Charles XII of Sweden
Charles XII | |
---|---|
King of Sweden | |
Reign | 5 April 1697 – 29 November 1718 O.S.[1] |
Coronation | 14 December 1697 |
Predecessor | Charles XI |
Successor | Ulrika Eleonora |
Born | 17 June 1682 Tre Kronor, Sweden |
Died | 29 November 1718 Fredrikshald, Norway | (aged 36)
Burial | 26 February 1719 Riddarholmen Church, Stockholm |
House | House of Pfalz-Zweibrücken |
Father | Charles XI of Sweden |
Mother | Ulrika Eleonora of Denmark |
Religion | Lutheran |
Signature |
Charles XII, also Carl (Swedish: Karl XII; 17 June 1682 – 30 November 1718 O.S.[1]), Latinized to Carolus Rex, was the King of Sweden 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]
In 1700, a triple alliance of Denmark–Norway, Saxony–Poland–Lithuania and Russia launched a threefold attack on the Swedish protectorate of Swedish Holstein-Gottorp and provinces of Livonia and Ingria, aiming to draw advantage as Sweden 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 usually 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 which Charles then 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' 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 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 close would see not only the end of the Swedish Empire but also of its effectively organized absolute monarchy and war machine, commencing a parliamentarian 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, who became King Frederick I of Sweden.[4]
Royal title
Charles, like all kings, was styled by a royal title, which combined all his titles into one single phrase. This was:
We Charles, by the Grace of God King of Sweden, the Goths and the Vends, Grand Prince of Finland, Duke of Scania, Estonia, Livonia and Karelia, Lord of Ingria, Duke of Bremen, Verden and Pomerania, Prince of Rügen and Lord of Wismar, and also Count Palatine by the Rhine, Duke in Bavaria, Count of Zweibrücken–Kleeburg, as well as Duke of Jülich, Cleve and Berg, Count of Veldenz, Spanheim and Ravensberg and Lord of Ravenstein.[5]
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.[6] The non-mathematic numbering tradition continues with the current King of Sweden, Carl XVI Gustaf, being counted as the equivalent of Charles XVI.[citation needed]
Marriage and relationships
Charles never married and fathered no children of which 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 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”.[7] 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 either may have been due to a strong religious faith.[8] Charles himself suggested in conversation with Axel Löwen that he actively resisted any match until peace could be secured>[9] and was in some sense “married” to the military life.[10][11] But that he was “chaste” occasioned speculation in his lifetime. Rumours that he was a hermaphrodite were quelled in 1917 when his coffin was opened and he was shown to have suffered no physical irregularities.[12] 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 for ever.[9][13] Some historians suggest that he resisted a marriage with Denmark which could have caused a family rift between those who dynastically favoured Holstein-Gottorp.[14] Other historians believe it possible he was in fact homosexual,[15][16] but there is no firm evidence of this.[9] Certainly a letter from Reuterholm suggested that Charles had indicated a closeness to the Elector Prince of Saxony, Maximilian Emanuel of Württemberg-Winnental, who Charles described as “very pretty”. But writing in the 1960s, Hatton relates that Wurttemberg was very much heterosexual and the relationship is just as likely to have been that of teacher-pupil – suggesting instead that Charles simply had an interest in the opposite sex never consummated.[12]
Great Northern War
Early campaigns
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, largely 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 invested 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.[18]
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 to close 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.[19] 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.[18]
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 split 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.[20]
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).[21]
Russian resurgence
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 standards for role model. Russian forces managed to penetrate Ingria and established a new city, Saint Petersburg, there. 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 of approximately 28,800 men, with a further 14,000 in Swedish Finland as well as further garrisons in the Baltic and German provinces.[22][23]
After securing his "favorite" victory in the Battle of Holowczyn, despite being outnumbered over three to one against 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.[24] 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 of being able to muster some 40,000 troops, but 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, as Charles marched his troops for winter camp in Ukraine.[25]
By the time of the decisive Battle of Poltava, Charles had been wounded, one-third of his infantry was dead, and his supply train was destroyed. The king was incapacitated by a coma resulting from his injuries and was unable to lead the Swedish forces. With the numbers of Charles' army reduced to some 23,000, with several wounded and handling 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.[26] The Swedish assault ended in disaster, and the king fled with a small entourage south to the Ottoman Empire, where he 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 in 1709 marks the downfall of the Swedish Empire,[27] as well as the founding of the Russian Empire.[28]
Exile in the Ottoman Empire
This section needs additional citations for verification. (April 2014) |
