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Northern Seven Years' War

The Northern Seven Years' War (also known as the Nordic Seven Years' War, the First Northern War or the Seven Years War in Scandinavia) was fought between the Kingdom of Sweden and a coalition of Denmark–Norway, Lübeck, and Poland–Lithuania between 1563 and 1570. The war was motivated by the dissatisfaction of King Frederick II of Denmark with the dissolution of the Kalmar Union, and the will of King Eric XIV of Sweden to break Denmark's dominating position. The fighting continued until both armies had been exhausted, and many men died. The resulting Treaty of Stettin was a stalemate, with neither party gaining any new territory.

Northern Seven Years' War

Frederick II of Denmark attacking Älvsborg Castle, 1563.
Date13 August 1563 – 13 December 1570
Location
Result Stalemate
Treaty of Stettin (1570)
Territorial
changes
Status quo ante bellum
Belligerents

Denmark–Norway
Free City of Lübeck

Poland–Lithuania[a]
Sweden
Commanders and leaders
Frederick II
Daniel Rantzau
Herluf Trolle
Otto Rud
Kristoffer Throndsen
Friedrich Knebel
Sigismund Augustus
Eric XIV
John III
Jakob Bagge
Klas Horn
Claude Collart [sv]

Context

The Kalmar Union of the three former Scandinavian Kingdoms of Sweden, Norway, and Denmark lasted on and off from 1397 to 1523, until it finally collapsed following the continued Swedish resentment of Danish domination.[2]

A successful rebellion in 1471 led to Swedish victory at the Battle of Brunkeberg, which established a powerful anti-Union movement under the leadership of the BondeSture nobles. In 1520, Christian II of Denmark reconquered Sweden and took a bloody revenge on the anti-Union faction at the Stockholm Bloodbath.[3] More than 80 noble men and ladies, including leading citizens of Stockholm, were executed, but the result severely backfired on Christian II.[2] The violence elicited strong reactions in Sweden for years to come,[3] and the Union was broken by the successful Swedish War of Liberation from 1521 to 1523. Christian II was condemned by the Pope, and he abdicated in 1523. The subsequent Danish kings Frederick I and Christian III, turned their attention mainly on the Reformation in Denmark–Norway and Holstein and the Count's Feud civil war, and relations with Sweden were generally peaceful.[4]

In Sweden, the internal power vacuum, combined with the abdication of Christian II, provided the opportunity for Gustav Vasa to consolidate control of Sweden and claim the throne in June 1523, with the support of peasants and the Hanseatic towns of Lübeck and Danzig. Under Vasa, the Kalmar Union was finally dissolved, and Sweden began establishing itself as a rival power of Denmark–Norway.[2] Gustav Vasa's Sweden was in a weak position in 1523, as access to the North Sea was dominated by the Danish Sound Dues and limited to a 20 kilometer stretch on the Kattegat in the vicinity of Älvsborg, close to modern Gothenburg. Furthermore, Denmark controlled the Baltic, limiting Swedish movement there.

Gustav Vasa changed the military structure in Sweden, which did not bear immediate fruit in the Nordic Seven Years' War but was to have a lasting impact on Sweden's fortune. In 1544 he used the old Scandinavian concept of Uppbåd (levy or the prerogative to call up some fraction of men from each district in an emergency) to establish one of the first native standing armies in Europe. The men served on standby, remaining at home in peacetime, and being paid by tax concessions, but were required to assemble and drill. This system was later expanded as the Swedish allotment system. By 1560 when Gustav Vasa died, every ten peasants were required to provide one soldier who must serve anywhere domestic or foreign as required by the king.

