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Ingeborg Of Sweden (1263–1292)
Ingeborg of Sweden may refer to: *Ingeborg Eriksdotter of Sweden, Swedish princess around 1212 * Ingeborg Birgersdotter of Bjelbo, Swedish princess around 1253, married John I, Duke of Saxony * Ingeborg of Sweden (1263–1292), Swedish princess 1263, daughter of King Waldemar *Ingeborg Magnusdotter of Sweden, Swedish princess 1277 *Ingeborg of Norway, Swedish princess consort and duchess 1312 *Ingeborg Eriksdottir of Norway, Swedish princess consort and duchess 1312 *Ingeborg Knutsdotter, Swedish princess consort 14th century, wife of Erik Valdemarsson the Elder *Princess Ingeborg of Denmark, Swedish princess consort and duchess 1897 See also * Ingeborg Ingeborg is a Germanic feminine given name, mostly used in Germany, Denmark, Sweden and Norway, derived from Old Norse ''Ingiborg, Ingibjǫrg'', combining the theonym ''Ing'' with the element ''borg'' "stronghold, protection". Ingebjørg is the No ...
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Ingeborg Eriksdotter Of Sweden
Ingeborg Eriksdotter (after 1214 – 17 June 1254) was a Swedish princess, daughter of King Erik Knutsson, eldest sibling of King Erik Eriksson, wife of Birger Jarl, and mother of Kings Valdemar and Magnus Ladulås. Biography Ingeborg was born the eldest daughter of King Erik Knutsson and his wife Rikissa of Denmark. Her parents married in 1210 and she was born at the earliest on 1214. She lived during her youth in exile in Denmark after her brother had been deposed by his guardian and regent in 1229. Sometime between 1235 and 1240 Ingeborg married Birger Magnusson of the House of Bjälbo, who supported her brother Erik Eriksson to reacquire the Swedish throne from the usurper Knut Långe. When Jarl Ulf Fase died in 1248, Birger was made the Jarl of Sweden. He had almost as much power as the king himself, partially because of his royal wife Ingeborg. Princess Ingeborg bore many children to her husband Birger. In 1250, her brother Erik died without an heir and her eldest ...
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Ingeborg Birgersdotter Of Bjelbo
Ingeborg (30 June 1302), was a Duchess consort of Saxony, married to John I, Duke of Saxony. In contemporary German sources, Ingeborg is referred to as ''filia regis Suecie'' and ''filia Regis Sweonum'' ("daughter of the Swedish King"). In his 1876 commentary on the ''Annales Lubecenses'', Claes Annerstedt speculated that she was the daughter of King Erik Eriksson.Gillingstam, Hans"Utomnordiskt och nordiskt i de äldsta svenska dynastiska förbindelserna."''Personhistorisk tidskrift'' 77 (1981): 17. The Danish genealogist Sixten Otto Brenner made the same claim independently in 1961. Brenner noted that Ingeborg's seal featured three leopards, the symbol of the Danish royal family, which Erik had inherited from his mother. He further supported his claim by citing the papal dispensations required for Ingeborg's daughters, Helena and Elisabeth, to marry Count Günther IX of Schwarzburg-Blankenburg and Duke Valdemar of Schleswig, despite their fourth degree of affinity with their husb ...
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Ingeborg Of Sweden (1263–1292)
Ingeborg of Sweden may refer to: *Ingeborg Eriksdotter of Sweden, Swedish princess around 1212 * Ingeborg Birgersdotter of Bjelbo, Swedish princess around 1253, married John I, Duke of Saxony * Ingeborg of Sweden (1263–1292), Swedish princess 1263, daughter of King Waldemar *Ingeborg Magnusdotter of Sweden, Swedish princess 1277 *Ingeborg of Norway, Swedish princess consort and duchess 1312 *Ingeborg Eriksdottir of Norway, Swedish princess consort and duchess 1312 *Ingeborg Knutsdotter, Swedish princess consort 14th century, wife of Erik Valdemarsson the Elder *Princess Ingeborg of Denmark, Swedish princess consort and duchess 1897 See also * Ingeborg Ingeborg is a Germanic feminine given name, mostly used in Germany, Denmark, Sweden and Norway, derived from Old Norse ''Ingiborg, Ingibjǫrg'', combining the theonym ''Ing'' with the element ''borg'' "stronghold, protection". Ingebjørg is the No ...
