn was coerced to hand over all substantial powers to the Riksdag of the Estates and opted to surrender the throne to her husband Friedrich of Hesse Kassel who became King Frederick I of Sweden 4 Contents 1 Royal title 2 Great Northern War 2 1 Early campaigns 2 2 Russian resurgence 2 3 Exile in the Ottoman Empire 2 4 Pomerania and Norway 3 Death 4 Personal life 5 Legacy 5 1 Scientific contributions 5 2 Literature 6 Ancestors 7 In popular culture 8 Battles of Charles XII 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksRoyal title edit nbsp The 15 year old Charles in 1697 as king of the Swedish EmpireHis title in full as the king of Sweden was as follows The Sovereign and Supreme Lord His Majesty Charles XII by the Grace of God King of Sweden the Goths and the Wends Grand Prince of Finland Duke of Uppland Vastergotland Smaland Ostergotland Skane Sodermanland Vastmanland Dalarna Northern Finland Southern Finland Estonia Livonia Karelia Bremen Verden Stettin Pomerania Rostock Kassuben and Wenden Count to Halsingland Narke Varmland Bohuslan Dalsland Halland Blekinge Gotland Oland Angermanland Westrobothnia Gastrikland Jamtland Medelpad Tavastland Nyland Ostrobothnia Aland Osel Savolax and Lapland Prince of Rugen Lord of Ingeria Kexholm Wismar and Narva so and Count Palatine by the Rhine Duke in Bavaria Count of Zweibrucken Kleeburg as well as Duke of Julich Cleves and Berg Count of Veldenz Sponnheim and Ravensberg Lord of Ravenstein etc etc etc 5 6 7 The fact that Charles was crowned as Charles XII does not mean that he was the 12th king of Sweden by that name Swedish kings Erik XIV 1560 1568 and Charles IX 1604 1611 gave themselves numerals after studying a mythological history of Sweden He was actually the 6th King Charles 8 Great Northern War editMain article Great Northern War Early campaigns edit nbsp Monument to Charles XII in Stockholm with Charles pointing towards Russia Stockholmers call this statue the lion among four pots Lejonet mellan fyra krukor referring to the mortars This contrasts with a nearby statue of Charles XIII which has lions similarly arranged that statue is known as the pot among four lions Krukan mellan fyra lejon referring to a Swedish slang expression for a klutz 9 Around 1700 the monarchs of Denmark Norway Saxony ruled by elector August II of Poland who was also the king of Poland Lithuania and Russia united in an alliance against Sweden mainly through the efforts of Johann Reinhold Patkul a Livonian nobleman who turned traitor when the great reduction of Charles XI in 1680 stripped much of the nobility of lands and properties In late 1699 Charles sent a minor detachment to reinforce his brother in law Duke Frederick IV of Holstein Gottorp who was attacked by Danish forces the following year A Saxon army simultaneously invaded Swedish Livonia and in February 1700 surrounded Riga the most populous city of the Swedish Empire Russia also declared war August 1700 but stopped short of an attack on Swedish Ingria until September 1700 10 Charles s first campaign was against Denmark Norway ruled by his cousin Frederick IV of Denmark For this campaign Charles secured the support of England and the Netherlands both maritime powers concerned with Denmark s threats too close to the Sound Leading a force of 8 000 and 43 ships in an invasion of Zealand Charles rapidly compelled the Danes to submit to the Peace of Travendal in August 1700 which indemnified Holstein 11 Having forced Denmark Norway to make peace within months King Charles turned his attention upon the two other powerful neighbors King August II cousin to both Charles XII and Frederick IV of Denmark Norway and Peter the Great of Russia who also had entered the war against him ironically on the same day that Denmark came to terms 10 Russia had opened their part of the war by invading the Swedish held territories of Livonia and Estonia Charles countered this by attacking the Russian besiegers at the Battle of Narva November 1700 The Russians outnumbered the Swedish army of ten thousand men by almost four to one Charles attacked under cover of a blizzard effectively splitting the Russian army in two and won the battle Many of Peter s troops who fled the battlefield drowned in the Narva River The total number of Russian fatalities reached about 10 000 at the end of the battle while the Swedish forces lost 667 men 12 Charles did not pursue the Russian army Instead he turned against Poland Lithuania which was formally neutral at this point thereby disregarding Polish negotiation proposals supported by the Swedish parliament Charles defeated the Polish king Augustus II and his Saxon allies at the Battle of Kliszow in 1702 and captured many cities of the Commonwealth After the deposition of Augustus as king of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Charles XII put Stanislaw Leszczynski as his puppet on the Polish throne 1704 13 Russian resurgence edit nbsp Charles XII and Mazepa at the Dnieper River after Poltava by Gustaf CederstromWhile Charles won several decisive battles in the Commonwealth and ultimately secured the coronation of his ally Stanislaw Leszczynski and the surrender of Saxony the Russian Tsar Peter the Great embarked on a military reform plan that improved the Russian army using the effectively organized Swedes and other European armies as role models Russian forces managed to penetrate Ingria where they established a new city Saint Petersburg Charles planned an invasion of the Russian heartland allying himself with Ivan Mazepa Hetman of the Ukrainian Cossacks The size of the invading Swedish army was peeled off as Charles left Leszczynski with some 24 000 German and Polish troops departing eastwards from Saxony