Casus belli

 
Frederick II (1534–1588), King of Denmark and Norway 1559–1588

After the deaths of Christian III and Gustav Vasa, in 1559 and 1560 respectively, both countries now had young and hawkish monarchs, Eric XIV of Sweden and Frederick II of Denmark. Frederick II envisioned the resurrection of the Kalmar Union under Danish leadership, while Eric wanted to finally break the dominating position of Denmark.[5]

Shortly after his coronation in 1559, King Frederick II of Denmark ordered his ageing field-commander Johan Rantzau to avenge the humiliating Danish defeat against the small peasant republic of Ditmarsh, which was defeated in a matter of a few weeks and brought under the Danish-Norwegian crown. During the next year, the Danish expansion continued with the possession of the Baltic Sea island of Ösel.[6]

 
Eric XIV (1533–1577), King of Sweden 1560–1568

In 1561, when a sizeable remnant of the Order states in the northern Baltics were secularized by its grand master Gotthard Kettler, both Denmark and Sweden were attracted to intervene in the Livonian War.[7] During this conflict, King Eric of Sweden successfully obstructed the Danish plans to conquer Estonia. He sought to dominate the Baltic Sea, while unsuccessfully pressing for Frederick to remove the traditionally Swedish insignia of Three Crowns from the Danish coat of arms;[8] a bone of contention since Christian III and Gustav Vasa. In February 1563, Swedish messengers were sent to Hesse to negotiate Eric's marriage with Christine of Hesse but were held back in Copenhagen. In retaliation, Eric added the insignia of Norway and Denmark to his own coat of arms and refused Danish requests to remove these symbols.

Lübeck, upset over obstacles to trade introduced by Eric to hinder the Russian trade as well as withdrawn trade privileges, joined Denmark in a war alliance. The Polish–Lithuanian union also joined, desiring control of the Baltic trade. Skirmishes broke out in May 1563, before war was officially declared in August that year.

War

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Getaryggen
 
Pomerania
class=notpageimage|
Map of pillaging and battles of the Northern Seven Years War. Red dots show places pillaged or torched by Denmark, chiefly Daniel Rantzau. Yellow dots show places pillaged or torched by Sweden. Modern administrative borders are shown.

Initial phase

In May, the first movements of the war started as a Danish fleet under Jakob Brockenhuus sailed towards the Baltic. At Bornholm, on 30 May 1563, the fleet fired on the Swedish navy under Jakob Bagge, even though war had not officially been declared. A battle arose that ended with Danish defeat.

German royal emissaries were sent to negotiate a peace, but at the meeting place of Rostock no Swedes appeared. On 13 August 1563, war was declared by emissaries from Denmark and Lübeck in Stockholm. The same month, Danish king Frederik II attacked Älvsborg. At the beginning of the war the Danes advanced from Halland with a 25,000-strong army of professional mercenaries and captured Sweden's gateway to the west, Älvsborg Fortress, after only three days of bombardment and a six-hour assault on 4 September. This achieved the Danish aim of cutting off Sweden from the North Sea, blocking the all-important salt imports. Eric then attacked Halmstad, without result; the Swedish counterattack was driven back by the professional Danish army. After the king's departure from his army, Charley de Mornays stepped in as the commanding officer and was beaten by the Danish at the Battle of Mared.

At sea a battle broke out near Öland on 11 September, whereafter the war took a pause.

Campaigns

South

 

On 30 May 1564 a battle broke out between the Swedish navy and the Danish–Lübeck navy between Gotland and Öland. The Swedish navy was under the command of Jakob Bagge, and the Danish–Lübeck navy was under the command of Herluf Trolle. Bagge was captured and the largest warship of the Baltic, the Mars (also known as the Makalös), sunk. The Swedish navy retreated to Stockholm leaving a sea blockade in effect. Klas Horn became the new commander and met the Danish fleet at the island Jungfrun north of Öland 14 August. An inconclusive fight left the sea blockade in effect.

Horn attacked the provinces Halland and Skåne in 1565 and made several attempts at Bohuslän and Uddevalla. The Danish burned old Lödöse in the province of Västergötland. Eric initially led the army against the Danish himself, but then turned over command to Nils Boije, who on 28 August 1564 took Varberg. The Danish army under Daniel Rantzau beat the Swedish army in the Battle of Axtorna on 20 October.