The Turks initially welcomed the Swedish king, who managed to provoke a war between the Ottomans and the Russians. 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. Demirbaş, the Turkish word for fixed asset, is literally ironhead (demir = iron, baş = head), which is the reason why this nickname has often been translated as Ironhead Charles. Eventually a small village named Karlstad had to be built near Bender to accommodate the ever-growing Swedish population there. Sultan Ahmet III, as a gesture to the King, had bought some of the Swedish women and children put up for sale by the Russians and turned them over to the Swedes, thus further strengthening the growing community of Caroleans.[29]
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 afterwards 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 Pälkäne 1713 and the Battle of Storkyro 1714, the military, administration and clergymen escaped from Finland, which fell under Russian military regime.[30]
Augustus II regained the Polish throne.
Pomerania and Norway
This section needs additional citations for verification. (April 2014) |
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.).[31]
After 14 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 material, 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.[32]
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 and killed during the siege. 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
While inspecting trenches close to the perimeter of the fortress on 11 December (30 November Old 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.[34] The definitive circumstances around Charles' death are unclear however. Despite multiple investigations of the battlefield, Charles' skull and his clothes, it is not known where he was hit exactly, and whether the shot came from the ranks of the enemy or from his own men.[35] There are several theories as to how Charles died, though none can be given with any certainty. Although there were many people around the king at the time of his death, there were no witnesses to the actual moment he was struck. The most likely theory is that Charles was killed by the Danes as he was within easy reach of the Danish guns.[36] Even then, 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 sinister theories claim he was murdered: One claim is that the killer was a Swedish compatriot and asserts that enemy guns were not firing at the time Charles was struck.[36] Suspects in this claim range from a nearby soldier tired of the siege who wanted to put an end to the war, to a murderer sent by Charles' own brother-in-law, who profited by the event, later taking the throne as Frederick I of Sweden. Another possible murderer was Fredrik's aide-de-camp, André Sicre, who confessed during a state of delirium brought on by fever but later recanted.[36] It is also 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.[36] In the Varberg Fortress museum there is a display with a lead filled brass button - Swedish - that is claimed by some to be the projectile that killed the king.
Another odd account of Charles' 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".[36]
The body has been exhumed on three occasions to ascertain the cause of death; in 1746, 1859 and 1917.[36] The 1859 exhumation found that the wound was in accordance with a shot from the Norwegian fort while the other two analyses found that he had been murdered.[36]
Charles was succeeded to the Swedish throne by his sister, Ulrika Eleonora. As Palatinate-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.[citation needed]
Legacy
Exceptional for abstaining from alcohol and women, 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, posthumously earning him the epithet "last of the Vikings," although the Great Northern War resulted in Sweden's defeat and the end of her empire within years of his own death.[citation needed]
Charles' 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.[37] 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).[38] 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.[39] 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[39] in Stockholm's Kungsträdgården (unveiled on 30 November 1868, the 150th anniversary of Charles' death)[40] and Gustaf Cederström's painting Karl XII:s likfärd ("Funeral procession of Charles XII", 1878).[41] The date of Charles' death was chosen by a student association in Lund for annual torch marches beginning in 1853.[42]
In 1901, August Strindberg in his play Karl XII broke with the heroization practice, showing an introverted Charles XII in conflict with his impoverished subjects.[43] In the so-called Strindberg feud (1910–1912), his response to the "Swedish cult of Charles XII" (Steene)[44] was that Charles had been "Sweden's ruin, the great offender, a ruffian, the rowdies' idol, a counterfeiter."[45] 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).[46]
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.[47] 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.[48]
A number of Russian writers for the state coupled Charles XII with Napoleon and Hitler as foreign invaders who all came to grief when trying to invade the Russian heartland.[citation needed]
Scientific contributions
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, 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. Several historians of science suspect that either the multi-talented Emanuel Swedenborg or the brilliant inventor Christopher Polhem – also present at the meeting in Lund – may have been the true inventor behind this feat, or at least a significant contributor.[citation needed]
Literature
Charles fascinated many in his time. In 1731, Voltaire wrote a highly critical biography blaming Charles for the collapse of Sweden's power.[49] Samuel Johnson, a devoted anti-militarian, wrote in his poem "The Vanity of Human Wishes":
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.[50][51][52]
Charles XII figures quite prominently in Robert Massie's magnum opus "Peter the Great".[53]
Ancestors
In popular culture
August Strindberg's 1901 play Carl XII
The 1925 Swedish film Charles XII was a silent epic portraying his reign. In 2007, Oleg Ryaskov again portrayed Charles XII (Eduard Flerov) in the Russian drama The Sovereign's Servant.