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Ingeborg Magnusdotter Of Sweden
Ingeborg Magnusdotter (1277 – 5 April or 15 August 1319) was Queen of Denmark by marriage to King Eric VI. She was the daughter of King Magnus Ladulås of Sweden and Helvig of Holstein. Life Ingeborg was born a daughter of King Magnus Ladulås of Sweden and Helvig of Holstein. In 1288, she was engaged to marry to King Eric Menved of Denmark, a marriage which took place in Helsingborg in 1296. The marriage was as a part of dynastic policies: in 1298, her brother king Birger of Sweden married her husband's sister, Princess Martha of Denmark. The dispensation necessary for the marriage was not obtained until 1297 because of the conflict between her spouse and the archbishop Jens Grand. Queen Queen Ingeborg was described as beautiful and tender; songs describe how she asked for a prison amnesty at her wedding, and contemporary songs both in Denmark and Sweden praise her for her compassion and sense of justice.Jorgensen, Ellen & Skovgaard, Johanne, Danske dronniger; fort ...
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Ingeborg Of Norway
Ingeborg of Norway (; ; ; 1301 – 17 June 1361) was a Norwegian princess and by marriage a Swedish royal duchess with a position in the regency governments in Norway (1319–1327) and Sweden (1319–1326) during the minority of her son, King Magnus Eriksson. In 1318–1319, she was Sweden's '' de facto'' ruler, and from 1319 until 1326, she was Sweden's first ''de jure'' female regent. Her role in northern European history is considered of major importance. Life Early life Ingeborg was born in 1301 as the only legitimate daughter of King Håkon V of Norway from his marriage with Euphemia of Rügen. As a child, she was first betrothed to Magnus Birgersson, the son and designated heir of Birger, King of Sweden. Soon afterwards the engagement was however broken for altered political reasons, and in 1305 she was betrothed to Duke Erik, a younger brother of King Birger, thus uncle of her first betrothed. In 1312, Ingeborg and Erik were formally married in a double wedding in ...
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Ingeborg Eriksdottir Of Norway
Ingeborg is a Germanic feminine given name, mostly used in Germany, Denmark, Sweden and Norway, derived from Old Norse ''Ingiborg, Ingibjǫrg'', combining the theonym ''Ing'' with the element ''borg'' "stronghold, protection". Ingebjørg is the Norwegian most used variant of the name, and Ingibjörg is the Icelandic variant. People Pre-modern era :''Ordered chronologically'' * Ingeborg, 10th century mother of Ragnvald Ulfsson * Ingeborg Tryggvasdotter (10th–11th century), daughter of Tryggve Olafsson (died 963), granddaughter of Harald Fairhair and sister of Olaf I of Norway * Ingeborg of Kiev (), mother of Valdemar I of Denmark * Ingibjörg Hakonsdóttir Of Orkney (fl. 12th century) wife of Óláfr Guðrøðarson king of Isle of Man * Ingeborg of Denmark, Queen of France (1174–1237), wife of Philip II of France and daughter of Valdemar I of Denmark * Ingeborg Eriksdotter of Sweden (c. 1212 – c. 1254), daughter of King Erik Knutsson of Sweden, wife of Birger Jarl and m ...
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Erik Valdemarsson The Elder
Erik Valdemarsson the Elder (born 1271/1272; died 1330) was a Swedish prince and ''riksråd'' for Norway and Sweden. He was the son of King Valdemar of Sweden and Queen Sophia of Denmark. He is the progenitor of the ''Valdemarsgren'' branch of the House of Bjälbo. He married Ingeborg Knutsdotter (Aspenäsätten). When his father was deposed in 1275 the three year old Erik was temporarily protected by the Norwegian earl Alv Erlingsson. Because he was a potential claimant to the throne he was held prisoner in the 1290s along with his father. In 1302 when there was a Swedish-Norwegian alliance and he was released from prison but he had to follow his cousin Eric Magnusson to Norway where he remained during the unrest in Sweden, he was appointed to the Norwegian government. He participated as a negotiator for Eric VI of Denmark and Haakon V of Norway against the Swedish dukes and Eric VI promised him Danish estates. He was mentioned as a knight and Norwegian Riksrad in 1308. When Ha ...
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Princess Ingeborg Of Denmark
Princess Ingeborg of Denmark (Ingeborg Charlotte Caroline Frederikke Louise; 2 August 1878 – 12 March 1958), was a Princess of Sweden by marriage to Prince Carl, Duke of Västergötland. Princess Ingeborg was a daughter of Frederick VIII of Denmark and Louise of Sweden, she grew up in Copenhagen as a Danish princess. In 1897, she was married to her mother's first cousin Prince Carl of Sweden, Duke of Västergötland, and spent the rest of her of life in Sweden as a member of the Swedish royal family. Her marriage produced four children, among whom were Märtha, Crown Princess of Norway and Astrid, Queen of the Belgians. Early life Princess Ingeborg was born on 2 August 1878 at her parents' country residence, the Charlottenlund Palace north of Copenhagen, during the reign of her paternal grandfather, King Christian IX. She was the second daughter and fifth child of Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark, and his wife Princess Louise of Sweden. Her father was the eldest son ...
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