The Swedes fared better at sea. Horn, commanding the Swedish navy, pursued a Danish–Lübeck fleet onto the German coast where most of it was destroyed. After this victory Horn steered for Öresund and levied a toll on passing ships. On 4 June 1565, the Battle at Buchow took place on the Mecklenburg coast, in which the Danish–Lübeck commander Herluf Trolle was mortally wounded. In the Battle of 7 July 1565, the Swedish navy under Horn defeated a Danish–Lübeck navy under Otto Rud near Bornholm, where Sweden captured the Danish flagship the Jegermesther. Thus ensured the command of the eastern Baltic by the Swedes that year.

In January 1566 Sweden unsuccessfully laid siege to Bohus Fortress in Bohuslän (then a Norwegian province). Daniel Rantzau then moved his forces into Västergötland. At sea Horn returned to taking toll charges in the Baltic. An indecisive battle at sea outside of Öland occurred on 26 July 1566. On 28 July half the Danish–Lübeck Navy was lost in a storm at sea. Horn was then called to command troops on land, where he died 9 September.

North

Sweden occupied the undefended Norwegian province of Jemtland, which was quickly reconquered by a counterattack by forces under command of the Norwegian governor of Trøndelag. The forces were unwilling to launch a counterattack on Swedish land. In 1564 the Swedes marched under Claude Collart[9] and re-occupied Jemtland, as well as Herjedalen and Trøndelag, including the city of Trondheim. Initially facing little opposition from the locals, their subsequent ill treatment of the Trøndelag natives, along with tax pressure, laid the groundwork for later resistance to Swedish invasion.[9] Also, Trøndelag was assisted by the governor of Bergenhus, Erik Rosenkrantz, who forced 3500 local peasants to assist him and his 50 professional soldiers. The Swedes saw Bergenhus as their next target. Although the 400 Swedish soldiers were repelled from Trøndelag, Sweden continued to occupy Jämtland and Härjedalen. These provinces were later regained by Denmark–Norway following the peace process in 1570.[10]

Sweden also launched attacks towards Eastern Norway. In the south-east Sweden captured Båhus Fortress, but lost it in 1566. Another part of the army marched through the valley Østerdalen in 1567, captured Hamar, and continued towards Oslo.[10] They reached as far as the Skiensfjord, and torched Skien at one point.[citation needed] In Oslo, however, citizens torched the city before invaders could seize it. From the south-east, more Swedish forces were then sent to aid in capturing Akershus Fortress near Oslo. These forces torched Konghelle and Sarpsborg on their way. They were repelled from Oslo by local forces together with men belonging to Erik Rosenkrantz and the King of Denmark and Norway. The Swedes retreated in a north-eastern direction, torching Hamar on their way,[10] destroying Hamar Cathedral and the bishop's fortified palace Hamarhus.

Later phase

class=notpageimage|
Localities of Rantzau's winter campaign. Red dots mark plundered and burned localities. The crossing of Sommen is in blue.
 
John III (1537–1592), King of Sweden 1568–1592

The Danish mercenary army was superior to the Swedish peasant army, but the professional army would not fight until their pay was current. Because only a fraction of the army would march, Denmark had to give up the plan to take the fortress of Kalmar and settle for an attack on Stockholm instead. In August 1564, Eric attacked Blekinge and his army occupied it cruelly (most infamously during the Ronneby Bloodbath), though the Danish later[when?] reclaimed this.

Eric XIV turned insane, paralyzing the Swedish war effort. The Danish were exhausted and made no serious attacks until Rantzau attacked Småland and Östergötland with about 8,500 men.[when?] He burned every field and house and destroyed every head of livestock he could. An attempt to cut off his retreat over the Holaveden failed, as Rantzius' army went over the ice of lake Sommen[11] and in the middle of February 1568 he returned to Halland.

Attempts were made to make peace between the fighting nations during these years. Negotiators included the dukes of Pomerania, French messenger Charles Dancay, and Holy Roman Emperors Ferdinand I and Maximilian II. The emperors wanted Denmark and Sweden to give back the territories won in Livonia, during the ongoing Livonian War, but Sweden refused to give in to those demands.[12]

In 1568, the Swedish duke John staged a successful coup d'etat against his brother, King Eric.[12] Enthroned as king with the name John III, he began negotiations with Denmark, and on 18 November the same year this led to a draft peace agreement in Roskilde. This was turned down by the Swedes, however, and in 1569 war stirred again. The Danes attacked and reclaimed Varberg, on 13 November. The Swedes on the other hand now had great success[clarification needed] in Skåne.