in late 1707 with some 35 000 men adding a further 12 500 under Adam Ludwig Lewenhaupt marching from Livonia Charles left the homeland with a defense force of approximately 28 800 men with a further 14 000 in Swedish Finland as well as other garrisons in the Baltic and German provinces 14 15 After securing his favorite victory in the Battle of Holowczyn despite being outnumbered over three to one by the new Russian army Charles opted to march eastwards on Moscow rather than try to seize Saint Petersburg founded from the Swedish town of Nyenskans five years earlier 16 Peter the Great managed however to ambush Lewenhaupt s army at Lesnaya before Charles could combine his forces thus losing valuable supplies artillery and half of Lewenhaupt s men Charles Polish ally Stanislaw Leszczynski was facing internal problems of his own Charles expected the support of a massive Cossack rebellion led by Mazepa in Ukraine with estimates suggesting Mazepa was able to muster about 40 000 troops However the Russians subjugated the rebellion and destroyed its capital Baturin before the arrival of the Swedish troops The harsh climate took its toll as well because Charles marched his troops to winter camp in Ukraine 17 By the time of the decisive Battle of Poltava in July 1709 Charles had been wounded one third of his infantry was dead and his supply train had been destroyed The king was incapacitated by a gunshot wound to the foot and was unable to lead the Swedish forces With the numbers of Charles army reduced to some 23 000 with many wounded or involved on the siege of Poltava his general Carl Gustav Rehnskiold had a clearly inferior force to face the fortified and modernized army of Tsar Peter with some 45 000 men 18 The Swedish assault ended in disaster and the king fled south to the Ottoman Empire with a small entourage and set up camp at Bender with some 1 000 of his Caroleans Karoliner in Swedish The remainder of the army surrendered days later at Perevolochna under Lewenhaupt s command most of them including Lewenhaupt himself spending the rest of their days in Russian captivity The Swedish defeat at Poltava marked the downfall of the Swedish Empire 19 as well as the founding of the Russian Empire 20 Exile in the Ottoman Empire edit nbsp Royal MonogramThe Ottomans initially welcomed the Swedish king where he went to Abdurrahman Pasha the commander of the Ozu Castle as he was about to fall into the hands of the Russian army and he was able to take refuge in the castle at the last moment Afterward he settled in Bender at the invitation of its governor Aga Yusuf Pasha In the meantime Charles sent Stanislaw Poniatowski and Thomas Funck sv as his messengers to Constantinople 21 They managed to indirectly contact with Gulnus Sultan mother of Sultan Ahmed III who became intrigued by Charles in which she took an interest in his cause and even corresponded with him in Bender 21 His expenses during his long stay in the Ottoman Empire were covered by the Ottoman state budget as part of the fixed assets Demirbas in Turkish hence his nickname Demirbas Sarl Fixed Asset Charles in Turkey a Eventually a small village named Karlstad Varnița had to be built near Bender to accommodate the ever growing Swedish population there 23 Gulnus Sultan convinced her son to declare war against Russia as she thought that Charles was a man worth taking a risk for Later on the Ottomans and Russians signed the Treaty of the Pruth and Treaty of Adrianople to end the hostilities between them The treaties dissatisfied the pro war party supported by King Charles and Stanislaw Poniatowski who failed to reignite the conflict nbsp Portrait by Hyacinthe Rigaud c 1715However the Sultan Ahmed III s subjects in the empire eventually got tired of Charles scheming His entourage also accumulated huge amounts of debts with Bender merchants Eventually crowds of townspeople attacked the Swedish colony at Bender and Charles had to defend himself against the mobs and the Ottoman Janissaries involved This uprising was called kalabalik Turkish for crowd which afterward found a place in Swedish lexicon referring to a ruckus The Janissaries did not shoot Charles during the skirmish at Bender but captured him and put him under house arrest at Dimetoka nowadays Didimoticho and Constantinople During his semi imprisonment the King played chess and studied the Ottoman Navy and the naval architecture of the Ottoman galleons His sketches and designs eventually led to the famous Swedish war ships Jarramas Yaramaz and Jilderim Yildirim citation needed Meanwhile Russia and Poland regained and expanded their borders Great Britain an adversary of Sweden defected from its alliance obligations while Prussia attacked Swedish holdings in Germany Russia occupied Finland the Greater Wrath 1713 1721 After defeats of the Swedish army consisting mainly of Finnish troops in the Battle of Helsinki 1713 the Battle of Palkane 1713 and the Battle of Storkyro 1714 the military administration and clergymen escaped from Finland which fell under Russian military regime 24 During his five year stay in the Ottoman Empire Charles XII corresponded with his sister and eventual successor Ulrika Eleonora According to Mrs Ragnhild Marie Hatton a Norwegian British historian in some of those letters Charles expressed his desire for a peace treaty which would be defensible in the future Swedish generations eyes However he emphasized that only a greater respect for Sweden in Europe would enable him to achieve such a peace treaty Meanwhile the Swedish Council of State government and Estates Diet Parliament tried to keep the beleaguered Sweden somehow organized and independent Eventually in the autumn of 1714 their warning