Online Encyclopedia

MARGARET (1353-1412)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 702 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

MARGARET (1353-1412)  , queen of Denmark, Norway and Sweden, the daughter of Valdemar IV. of Denmark, was born in 1353 and married ten years later to King Haakon VI. of Norway . Her first act, after her
See also:
father's
See also:
death (1395), was to procure the election of her infant son Olaf as king of Denmark . Olaf died in 1387, having in 138o also succeeded his father; and in the following
See also:
year Margaret, who had ruled both'kingdoms in his name, was chosen regent of Norway and Denmark . She had already given proofs of her
See also:
superior statesmanship by recovering possession of Schleswig from the Holstein
See also:
counts, who had held it absolutely for a generation, and who now received it back indeed as a
See also:
fief (by the compact of
See also:
Nyborg 1386), but under such stringent conditions that the Danish
See also:
crown got all the
See also:
advantage of the arrangement . By this compact, moreover, the chronically rebellious Jutish
See also:
nobility lost the support they had hitherto always found in Schleswig-Holstein, and Margaret,
See also:
free from all fear of domestic sedition, could now give her undivided attention to Sweden, where the mutinous nobles were already in arms against their unpopular king, Albert of
See also:
Mecklenburg . At a
See also:
conference held at Dalaborg Castle, in March 1388, the Swedes were compelled to accept all Margaret's conditions, elected her "
See also:
Sovereign Lady and Ruler," and engaged to accept from her any king she chose to appoint . On the 24th of
See also:
February 1389, Albert, who had returned from Mecklenburg with an army of mercenaries, was routed and taken prisoner at Aasle near Falkoping, and Margaret was now the omnipotent
See also:
mistress of three kingdoms .
See also:
Stockholm then almost entirely a German city, still held out; fear of Margaret induced both the Mecklenburg princes and the Wendish towns to hasten to its assistance; and the Baltic and the North Sea speedily swarmed with the privateers of the Viktualien brodre or Vitalianer, so called because their professed
See also:
object was to revictual Stockholm . Finally the Hansa intervened, and by the compact of Lindholm (1395) Albert was released by Margaret on promising to pay 60,000 marks within three years, the Hansa in the mean-time to hold Stockholm in
See also:
pawn . Albert failing to pay his ransom within the stipulated time, the Hansa surrendered Stockholm to Margaret in September 1398, in
See also:
exchange for very considerable commercial privileges . It had been understood that Margaret should, at the first convenient opportunity, provide the three kingdoms with a king who was to be her nearest kinsman, and in 1389 she proclaimed her infant cousin,
See also:
Eric of Pomerania, king of Norway . In 1396 homage was rendered to him in Denmark and Sweden likevi'ise, Margaret reserving to herself the office of regent during his minority .

To weld the

See also:
united kingdoms still more closely together, Margaret summoned a congress of the three
See also:
councils of state to Kalmar in
See also:
June 1399; and on Trinity
See also:
Sunday, the 17th of June, Eric was solemnly crowned king of Denmark, Norway and Sweden . The proposed act of union divided the three Rigsraads, but the actual deed embodying the terms of the union never got beyond the stage of an unratified draft . Margaret revolted at the clauses which insisted that each country should retain exclusive possession of its own
See also:
laws and customs, and be administered by its own dignitaries, as tending in her opinion to prevent the
See also:
complete amalgamation of Scandinavia . But with her usual prudence she avoided every appearance of an open rupture . A few years after the union of Kalmar, Eric, now in his eighteenth year, was declared of age and homage was rendered to him in all his three kingdoms, but during her lifetime Margaret was the real ruler of Scandinavia . So long as the union was insecure, Margaret had tolerated the presence near the
See also:
throne of " good men " from all three realms (the Rigsraad, or council of state, as these councillors now began to be called); but theirinfluence was always insignificant . In every direction the royal authority remained supreme . The offices of high constable and
See also:
earl marshal were
See also:
left vacant; the Danehoffer or
See also:
national assemblies fell into desuetude, and the
See also:
great queen, an ideal despot, ruled through her court officials acting as superior clerks . But law and order were well maintained; the licence of the nobility was sternly repressed; the kingdoms of Sweden and Norway were treated as integral parts of the Danish state, and national aspirations were frowned upon or checked, though Norway, as being more loyal, was treated more indulgently than Sweden . Margaret also recovered for the Crown all the landed
See also:
property which had been alienated during the troublous days of Valdemar IV . This so-called " reduktion," or
See also:
land-recovery, was carried out with the utmost rigour, and hundreds of estates fell into the Crown . Margaret also reformed the Danish currency, substituting good
See also:
silver coins for the old and worthless copper tokens, to the great advantage both of herself and the state .

She had always large sums of

See also:
money to dispose of, and a consider-able proportion of this treasure was dispensed in
See also:
works of charity . Margaret's
See also:
foreign policy was sagaciously circumspect, in sharp contrast with the venturesomeness of her father's . The most tempting offer of
See also:
alliance, the most favourable conjunctures, could never move her from her
See also:
system of
See also:
neutrality . On the other hand she spared no pains to recover lost Danish territory .
See also:
Gotland she
See also:
purchased from its actual possessors, Albert of Mecklenburg and the Livonian Order, and the greater
See also:
part of Schleswig was regained in the same way . Margaret died suddenly on board her
See also:
ship in Flensborg harbour on the 28th of
See also:
October 1412 . We know very little of her private character . Contemporary records are both scanty and hostile to a sovereign who squeezed the utmost out of the
See also:
people . Craft and wiliness are the qualities most generally attributed to her, coupled with the cynical praise that " in temporal matters she was very lucky." See Danmarks riges historie, den senere Middelalder, pp . 358-412 (Copenhagen, 1897—1905) ; Erslev, Danmarks historie under dronning Margrethe (Copenhagen, 1882—1901); Hill, Margaret of Denmark (
See also:
London, 1898) . - (R . N .

End of Article: MARGARET (1353-1412)
[back]
MARGARET (1283–1290)
[next]
MARGARET (1489–1541)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.