Peace negotiations and consequences

At this point, both armies were exhausted,[5] leading to further negotiations toward peace. In September 1570 a meeting began in Stettin and peace was finally reached on 13 December 1570 with the Treaty of Stettin. The Swedish king withdrew the claims to Norway, Skåne, Halland, Blekinge, and Gotland, while the Danes withdrew their claims to Sweden. The Baltic Sea was declared sovereign Danish. In addition, the Kalmar Union was declared dissolved. The Swedes ransomed Älvsborg with 150,000 riksdaler and had to hand back captured warships. The disputes concerning the Three Crowns insignia were unresolved and remained a source of future conflict.

See also

Notes

Sources

  • Eriksson, Bo (2007). Lützen 1632. Norstedts Pocket, Stockholm. ISBN 978-91-7263-790-0. In Swedish.
  • Ersland, Geir Atle; Sandvik, Hilde (1999). Norsk historie 1300-1625. Volume two of Norsk historie (in Norwegian). Oslo: Samlaget. ISBN 82-521-5182-5.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Lukowski, Jerzy; Zawadzki, Hubert (2001). A Concise History of Poland (1st ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 63–64. ISBN 9780521559171.
  2. ^ a b c Bjørn Poulsen, Home > About Denmark > History > The Middle Ages > The Kalmar Union 3 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, March 7, 2008
  3. ^ a b Forside > Om Sverige > Historie 2007-02-11 at the Wayback Machine, Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, "Danish Embassy, Stockholm", August 5, 2009
  4. ^ Knud J.V. Jespersen, Home > About Denmark > History > Reformation & Absolutism > Danish Sovereignty 28 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, February 13, 2008
  5. ^ a b Knud J.V. Jespersen, Home > About Denmark > History > Reformation & Absolutism > The Dano-Swedish Wars 2010-02-27 at the Wayback Machine, Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, March 7, 2008
  6. ^ När Hände Vad?: Historisk uppslagsbok 1500-2002 (2002) pp. 41
  7. ^ När Hände Vad?: Historisk uppslagsbok 1500-2002 (2002) pp. 42
  8. ^ Den Nordiske Syvårskrig at Gyldendals Åbne Encyklopædi
  9. ^ a b Martinsen, Tor Anders Bekken (2013). "Claude Collarts invasjon og okkupasjon av Trøndelag våren 1564". Trondhjemske Samlinger: 63–87. ISBN 978-82-997479-7-4.
  10. ^ a b c Ersland and Sandvik, 1999: pp. 205–206
  11. ^ "Här slaktades hundratals när de försvarade sina hem" (in Swedish). JP.se. 19 November 2016. Retrieved 12 April 2019.
  12. ^ a b Eriksson 2007, pp.49–50

Further reading

  • Anderson, R.C. (1910). Naval Battles in the Baltic 1553-1850.
  • Andersson, Ingvar (1956). A History of Sweden. Frederick A. Praeger.
  • Frost, Robert I. (2000). The Northern Wars, 1558-1721. Longman, Harlow. ISBN 0-582-06429-5.
  • Gjerset, Knut (1915). History of the Norwegian People. The MacMillan Company. Volumes I & II.
  • Lisk, Jill (1967). The Struggle for Supremacy in the Baltic: 1600-1725. Funk & Wagnalls, New York.
  • Mathisen, Trygve (1952). Fra Bondeoppbud til Legdshær. Guldendal Norsk Forlag.
  • Scott, Franklin D. (1988). Sweden - The Nation's History. Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 0-8093-1489-4.
  • Stagg, Frank N. (1956). East Norway and its Frontier. George Allen & Unwin, Ltd.
  • Stagg, Frank N. (1953). The Heart of Norway. George Allen & Unwin, Ltd.
  • Stiles, Andrina (1992). Sweden and the Baltic, 1523 - 1721. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-54644-1.