letter reached him In it those executive and legislative bodies told the absentee King that unless he quickly returned to Sweden they would independently conclude an achievable peace treaty with Russia Poland and Denmark This stark admonition prompted Charles to rush back to Sweden 25 Charles traveled back to Sweden with a group of Ottomans soldiers such as escorts and businessmen to whom he promised to repay his debts during his stay in the Ottoman Empire but they had to wait several years before that happened According to the prevailing church law in Sweden at that time all who lived in the country but were not members of the Swedish state church would be baptized In order for the Jewish and Muslim creditors to avoid this Charles wrote a free letter so that they could practice their religions without being punished The soldiers chose to remain in Sweden instead of difficult trips home They were called Askersson the word asker in Turkish means soldier 26 However there are accounts implying that following the long stay for Charles to repay his debts they got paid and left the country 27 Pomerania and Norway edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Karl XII 1707 Skokloster Castle nbsp Uniform worn by Charles XII in Frederikshall on 30 November 1718 Shown in The Royal Armoury in Stockholm nbsp Bringing Home the Body of King Charles XII A romanticized painting by Gustaf Cederstrom 1884Charles agreed to leave Constantinople and returned to Swedish Pomerania He made the journey on horseback riding across Europe in just fifteen days He traveled across the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary to Vienna and arrived at Stralsund A medal with Charles on horseback his long hair flying in the wind was struck in 1714 to commemorate the speedy ride It reads Was sorget Ihr doch Gott und Ich leben noch What worries you so God and I live still 28 After five years away Charles arrived in Sweden to find his homeland at war with Russia Saxony Hannover Great Britain and Denmark Sweden s western enemies attacked southern and western Sweden while Russian forces traveled across Finland to attack the Stockholm district For the first time Sweden found itself in a defensive war Charles plan was to attack Denmark by striking at her possessions in Norway It was hoped that by cutting Denmark s Norwegian supply lines the Danes would be compelled to withdraw their forces from Swedish Scania citation needed Charles invaded Norway in 1716 with a combined force of 7 000 men He occupied the capital of Christiania modern Oslo and laid siege to the Akershus fortress there Due to a lack of heavy siege cannons he was unable to dislodge the Norwegian forces inside After suffering significant losses of men and materiel Charles was forced to retreat from the capital on 29 April In the following mid May Charles invaded again this time striking the border town of Fredrikshald now Halden in an attempt to capture the fortress of Fredriksten The attacking Swedes came under heavy cannon fire from the fortress and were forced to withdraw when the Norwegians set the town of Fredrikshald on fire Swedish casualties in Fredrikshald were estimated at 500 men While the siege at Fredrikshald was underway the Swedish supply fleet was attacked and defeated by Tordenskjold in the Battle of Dynekilen 29 In 1718 Charles once more invaded Norway With a main force of 40 000 men he again laid siege to the fortress of Fredriksten overlooking the town of Fredrikshald Charles was shot in the head and killed during the siege while he was inspecting trenches The invasion was abandoned and Charles body was returned to Sweden A second force under Carl Gustaf Armfeldt marched against Trondheim with 10 000 men but was forced to retreat In the march that ensued many of the 5 800 remaining men perished in a severe winter storm Death editWhile in the trenches close to the perimeter of the fortress on 30 November 11 December New Style 1718 Charles was struck in the head by a projectile and killed The shot struck the left side of his skull and exited from the right He died instantly 30 The definitive circumstances around Charles s death remain unclear Despite multiple investigations of the battlefield Charles s skull and his clothes it is not known where and when he was hit or whether the shot came from the ranks of the enemy or from his own men 31 There are several hypotheses as to how Charles died though none have strong enough evidence to be deemed true Although there were many people around the king at the time of his death there were no known witnesses to the actual moment he was hit A likely explanation has been that Charles was killed by Dano Norwegians as he was within reach of their guns 32 There are two possibilities that are usually cited that he was killed by a musket shot or that he was killed by grapeshot from the nearby fortress More theories claim he was assassinated one is that the killer was a Swedish compatriot and asserts that enemy guns were not firing at the time Charles was struck 32 Suspects in this claim range from a nearby soldier tired of the siege and wanting to put an end to the war to an assassin hired by Charles s own brother in law who profited from the event by subsequently taking the throne himself as Frederick I of Sweden that person being Frederick s aide de camp Andre Sicre Sicre confessed during what was claimed to be a state of delirium brought on by fever but later recanted 32 It has also been suspected that a plot to kill Charles may have been put in place by a group of wealthy Swedes who would benefit from the blocking of a 17 wealth tax that Charles intended to introduce 32 In the Varberg Fortress museum there is a