A character based on Charles XII plays a major role in The Age of Unreason, a series of four alternate history novels written by American science fiction and fantasy author Gregory Keyes.
A number of albums started by Ultima Thule, later including other artists, were named "Carolus Rex".
In May 2012 the Swedish heavy metal band Sabaton released an album named "Carolus Rex" which featured a song of the same name about Charles XII. The song itself and the four following songs (tracks 7 to 11) on the album tell the story of Charles XII from his rise to the throne until his death and the fall of the Swedish Empire.
Al Stewart's song, "The Coldest Winter in Memory," deals primarily with Charles's military campaign and defeat by Peter the Great. The song is on the out-of-print 1996 album Seemed Like a Good idea at the Time and the live 2010 album Uncorked.[54]
In his novel, Victory, Joseph Conrad compares his Swedish protagonist, Axel Heyst, to the Swedish king, "...with his bald head and long moustaches, he resembled the portraits of Charles XII, of adventurous memory."[55]
In Roy Andersson's 2014 film A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence, a young Swedish king appears in several scenes while an army in the background sings a song about Charles XII. In one scene, the king has all the women driven out of a bar before he enters, orders mineral water rather than beer, and takes interest in the young male bar assistant, which accords with popular depictions of Charles XII, as a bachelor and teetotaler.
References
- ^ a b Nordling, Carl O. "The Death of Karl XII". Questia. Questia. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
- ^ "Karl XII (in Swedish)" (PDF). Livrustkammaren. Livrustkammaren Museum. Retrieved 28 April 2016.
- ^ Cronholm, Neander Nicolas (1902). "37". A history of Sweden from the earliest times to the present day. New York.
{{cite book}}
: 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 Förlag. OCLC 49695435.
- ^ "Sweden and Finland. Titles of European hereditary rulers". eurulers.altervista.org. Retrieved 28 April 2016.
- ^ Article Karl in Nordisk familjebok
- ^ R.M. Hatton, ‘’Charles XII of Sweden’’, 1968, p89
- ^ Frans Bengtsson, ‘’The Life of Charles XII’’, p38
- ^ a b c Liljegren, Karl XII: en biografi
- ^ R.M. Hatton, ‘’Charles XII of Sweden’’, 1968, p210
- ^ Frans Bengtsson, ‘’The Life of Charles XII’’, p469
- ^ a b R.M. Hatton, ‘’Charles XII of Sweden’’, 1968, p219
- ^ R.M. Hatton, ‘’Charles XII of Sweden’’, 1968, p220
- ^ Byron Nordstrom, ‘’Dictionary of Scandinavian History’’, p317
- ^ Tim Blanning, Frederick the Great, 2015, p. 152
- ^ Simon Sebag Montefiore, The Romanovs: 1613-1918, 2016, p. 451
- ^ 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. 182–93.