External links

  •   Media related to Northern Seven Years' War at Wikimedia Commons

northern, seven, years, confused, with, seven, years, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspape. Not to be confused with Seven Years War This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Northern Seven Years War news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Northern Seven Years War also known as the Nordic Seven Years War the First Northern War or the Seven Years War in Scandinavia was fought between the Kingdom of Sweden and a coalition of Denmark Norway Lubeck and Poland Lithuania between 1563 and 1570 The war was motivated by the dissatisfaction of King Frederick II of Denmark with the dissolution of the Kalmar Union and the will of King Eric XIV of Sweden to break Denmark s dominating position The fighting continued until both armies had been exhausted and many men died The resulting Treaty of Stettin was a stalemate with neither party gaining any new territory Northern Seven Years WarFrederick II of Denmark attacking Alvsborg Castle 1563 Date13 August 1563 13 December 1570LocationScandinaviaResultStalemateTreaty of Stettin 1570 TerritorialchangesStatus quo ante bellumBelligerentsDenmark Norway Free City of Lubeck Poland Lithuania a SwedenCommanders and leadersFrederick II Daniel Rantzau Herluf Trolle Otto Rud Kristoffer Throndsen Friedrich Knebel Sigismund AugustusEric XIV John III Jakob Bagge Klas Horn Claude Collart sv Contents 1 Context 2 Casus belli 3 War 3 1 Initial phase 3 2 Campaigns 3 2 1 South 3 2 2 North 3 3 Later phase 4 Peace negotiations and consequences 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Sources 8 Footnotes 9 Further reading 10 External linksContext EditThe Kalmar Union of the three former Scandinavian Kingdoms of Sweden Norway and Denmark lasted on and off from 1397 to 1523 until it finally collapsed following the continued Swedish resentment of Danish domination 2 A successful rebellion in 1471 led to Swedish victory at the Battle of Brunkeberg which established a powerful anti Union movement under the leadership of the Bonde Sture nobles In 1520 Christian II of Denmark reconquered Sweden and took a bloody revenge on the anti Union faction at the Stockholm Bloodbath 3 More than 80 noble men and ladies including leading citizens of Stockholm were executed but the result severely backfired on Christian II 2 The violence elicited strong reactions in Sweden for years to come 3 and the Union was broken by the successful Swedish War of Liberation from 1521 to 1523 Christian II was condemned by the Pope and he abdicated in 1523 The subsequent Danish kings Frederick I and Christian III turned their attention mainly on the Reformation in Denmark Norway and Holstein and the Count s Feud civil war and relations with Sweden were generally peaceful 4 In Sweden the internal power vacuum combined with the abdication of Christian II provided the opportunity for Gustav Vasa to consolidate control of Sweden and claim the throne in June 1523 with the support of peasants and the Hanseatic towns of Lubeck and Danzig Under Vasa the Kalmar Union was finally dissolved and Sweden began establishing itself as a rival power of Denmark Norway 2 Gustav Vasa s Sweden was in a weak position in 1523 as access to the North Sea was dominated by the Danish Sound Dues and limited to a 20 kilometer stretch on the Kattegat in the vicinity of Alvsborg close to modern Gothenburg Furthermore Denmark controlled the Baltic limiting Swedish movement there Gustav Vasa changed the military structure in Sweden which did not bear immediate fruit in the Nordic Seven Years War but was to have a lasting impact on Sweden s fortune In 1544 he used the old Scandinavian concept of Uppbad levy or the prerogative to call up some fraction of men from each district in an emergency to establish one of the first native standing armies in Europe The men served on standby remaining at home in peacetime and being paid by tax concessions but were required to assemble and drill This system was later expanded as the Swedish allotment system By 1560 when Gustav Vasa died every ten peasants were required to provide one soldier who must serve anywhere domestic or foreign as required by the king Casus belli Edit Frederick II 1534 1588 King of Denmark and Norway 1559 1588 After the deaths of Christian III and Gustav Vasa in 1559 and 1560 respectively both countries now had young and