display with a lead filled brass button of Swedish origin that is claimed by some to be the projectile that killed the king Another odd account of Charles s death comes from Finnish writer Carl Nordling who states that the king s surgeon Melchior Neumann dreamed the king had told him that he was not shot from the fortress but from one who came creeping 32 nbsp From the autopsy of Charles XII in 1917 33 nbsp Charles XII s sarcophagus in Riddarholmen Church StockholmCharles s body has been exhumed on three occasions to ascertain the cause of death in 1746 1859 and 1917 32 The 1859 exhumation found that the wound was in accordance with a shot from the Norwegian fort In 1917 his head was photographed and x rayed Peter Englund asserted in his essay On the death of Charles XII and other murders 34 that the mortal wound sustained by the King with a smaller exit wound than entry wound would be consistent with being hit by a bullet with a speed not exceeding 150 m s concluding that Charles was killed by stray grapeshot from the nearby fortress A 2022 study also found that iron grapeshot was likely to have killed the king citing evidence from ballistic experiments as well as the absence of lead fragments in Charles s skull 35 Academic research from University of Oulu and University of Helsinki concluded that Charles XII was likely killed by an enemy projectile 36 35 Charles was succeeded to the Swedish throne by his sister Ulrika Eleonora As his duchy of Palatine Zweibrucken required a male heir Charles was succeeded as ruler there by his cousin Gustav Leopold Georg Heinrich von Gortz Charles minister was beheaded in 1719 Personal life editCharles never married and fathered no children of whom historians are aware In his youth he was particularly encouraged to find a suitable spouse in order to secure the succession but he would frequently avoid the subject of sex and marriage Possible candidates included Princess Sophia Hedwig of Denmark Louisa Maria Stuart and Princess Maria Elisabeth of Holstein Gottorp but of the latter he pleaded that he could never wed someone as ugly as Satan and with such a devilish big mouth 37 Instead he made it clear that he would marry only someone of his own choice and for love rather than dynastic pressures His lack of mistresses may have been due to a strong religious faith 38 Charles himself suggested in conversation with Axel Lowen that he actively resisted any match until peace could be secured 39 and was in some sense married to the military life 40 41 But that he was chaste occasioned speculation in his lifetime Much later speculation that he was a hermaphrodite was quelled in 1917 when his coffin was opened and he was shown to have beard growth 42 nbsp Portrait of King Charles XII Johan David Schwartz 1706In his conversations with Lowen he also stated that he did not lack taste for beautiful women but that he held in his sexual desires for fear that they would get out of control if unchecked and that if he committed to something like that it would be forever 39 43 Some historians suggest that he resisted a marriage with Denmark which could have caused a family rift between those who dynastically favoured Holstein Gottorp 44 Historians such as Blanning and Montefiore believe he was in fact homosexual 45 46 Certainly a letter from Reuterholm suggested that Charles had indicated a closeness to the Elector Prince of Saxony Maximilian Emanuel of Wurttemberg Winnental whom Charles described as very pretty But writing in the 1960s Hatton argues that Wurttemberg was very much heterosexual and the relationship is just as likely to have been that of teacher pupil 42 Legacy edit nbsp Charles XII by Johann Heinrich WedekindExceptional for abstaining from alcohol and sex he felt most comfortable during warfare Contemporaries report of his seemingly inhuman tolerance for pain and his utter lack of emotion His brilliant campaigning and startling victories brought his country to the pinnacle of her prestige and power although the Great Northern War resulted in Sweden s defeat and the end of the empire within years of his own death citation needed In his youth renowned Russian general Alexander Suvorov considered Charles XII his hero together with Julius Caesar 47 Like Charles XII Suvorov adopted an aggressive style of tactics and campaigning seemingly inspired by the Swedish king 48 Charles s death marked the end of autocratic kingship in Sweden and the subsequent Age of Liberty saw a shift of power from the monarch to the parliament of the estates 49 Historians of the late 18th and early 19th centuries viewed Charles death as the result of an aristocratic plot and Gustav IV Adolf the king who refused to settle with Napoleon Bonaparte identified himself with Charles as a type of righteous man struggling with iniquity Roberts 50 Throughout the 19th century s romantic nationalism Charles XII was viewed as a national hero He was idealized as a heroic virtuous young warrior king and his fight against Peter the Great was associated with the contemporary Swedish Russian enmity 51 Examples of the romantic hero idolatry of Charles XII in several genres are Esaias Tegner s song Kung Karl den unge hjalte 1818 Johan Peter Molin s statue 51 in Stockholm s Kungstradgarden unveiled on 30 November 1868 the 150th anniversary of Charles s death 52 and Gustaf Cederstrom s painting Karl XII s likfard Funeral procession of Charles XII 1878 53 The date of Charles s death was chosen by a student association in Lund for annual torch marches beginning in 1853 54 In his 1901 play Karl XII August Strindberg broke with the heroization practice by showing an introverted Charles XII in conflict with his impoverished subjects 55 In