{{cite book}}
:|author=
has generic name (help) - ^ 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.
- ^ Karoliner by Alf Åberg, p. 117
- ^ Karl XII by Bengt Liljegren, p. 151 and 163
- ^ Svenska slagfält, page 280
- ^ Svenska folkets underbara öden, book four by Carl Grimberg, about the numbers of Mazepa's army
- ^ Bra Böckers Lexikon, the article of Karl XII
- ^ Kalevi Jaakko Holsti (1991). Peace and War: Armed Conflicts and International Order, 1648-1989. p. 69.
- ^ Dominic Lieven (2006). The Cambridge History of Russia: Volume 2, Imperial Russia, 1689-1917. p. 29.
- ^ "SWEDEN, THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE AND THE CRIMEAN TARTARS, c 1580 – 1714 – THE REALPOLITIK OF A CHRISTIAN KINGDOM". Världsinbördeskriget. Wordpress. Retrieved 28 April 2016.
- ^ Suomen historian pikkujättiläinen. p. 265. ISBN 978-951-0-14253-0.
- ^ 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.
- ^ Associated Press (16 September 1917). "A ROYAL AUTOPSY DELAYED 200 YEARS". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 November 2008.
{{cite news}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help) - ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 2013-08-10.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Lindqvist, Herman (29 November 2009). "Karl XII:s död ger inte forskarna någon ro". Aftonbladet.
- ^ a b c d e f g Mike Dash (17 September 2012). "Past Imperfect". Smithsonian Magazine.
- ^ 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.
- ^ 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 från forntid till nutid. Vol. 3. Nordisk rotogravyr. p. 1210.
- ^ Scott, Franklin Daniel (1988). Sweden, the nation's history. SIU Press. p. 560.
- ^ Lööw, Heléne (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.
- ^ 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.
- ^ Moers, Gerald (2000). "Im Gemeindewald der Geschichte". In Schöning, Udo (ed.). Internationalität 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 lågt i år". DN. 27 November 2011. "Nationalists abandon 'warrior king' anniversary". TheLOcal. 28 November 2011. On the use of Charles XII by nationalists and Nazis in general "Om den 30 november". Peter Englund, in Expressen 30 November 1994.
{{cite web}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help) - ^ Voltaire (1740). The History of Charles XII. King of Sweden ... Seventh edition... p. 1.
- ^ Bengtsson, Frans G. Karl XII:s Levnad. Norstedts. ISBN 9789119418326.
- ^ Hatton, Ragnhild Marie (1968). Charles XII of Sweden. London.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Voltaire (1731). History of Charles XII, King of Sweden.
- ^ Massie, Robert K. (October 1981). Peter the Great: His Life and World. New York City: Ballantine Books. pp. Part 3–4. ISBN 0-345-29806-3.
- ^ Stewart, Al. "The Coldest Winter in Memory". Al Stewart - Official Website. Al Stewart. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
- ^ Conrad, Joseph. "Victory: An Island Tale". Project Gutenberg. Project Gutenberg. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
Further reading
- 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).
- Hatton, R.M. Charles XII of Sweden (1968).
- Peterson, Gary Dean. Warrior kings of Sweden: the rise of an empire in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries (McFarland, 2007).
External links
- 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[permanent dead link] Template:Swe icon
- BBC News item: Who killed Sweden's Warrior King?
- Timeline of 1700–1720 in Sweden
- . . 1914.
- New International Encyclopedia. 1905. .
- The American Cyclopædia. 1879. .
- Charles XII of Sweden
- People from Stockholm
- Swedish monarchs
- Protestant monarchs
- Rulers of Finland
- House of Palatinate-Zweibrücken
- House of Wittelsbach
- Military personnel killed by friendly fire
- Monarchs killed in action
- Uppsala University alumni
- Swedish monarchs of German descent
- 1682 births
- 1718 deaths
- Burials at Riddarholmen Church
- Swedish people of the Great Northern War
- Battle of Poltava
- 17th-century monarchs in Europe
- 18th-century monarchs in Europe