hawkish monarchs Eric XIV of Sweden and Frederick II of Denmark Frederick II envisioned the resurrection of the Kalmar Union under Danish leadership while Eric wanted to finally break the dominating position of Denmark 5 Shortly after his coronation in 1559 King Frederick II of Denmark ordered his ageing field commander Johan Rantzau to avenge the humiliating Danish defeat against the small peasant republic of Ditmarsh which was defeated in a matter of a few weeks and brought under the Danish Norwegian crown During the next year the Danish expansion continued with the possession of the Baltic Sea island of Osel 6 Eric XIV 1533 1577 King of Sweden 1560 1568 In 1561 when a sizeable remnant of the Order states in the northern Baltics were secularized by its grand master Gotthard Kettler both Denmark and Sweden were attracted to intervene in the Livonian War 7 During this conflict King Eric of Sweden successfully obstructed the Danish plans to conquer Estonia He sought to dominate the Baltic Sea while unsuccessfully pressing for Frederick to remove the traditionally Swedish insignia of Three Crowns from the Danish coat of arms 8 a bone of contention since Christian III and Gustav Vasa In February 1563 Swedish messengers were sent to Hesse to negotiate Eric s marriage with Christine of Hesse but were held back in Copenhagen In retaliation Eric added the insignia of Norway and Denmark to his own coat of arms and refused Danish requests to remove these symbols Lubeck upset over obstacles to trade introduced by Eric to hinder the Russian trade as well as withdrawn trade privileges joined Denmark in a war alliance The Polish Lithuanian union also joined desiring control of the Baltic trade Skirmishes broke out in May 1563 before war was officially declared in August that year War Edit C S H Akershus fortress Bohus Alvsborg Kalmar Castle Getaryggen Brobacka Axtorna Mared Varberg Oland I Oland II Oland III Bornholm Rugen Pomeraniaclass notpageimage Map of pillaging and battles of the Northern Seven Years War Red dots show places pillaged or torched by Denmark chiefly Daniel Rantzau Yellow dots show places pillaged or torched by Sweden Modern administrative borders are shown Initial phase Edit In May the first movements of the war started as a Danish fleet under Jakob Brockenhuus sailed towards the Baltic At Bornholm on 30 May 1563 the fleet fired on the Swedish navy under Jakob Bagge even though war had not officially been declared A battle arose that ended with Danish defeat German royal emissaries were sent to negotiate a peace but at the meeting place of Rostock no Swedes appeared On 13 August 1563 war was declared by emissaries from Denmark and Lubeck in Stockholm The same month Danish king Frederik II attacked Alvsborg At the beginning of the war the Danes advanced from Halland with a 25 000 strong army of professional mercenaries and captured Sweden s gateway to the west Alvsborg Fortress after only three days of bombardment and a six hour assault on 4 September This achieved the Danish aim of cutting off Sweden from the North Sea blocking the all important salt imports Eric then attacked Halmstad without result the Swedish counterattack was driven back by the professional Danish army After the king s departure from his army Charley de Mornays stepped in as the commanding officer and was beaten by the Danish at the Battle of Mared At sea a battle broke out near Oland on 11 September whereafter the war took a pause Campaigns Edit South Edit Herluf Trolle in 1551 On 30 May 1564 a battle broke out between the Swedish navy and the Danish Lubeck navy between Gotland and Oland The Swedish navy was under the command of Jakob Bagge and the Danish Lubeck navy was under the command of Herluf Trolle Bagge was captured and the largest warship of the Baltic the Mars also known as the Makalos sunk The Swedish navy retreated to Stockholm leaving a sea blockade in effect Klas Horn became the new commander and met the Danish fleet at the island Jungfrun north of Oland 14 August An inconclusive fight left the sea blockade in effect Daniel Rantzau Horn attacked the provinces Halland and Skane in 1565 and made several attempts at Bohuslan and Uddevalla The Danish burned old Lodose in the province of Vastergotland Eric initially led the army against the Danish himself but then turned over command to Nils Boije who on 28 August 1564 took Varberg The Danish army under Daniel Rantzau beat the Swedish