the so called Strindberg feud 1910 1912 his response to the Swedish cult of Charles XII Steene 56 was that Charles had been Sweden s ruin the great offender a ruffian the rowdies idol a counterfeiter 57 Verner von Heidenstam however one of his opponents in the feud in his book Karolinerna instead emphasized the heroic steadfastness of the Swedish people in the somber years of trial during the long drawn out campaigns of Karl XII Scott 58 In the 1930s the Swedish Nazis held celebrations on the date of Charles XII s death and shortly before the outbreak of World War II Adolf Hitler received from Sweden a sculpture of the king at his birthday 59 In the late 20th century Swedish nationalists and neo Nazis had again used 30 November as a date for their ceremonies however these were regularly interrupted by larger counter demonstrations and were abandoned 60 Scientific contributions edit Apart from being a monarch the King s interests included mathematics and anything that would be beneficial to his warlike purposes He is credited with having invented an octal numeral system as well as a more elaborate one with the base 64 which he considered more suitable for war purposes because all the boxes used for materials such as gunpowder were cubic According to a report by contemporary scientist Emanuel Swedenborg the King had sketched a model of his thoughts on a piece of paper and handed it to him at their meeting in Lund in 1716 The paper was reportedly still in existence a hundred years later but has since been lost 61 Literature edit Charles fascinated many in his time In 1731 Voltaire wrote a biography of Charles XII History of Charles XII Voltaire portrays the Swedish king in a positive light against the brutal nature of Peter the Great 62 The English man of letters Samuel Johnson wrote of Charles in his poem The Vanity of Human Wishes citation needed On what Foundation stands the warrior s pride How just his hopes let Swedish Charles decide A frame of adamant a soul of fire No dangers fright him and no labours tire O er love o er fear extends his wide domain Unconquered lord of pleasure and of pain No joys to him pacific sceptres yield War sounds the trump he rushes to the field Behold surrounding kings their power to combine And one capitulate and one resign Peace courts his hand but spreads her charms in vain Think nothing gained he cries till nought remain On Moscow s walls till Gothic standards fly And all be mine beneath the polar sky The march begins in military state And nations on his eye suspended wait Stern Famine guards the solitary coast And Winter barricades the realms of Frost He comes not want and cold his course delay Hide blushing Glory hide Pultowa s day The vanquished hero leaves his broken bands And shows his miseries in distant lands Condemned a needy supplicant to wait While ladies interpose and slaves debate But did not Chance at length her error mend Did no subverted empire mark his end Did rival monarchs give the fatal wound Or hostile millions press him to the ground His fall was destined to a barren strand A petty fortress and a dubious hand He left the name at which the world grew pale To point a moral or adorn a tale Swedish author Frans G Bengtsson and Professor Ragnhild Hatton have written biographies of Charles XII of Sweden 63 64 65 In 1938 E M Almedingen wrote The Lion of the North Charles XII King of Sweden 66 Charles XII figures quite prominently in Robert Massie s magnum opus Peter the Great 67 Ancestors editAncestors of Charles XII of Sweden8 John Casimir Count Palatine of Zweibrucken Kleeburg4 Charles X Gustav of Sweden9 Catharina of Sweden2 Charles XI of Sweden10 Frederick III Duke of Holstein Gottorp5 Hedvig Eleonora of Holstein Gottorp11 Marie Elisabeth of Saxony1 Charles XII of Sweden12 Christian IV of Denmark6 Frederick III of Denmark13 Anne Catherine of Brandenburg3 Ulrike Eleonora of Denmark14 George Duke of Brunswick Luneburg7 Sophie Amalie of Brunswick Luneburg15 Anne Eleonore of Hesse Darmstadt nbsp Coat of Arms of the House of Palatinate ZweibruckenIn popular culture editHe is referred to in the anime Legend of the Galactic Heroes as the Swedish Meteor whose similarity to Reinhard von Lohengramm may portend the dynasty dying out without a successor August Strindberg s 1901 play Carl XII is about him The 1925 Swedish film Charles XII is a two part silent epic starring Gosta Ekman the Elder portraying his reign In the 1968 Polish film Hrabina Cosel Charles XII is portrayed by Daniel Olbrychski In the 1983 Swedish comedy film Kalabaliken i Bender sv Charles XII is portrayed by Gosta Ekman the Younger In 2007 Charles XII was portrayed by Eduard Flerov in the Russian drama The Sovereign s Servant Charles XII appears in the absurdist comedy A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence 2014 in which his army passes a modern day cafe on their way to and retreating from the Battle of Poltava He is played by Viktor Gyllenberg 68 69 The Swedish power metal band Sabaton wrote an album named after him which includes several songs about his life 70 71 Battles of Charles XII edit nbsp Denmark Norway nbsp Tsardom of Russia nbsp Electorate of Saxony nbsp Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth nbsp Cossack Hetmanate nbsp Kalmyk Khanate nbsp Ottoman Empire nbsp Kingdom of Prussia Date Action Type b Location c Warring Opponent s OutcomeDanish Holstein War of 17001 4 Aug 1700 Humlebaek Landing Denmark Norway Denmark nbsp Jens Rostgaard VictoryBaltic campaigns of 1700 17012 27 Nov 1700 Pyhajoggi de Skirmish Swedish Estonia Estonia nbsp Boris Sheremetev Victory3 30 Nov 1700 Narva Battle Swedish Estonia Estonia nbsp Charles de Croy Victory4 19 Jul 1701 Duna Battle Swedish Livonia Latvia nbsp nbsp Adam von SteinauAnikita Repnin VictoryPolish Lithuanian campaigns of 1701 17065 15 16 Nov 1701 Tryszki Skirmish Duchy of Lithuania Lithuania nbsp Grzegorz Oginski Victory6 19 Jul 1702 Kliszow Battle Kingdom of Poland Poland nbsp nbsp Augustus IIAdam von SteinauHieronim Lubomirski Victory7 1 May 1703 Pultusk Battle Kingdom of Poland Poland nbsp Adam von Steinau Victory8 26 May 14 Oct 1703 Thorn Siege Kingdom of Poland Poland nbsp Christoph von Kanitz de Victory9 6 Sep 1704 Lemberg Assault Kingdom of Poland Ukraine nbsp nbsp Franciszek Galecki pl Victory10 7 Nov 1704 Poniec Battle Kingdom of Poland Poland nbsp Johann von Schulenburg Victory11 9 Nov 1704 Oderbeltz sv Battle Lower Silesia Poland nbsp Unknown Victory12 26 Jan 10 Apr 1706 Grodno Blockade Duchy of Lithuania Belarus nbsp Georg Ogilvy ru VictoryRussian invasion of 1708 170913 6 7 Feb 1708 Grodno Skirmish Duchy of Lithuania Belarus nbsp Peter I Victory14 14 Jul 1708 Holowczyn Battle Duchy of Lithuania Belarus nbsp nbsp nbsp Boris Sheremetev Victory15 10 Sep 1708 Malatitze Battle Duchy of Lithuania Belarus nbsp nbsp nbsp Peter IMikhail Golitsyn Victory16 20 Sep 1708 Rajovka Skirmish Duchy of Lithuania Russia nbsp nbsp nbsp Peter IChristian Bauer Victory17 11 13 Nov 1708 Desna Operation Cossack Hetmanate Ukraine nbsp Ludwig von Hallart de Victory18 17 Jan 1709 Veprik Assault Cossack Hetmanate Ukraine nbsp nbsp William Fermor Victory19 8 Feb 1709 Oposhnya Skirmish Cossack Hetmanate Ukraine nbsp nbsp Otto von Schaumburg ru Victory20 19 Feb 1709 Khukhra 72 73 Skirmish Tsardom of Russia Ukraine nbsp Unknown Victory21 21 Feb 1709 Krasnokutsk Gorodnoye Battle Tsardom of Russia Ukraine nbsp nbsp nbsp Carl von Ronne Victory22 8 Jul 1709 Poltava Battle Cossack Hetmanate Ukraine nbsp nbsp nbsp Peter IBoris Sheremetev DefeatTurkish exile in 1709 171423 31 Jan 1 Feb 1713 Bender Assault Ottoman Empire Moldova nbsp Ismail Pasha tr DefeatGerman campaigns of 1714 171524 21 27 Apr 1715 Usedom 74 75 Operation Swedish Pomerania Germany Poland nbsp Captain Rohr Victory25 31 Jul 22 Aug 1715 Usedom 74 75 Operation Swedish Pomerania Germany Poland nbsp nbsp Georg von Arnim de Louis of Wurttemberg Winnental Defeat26 12 Jul 24 Dec 1715 Stralsund Siege Swedish Pomerania Germany nbsp nbsp nbsp Leopold of Anhalt DessauAugust von Wackerbarth de Jobst von Scholten Defeat27 16 Nov 1715 Stresow Battle Swedish Pomerania Germany nbsp nbsp nbsp Leopold of Anhalt Dessau DefeatNorwegian campaigns of 1716 and 171828 9 Mar 1716 Holand Skirmish Denmark Norway Norway nbsp Ulrik Kruse dk Victory29 21 Mar 1716 Christiania sv Skirmish Denmark Norway Norway nbsp Jorgen von Klenow Victory30 22 Mar 30 Apr 1716 Akershus Fortress no Siege Denmark Norway Norway nbsp Jorgen von Klenow Defeat31 3 5 Jun 1716 Sponvika Sconce 76 Siege Denmark Norway Norway nbsp Hans Gunter Victory32 3 4 Jul 1716 Fredrikshald de Assault Denmark Norway Norway nbsp Hans Brun dk Defeat33 15 Jul 16 Nov 1718 Iddefjord no Operation Denmark Norway Norway nbsp Barthold Landsberg Victory34 20 Nov 14 Dec 1718 Fredriksten Siege Denmark Norway Norway nbsp Barthold Landsberg Defeat See also editList of unsolved murders Gottorp FuryNotes edit Demirbas the Turkish word for fixed asset is literally ironhead demir as iron bas as head which is the reason why this nickname has often been translated as Ironhead Charles However it should be said that this translation is wrong and does not reflect the truth Although written separately demir bas really means iron head the whole word demirbas means inventory 22 which reflects Charles long stay in Ottoman Bender at expenses of sultan s exchequer In this table the following criteria applies Landing refers to a contested amphibious operation skirmish refers to a limited engagement either by parts of an army or a smaller force with minor strategic impact or losses battle refers to a larger engagement in which one or both sides fights in battle formation to defeat the other army with considerable strategic impact or losses siege refers to a contested fortification or larger settlement where any attempts to storm were indecisive assault refers to a contested or uncontested fortification or larger settlement where an assault played the decisive role blockade refers to an attacker s attempt to starve out the garrison of a fortification or larger settlement operation refers to a pre planned military operation to seize a larger area of strategic value in which several minor engagements are fought Contemporary location written at the top present day location written inside parentheses References edit a b c Nordling Carl O The Death of Karl XII Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Karl XII in Swedish PDF Livrustkammaren Livrustkammaren Museum Archived from the original PDF on 29 May 2015 Retrieved 28 April 2016 Cronholm Neander Nicolas 1902 37 A history of Sweden from the earliest times to the present day New York a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hofberg Herman Heurlin Frithiof Millqvist Victor Rubenson Olof 1908 Svenskt Biografiskt Handlexikon Uggleupplagan Swedish Biographical Dictionary The Owl Edition 2nd Edition In Swedish Albert Bonniers Forlag OCLC 49695435 Archived from the original on 12 March 2012 Retrieved 28 April 2016 Sweden and Finland Titles of European hereditary rulers eurulers altervista org Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 28 April 2016 Liljegren 2000 p 11 riksbaner samlingar shm se in Swedish Retrieved 21 July 2023 Article Karl Archived 30 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine in Nordisk familjebok William Pembroke Fetridge 1875 The American Traveller s Guide Harper s Hand book for Travellers