army in the Battle of Axtorna on 20 October The Swedes fared better at sea Horn commanding the Swedish navy pursued a Danish Lubeck fleet onto the German coast where most of it was destroyed After this victory Horn steered for Oresund and levied a toll on passing ships On 4 June 1565 the Battle at Buchow took place on the Mecklenburg coast in which the Danish Lubeck commander Herluf Trolle was mortally wounded In the Battle of 7 July 1565 the Swedish navy under Horn defeated a Danish Lubeck navy under Otto Rud near Bornholm where Sweden captured the Danish flagship the Jegermesther Thus ensured the command of the eastern Baltic by the Swedes that year In January 1566 Sweden unsuccessfully laid siege to Bohus Fortress in Bohuslan then a Norwegian province Daniel Rantzau then moved his forces into Vastergotland At sea Horn returned to taking toll charges in the Baltic An indecisive battle at sea outside of Oland occurred on 26 July 1566 On 28 July half the Danish Lubeck Navy was lost in a storm at sea Horn was then called to command troops on land where he died 9 September North Edit Sweden occupied the undefended Norwegian province of Jemtland which was quickly reconquered by a counterattack by forces under command of the Norwegian governor of Trondelag The forces were unwilling to launch a counterattack on Swedish land In 1564 the Swedes marched under Claude Collart 9 and re occupied Jemtland as well as Herjedalen and Trondelag including the city of Trondheim Initially facing little opposition from the locals their subsequent ill treatment of the Trondelag natives along with tax pressure laid the groundwork for later resistance to Swedish invasion 9 Also Trondelag was assisted by the governor of Bergenhus Erik Rosenkrantz who forced 3500 local peasants to assist him and his 50 professional soldiers The Swedes saw Bergenhus as their next target Although the 400 Swedish soldiers were repelled from Trondelag Sweden continued to occupy Jamtland and Harjedalen These provinces were later regained by Denmark Norway following the peace process in 1570 10 Sweden also launched attacks towards Eastern Norway In the south east Sweden captured Bahus Fortress but lost it in 1566 Another part of the army marched through the valley Osterdalen in 1567 captured Hamar and continued towards Oslo 10 They reached as far as the Skiensfjord and torched Skien at one point citation needed In Oslo however citizens torched the city before invaders could seize it From the south east more Swedish forces were then sent to aid in capturing Akershus Fortress near Oslo These forces torched Konghelle and Sarpsborg on their way They were repelled from Oslo by local forces together with men belonging to Erik Rosenkrantz and the King of Denmark and Norway The Swedes retreated in a north eastern direction torching Hamar on their way 10 destroying Hamar Cathedral and the bishop s fortified palace Hamarhus Later phase Edit Jonkoping Vadstena Alvastra Abbey Motala hus Linkoping Norrkoping Skanninge Crossing of Sommen Eksjoclass notpageimage Localities of Rantzau s winter campaign Red dots mark plundered and burned localities The crossing of Sommen is in blue John III 1537 1592 King of Sweden 1568 1592 The Danish mercenary army was superior to the Swedish peasant army but the professional army would not fight until their pay was current Because only a fraction of the army would march Denmark had to give up the plan to take the fortress of Kalmar and settle for an attack on Stockholm instead In August 1564 Eric attacked Blekinge and his army occupied it cruelly most infamously during the Ronneby Bloodbath though the Danish later when reclaimed this Eric XIV turned insane paralyzing the Swedish war effort The Danish were exhausted and made no serious attacks until Rantzau attacked Smaland and Ostergotland with about 8 500 men when He burned every field and house and destroyed every head of livestock he could An attempt to cut off his retreat over the Holaveden failed as Rantzius army went over the ice of lake Sommen 11 and in the middle of February 1568 he returned to Halland Attempts were made to make peace between the fighting nations during these years Negotiators included the dukes of Pomerania French messenger Charles Dancay and Holy Roman Emperors Ferdinand I and Maximilian II The emperors wanted Denmark and Sweden to give back the territories won in Livonia during the ongoing Livonian War but Sweden refused