in Europe and the East Being a Guide Through Great Britain and Ireland France Belgium Holland Germany Italy Egypt Syria Turkey Greece Switzerland Tyrol Denmark Norway Sweden Russia and Spain p 829 a b Spencer C Tucker ed 2015 Wars That Changed History 50 of the World s Greatest Conflicts ABC CLIO pp 182 193 ISBN 978 1610697866 Thomas Derry History of Scandinavia Norway Sweden Denmark Finland and Iceland 2000 p 154 Richard Cavendish The Battle of Narva History Today 50 11 2000 50 Renata Tyszczuk 2007 The Story of an Architect King Stanislas Leszczynski in Lorraine 1737 1766 Peter Lang p 34 ISBN 978 3039103249 Karoliner by Alf Aberg p 117 Karl XII by Bengt Liljegren pp 151 163 Svenska slagfalt p 280 Svenska folkets underbara oden book four by Carl Grimberg about the numbers of Mazepa s army Bra Bockers Lexikon the article of Karl XII Kalevi Jaakko Holsti 1991 Peace and War Armed Conflicts and International Order 1648 1989 Cambridge University Press p 69 ISBN 978 0521399296 Dominic Lieven 2006 The Cambridge History of Russia Volume 2 Imperial Russia 1689 1917 Cambridge University Press p 29 ISBN 978 0521815291 a b Herman Lindquist in Swedish Historian om Sverige Storhet och Fall History of Sweden Greatness and fall ISBN 9172630922 2000 Nordstedts forlag Stockholm Demirbas Yandex Ceviri Ingilizce Turkce Rusca Turkce Almanca Turkce ve diger diller icin sozluk ve cevrimici ceviri servisidir ceviri yandex com tr Archived from the original on 13 March 2022 Retrieved 24 June 2022 Sweden The Ottoman Empire and the Crimean Tartars c 1580 1714 The Realpolitoik of a Christian Kingdom Varldsinbordeskriget Wordpress Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 28 April 2016 Zetterberg Seppo 1987 Suomen historian pikkujattilainen p 265 ISBN 978 951 0 14253 0 R M Hatton Charles XII of Sweden London 1968 ISBN missing Seppo Zetterberg et al eds A Small Giant Compendium of the Finnish History Suomen historian pikkujattilainen 2nd ed Helsinki 2003 ISBN missing Friberg Henrik 23 September 2015 Redan Karl XII godkande muslimska gudstjanster SVT Nyheter in Swedish Archived from the original on 28 April 2020 Retrieved 29 April 2020 Vad hande med Karl XII s kreditorer Slakt Historia 19 September 2019 Archived from the original on 26 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 Wilson Peter Hamish German armies War and German politics 1648 1806 Warfare and history p 140 ISBN 1 85728 106 3 Karl XIIs felttog i Norge nb no Archived from the original on 3 February 2014 Retrieved 22 June 2009 Valkommen till Peter Englund Archived from the original on 5 October 2013 Retrieved 10 August 2013 Lindqvist Herman 29 November 2009 Karl XII s dod ger inte forskarna nagon ro Aftonbladet Archived from the original on 8 March 2014 Retrieved 26 February 2012 a b c d e f Mike Dash 17 September 2012 Past Imperfect Smithsonian Magazine Archived from the original on 28 August 2016 Retrieved 25 September 2012 Dash Mike The Blazing Career and Mysterious Death of The Swedish Meteor Smithsonian Archived from the original on 8 October 2021 Retrieved 24 December 2017 Forflutenhetens landskap The Landscape of Times Past 1991 collection of essays pp 126 129 a b Juho Antti Junno et al November 2022 The death of King Charles XII of Sweden revisited PNAS Nexus 1 5 pgac234 doi 10 1093 pnasnexus pgac234 PMC 9802245 PMID 36712377 Tutkijat ratkaisivat yli 300 vuotta vanhan mysteerin Kaarle XII ei kuollutkaan omien luodista vaan vihollisen ampumana 23 November 2022 Archived from the original on 23 November 2022 Retrieved 23 November 2022 R M Hatton Charles XII of Sweden 1968 p 89 Frans Bengtsson The Life of Charles XII p 38 a b Liljegren Karl XII en biografi R M Hatton Charles XII of Sweden 1968 p 210 Frans Bengtsson The Life of Charles XII p 469 a b R M Hatton Charles XII of Sweden 1968 p 219 R M Hatton Charles XII of Sweden 1968 p 220 Byron Nordstrom Dictionary of Scandinavian History p 317 Tim Blanning Frederick the Great 2015 p 152 Simon Sebag Montefiore The Romanovs 1613 1918 2016 p 451 Anthing Frederic 1799 History of the campaigns of Count Alexander Suworow Rymnikski London J Wright p 7 OCLC 901339492 Essame Hubert 1961 Military review the professional journal of the United States Army January The Suvorov Legend Kansas Command and General Staff School p 17 Massengale James 1996 The Enlightenment and the Gustavian Age In Warme Lars G ed A History of Swedish literature University of Nebraska Press pp 102 104 105 ISBN 978 0803247505 Roberts Michael 1991 From Oxenstierna to Charles XII Four Studies Cambridge University Press p 164 Repr 2003 a b Roberts Michael 1991 From Oxenstierna to Charles XII Four Studies Cambridge University Press pp 164 165 Repr 2003 Lindblom Andreas 1946 Sveriges konsthistoria fran forntid till nutid Vol 3 Nordisk rotogravyr p 1210 Scott Franklin Daniel 1988 Sweden the nation s history SIU Press p 560 Loow Helene 1998 Nazismen i Sverige 1980 1997 Ordfront Steene Brigitta 1996 Strindberg and the transition to Modernism In Warme Lars G ed A History of Swedish literature University of Nebraska Press p 267 ISBN 978 0803247505 Steene Brigitta 1996 Strindberg and the transition to Modernism In Warme Lars G ed A History of Swedish literature University of Nebraska Press p 271 ISBN 978 0803247505 Moers Gerald 2000 Im Gemeindewald der Geschichte In Schoning Udo ed Internationalitat nationaler Literaturen Wallstein pp 285 286 fn 83 Scott Franklin Daniel 1988 Sweden the nation s history SIU Press p 551 Oredsson Sverker 2000 Gustav II Adolf in Geschichtsschreibung und Kult In Petersson Rikke ed Damals als Schweden eine Grossmacht war LIT p 59 Karl XII firare ligger lagt i ar Dagens Nyheter DN 27 November 2011 Archived from the original on 30 January 2012 Retrieved 27 February 2012 Nationalists abandon warrior king anniversary TheLOcal 28 November 2011 Archived from the original on 30 November 2011 Retrieved 27 February 2012 On the use of Charles XII by nationalists and Nazis in general Om den 30 november Peter Englund in Expressen 30 November 1994 Archived from the original on 21 April 2012 Donald Knuth The Art of Computer Programming Voltaire 1740 The History of Charles XII King of Sweden Seventh edition p 1 Bengtsson Frans G 1994 Karl XII s Levnad Norstedts ISBN 978 9119418326 Hatton Ragnhild Marie 1968 Charles XII of Sweden London ISBN 978 0297748267 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Voltaire 1731 History of Charles XII King of Sweden The lion of the north Charles XII King of Sweden Book 1938 OCLC 1063928075 Massie Robert K 1981 Peter the Great His Life and World New York City Ballantine Books pp Part 3 4 ISBN 0 345 29806 3 Cinema Scope A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence Roy Andersson Sweden cinema scope com 18 December 2014 Archived from the original on 25 January 2020 Retrieved 25 January 2020 A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence review heaven The Telegraph 23 April 2015 Archived from the original on 21 August 2019 Retrieved 25 January 2020 via www telegraph co uk NewEngland7 kluseba gasmask colostomy Midnight Rambler Braindead Binky Napero MetalGuard hells unicorn Immortally Insane Lord Lexy 25 May 2012 Sabaton Carolus Rex Encyclopaedia Metallum Reviews Archived from the original on 8 March 2021 Retrieved 17 January 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link unreliable source Sundstrom Par 7 December 2018 Par Sundstrom interview Carolus Rex Part 2 3 Interview Sabaton Archived from the original on 8 July 2020 Retrieved 24 January 2020 via YouTube a href Template Cite interview html title Template Cite interview cite interview a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Nordberg Joran 1740 Konung Carl den XII tes Historia volume 1 Stockholm Pet Momma pp 892 893 OCLC 256604521 Quennerstedt August 1901 Karolinska krigares dagbocker jamte andra samtida skrifter volume 1 Lund Gleerupska univ bokhandeln pp 343 344 OCLC 186563462 a b Poetzsch Johnny 2018 Phoenix den ateruppstandne Forsvaret av Stralsund och de svenska provinserna i Nordtyskland 1710 1716 Balsta Poetzsch Historia pp 457 458 487 491 511 517 ISBN 9789198448405 a b Tuxen August With Seidelin Carl 1922 Bidrag til den store nordiske krigs historie Erobringen af Sverigs tyske provinser 1715 1716 Copenhagen Det Nordiske forlag pp 39 40 104 106 OCLC 1140275292 Lagermark Johan August 1883 Karl XII s krig i Norge 1716 Uppsala Edv Berling p 66 OCLC 457320804 Further reading editBain Robert Nisbet 1911 Charles XII Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed pp 929 931 Bain Robert Nisbet Charles XII and the Collapse of the Swedish Empire 1682 1719 1899 online Bengtsson F G The Life of Charles XII King of Sweden 1697 1718 1960 also published as The sword does not jest The heroic life of King Charles XII of Sweden St Martin s Press 1960 Browning Oscar Charles XII of Sweden London Hurst and Blackett 1899 Fielding Henry Translator The Military History of Charles XII King of Sweden Written by the Express Order of His Majesty by M Gustavus Adlerfeld to Which Is Added an Exact Account of the Battle of Pultowa Illustrated with Plans in Three Volumes London printed for J and P Knapton J Hodges A Millar and J Nourse 1740 Reprinted by Gale Ecco Print Editions 2010 Gade John Translator Charles the Twelfth King of Sweden Translated from the manuscript of Carl Gustafson Klingspor Boston Houghton Mifflin 1916 Reprinted by Merkaba Press 2017 Glaeser Michael By Defeating My Enemies Charles XII of Sweden and the Great Northern War 1682 1721 Helion amp Co Ltd 2020 Hattendorf J B Asa Karlsson Margriet Lacy Bruijn Augustus J Veenendaal Jr and Rolof van Hovell tot Westerflier Charles XII Warrior King Rotterdam Karwansaray 2018 Hatton R M Charles XII of Sweden 1968 Hone Michael Charles XII of Sweden Versus Peter the Great of Russia Createspace Independent Pub 2016 Liljegren Bengt 2000 Karl XII en biografi Lund Historiska media ISBN 978 9188930996 Peterson Gary Dean Warrior kings of Sweden the rise of an empire in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries McFarland 2007 Voltaire Francois Marie Arouet de History of Charles XII King of Sweden translated by W H Dilworth 1760 Reprinted by True World of Books 2020 External links edit nbsp Media related to Charles XII of Sweden at Wikimedia Commons The Swedish Meteor the blazing career and mysterious death of Charles XII Smithsonian summary of assassination theories Charles XII on the centenary of his death 1818 The original Swedish text by Esaias Tegner as well as parallel translations by J E D Bethune 1848 and Charles Harrison Wallace 1998 and a comment by the latter The Great Northern War and Charles XII Charles XII and his Life and Death in Swedish BBC News item Who killed Sweden s Warrior King Timeline of 1700 1720 in Sweden Charles XII The New Student s Reference Work 1914 Charles XII New International Encyclopedia 1905 Charles XII The American Cyclopaedia 1879 Charles XII of SwedenHouse of Palatinate ZweibruckenCadet branch of the House of WittelsbachBorn 17 June 1682 Died 30 November 1718Regnal titlesPreceded byCharles XI King of SwedenDuke of Bremen and Verden1697 1718 Succeeded byUlrika EleonoraDuke of Palatine Zweibrucken1697 1718 Succeeded byGustav Samuel Leopold Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles XII of Sweden amp oldid 1186761008, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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