to give in to those demands 12 In 1568 the Swedish duke John staged a successful coup d etat against his brother King Eric 12 Enthroned as king with the name John III he began negotiations with Denmark and on 18 November the same year this led to a draft peace agreement in Roskilde This was turned down by the Swedes however and in 1569 war stirred again The Danes attacked and reclaimed Varberg on 13 November The Swedes on the other hand now had great success clarification needed in Skane Peace negotiations and consequences EditMain articles Treaty of Roskilde 1568 and Treaty of Stettin 1570 At this point both armies were exhausted 5 leading to further negotiations toward peace In September 1570 a meeting began in Stettin and peace was finally reached on 13 December 1570 with the Treaty of Stettin The Swedish king withdrew the claims to Norway Skane Halland Blekinge and Gotland while the Danes withdrew their claims to Sweden The Baltic Sea was declared sovereign Danish In addition the Kalmar Union was declared dissolved The Swedes ransomed Alvsborg with 150 000 riksdaler and had to hand back captured warships The disputes concerning the Three Crowns insignia were unresolved and remained a source of future conflict See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Northern Seven Years War List of wars involving Poland Chronological list of wars involving Poland Livonian War 16th century war in the Baltic Sea region contemporary struggle for hegemony on the eastern Baltic coast 1558 1583 Naval battle near Hel Polish Swedish wars History of military conflicts between the nationsNotes Edit Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth after July 1569 1 Sources EditEriksson Bo 2007 Lutzen 1632 Norstedts Pocket Stockholm ISBN 978 91 7263 790 0 In Swedish Ersland Geir Atle Sandvik Hilde 1999 Norsk historie 1300 1625 Volume two of Norsk historie in Norwegian Oslo Samlaget ISBN 82 521 5182 5 Footnotes Edit Lukowski Jerzy Zawadzki Hubert 2001 A Concise History of Poland 1st ed Cambridge University Press pp 63 64 ISBN 9780521559171 a b c Bjorn Poulsen Home gt About Denmark gt History gt The Middle Ages gt The Kalmar Union Archived 3 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs March 7 2008 a b Forside gt Om Sverige gt Historie Archived 2007 02 11 at the Wayback Machine Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs Danish Embassy Stockholm August 5 2009 Knud J V Jespersen Home gt About Denmark gt History gt Reformation amp Absolutism gt Danish Sovereignty Archived 28 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs February 13 2008 a b Knud J V Jespersen Home gt About Denmark gt History gt Reformation amp Absolutism gt The Dano Swedish Wars Archived 2010 02 27 at the Wayback Machine Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs March 7 2008 Nar Hande Vad Historisk uppslagsbok 1500 2002 2002 pp 41 Nar Hande Vad Historisk uppslagsbok 1500 2002 2002 pp 42 Den Nordiske Syvarskrig at Gyldendals Abne Encyklopaedi a b Martinsen Tor Anders Bekken 2013 Claude Collarts invasjon og okkupasjon av Trondelag varen 1564 Trondhjemske Samlinger 63 87 ISBN 978 82 997479 7 4 a b c Ersland and Sandvik 1999 pp 205 206 Har slaktades hundratals nar de forsvarade sina hem in Swedish JP se 19 November 2016 Retrieved 12 April 2019 a b Eriksson 2007 pp 49 50Further reading EditAnderson R C 1910 Naval Battles in the Baltic 1553 1850 Andersson Ingvar 1956 A History of Sweden Frederick A Praeger Frost Robert I 2000 The Northern Wars 1558 1721 Longman Harlow ISBN 0 582 06429 5 Gjerset Knut 1915 History of the Norwegian People The MacMillan Company Volumes I amp II Lisk Jill 1967 The Struggle for Supremacy in the Baltic 1600 1725 Funk amp Wagnalls New York Mathisen Trygve 1952 Fra Bondeoppbud til Legdshaer Guldendal Norsk Forlag Scott Franklin D 1988 Sweden The Nation s History Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 0 8093 1489 4 Stagg Frank N 1956 East Norway and its Frontier George Allen amp Unwin Ltd Stagg Frank N 1953 The Heart of Norway George Allen amp Unwin Ltd Stiles Andrina 1992 Sweden and the Baltic 1523 1721 Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 0 340 54644 1 External links Edit Media related to Northern Seven Years War at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Northern Seven Years 27 War amp oldid 1130105139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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