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Christopher II of Denmark

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Christopher II
Christopher II's tomb effigy at Sorø Abbey.
King of Denmark
Reign1320–1326
Coronation15 August 1324[1]
Vordingborg
PredecessorEric VI Menved
SuccessorValdemar III
Junior KingEric Christoffersen
King of Denmark
Reign1330–1332
PredecessorValdemar III
SuccessorVacant
Valdemar IV Atterdag
Junior KingEric Christoffersen
Born(1276-09-29)29 September 1276
Died2 August 1332(1332-08-02) (aged 55)
Nykøbing Castle
Burial
ConsortEuphemia of Pomerania
Issue
among others...
Margaret, Margravine of Brandenburg
Eric Christoffersen
Otto, Duke of Lolland and Estonia
Valdemar IV Atterdag
Names
Christopher Eriksen
HouseEstridsen
FatherEric V Klipping
MotherAgnes of Brandenburg
ReligionRoman Catholicism

Christopher II (Danish: Christoffer 2.; 29 September 1276 – 2 August 1332) was king of Denmark from 1320 to 1326 and again from 1329 until his death. He was son of Eric V. His name is connected with national disaster, as his rule ended in an almost total dissolution of the Danish state.

Biography

Seal of Christopher II.

Being the brother of King Eric VI, Christopher was a possible heir to the throne. As a young man with the title of Duke of Estonia, he supported the politics of his brother. Among other things he arrested Archbishop Jens Grand in 1294. But later on he joined the opposition and went into exile at the death of Eric in 1319.

The magnates wanted a weak royal power, and Christopher was elected as king in January 1320;[1] in return he signed a contractual håndfæstning, the first time this kind of document was used as a coronation charter. He received a "bankrupt estate" in which entire regions of the kingdom were mortgaged to German and Danish magnates. The conditions of the charter were very hard, because they limited his ability to assess taxes, as well as demanded payments on the mortgages. Christopher could make no decision regarding the realm without the consent of the nobility and the bishops. The privileges of the nobility and the church were included in the charter and new ones were included. No bishop could be imprisoned, exiled, or fined without the pope's approval, no secular court could try any churchman, no church land or property could be taxed, the nobles could raise fees or rents on peasants, no noble could be forced to fight abroad or forced to pay to outfit soldiers to fight abroad, the king was required to ransom captured noblemen within a year, all taxes imposed since the reign of Valdemar Sejr on nobles or church were to be lifted, but the kingdom's debts were to be paid. This shift of power away from the king would last until 1660.[2]

Despite signing the charter, King Christopher ruled as if it did not exist. Since he could not tax the church or Danish nobles he levied disastrous taxes on the German territories and peasants.

During the next years Christopher tried to strengthen his position by reviving Erik’s policy of warfare against the duchies, counties, and cities of Northern Germany. This resulted in new mortgages and taxes, and very soon he was in conflict with both the church and the magnates. During a rebellion in 1326 he was overthrown by an alliance between Danish magnates and Holstein Count Gerhard III and Count Johann I of Holstein-Kiel (Count Johann I of Wagrien, son of Adolf IV of Holstein). Christopher was forced into abdication and exile, while the 12-year-old Duke Valdemar of Southern Jutland was made a king of Denmark under the regent, Count Gerhard. They forced the Valdemar in his coronation charter to separate southern Jutland from Denmark so that never again would the King of Denmark rule there. Knud Knudson Porse took Halland for himself for his services to Count Gerhard and Count Johann. The squabbling over who got which pieces of Denmark broke down the alliances which had forced Christopher out of the country.[2]

Until 1329 Christopher lived in exile, but a growing chaos in the "magnates’ republic" of Denmark, and frictions between Gerhard and his cousin Count Johan of Plön, Christopher’s half-brother, gave him another chance. Suddenly, with the help of Henry of Mecklenburg, Christopher stood poised at Vordingborg with 2000 mounted German knights. Unfortunately for Christopher they allowed themselves to be surrounded and were forced to surrender. After a peasant uprising in Jutland which was crushed ruthlessly by Count Gerhard, the peasants in Skåne begged King Magnus IV of Sweden to rule them. He readily accepted and Denmark ceased to exist as a united kingdom.[3]

Christopher was restored as Danish king 1329–1330 by the co-operation of Count Johan, but this time he was reduced to the position of a puppet from the start. Most of his country was mortgaged, and he had no chance of holding real royal power. Jutland for example was mortgaged for 100,000 silver marks which had to be "laid on the table all at once" or the mortgage was not redeemed. It was an enormous mortgage and impossible to pay. Count Gerhard took all of Jutland as his personal property. Count Johan did the same on Funen and Zealand. In 1331 Christopher attempted to use a conflict between Counts Gerhard and Johan by joining the latter which ended in a clear military defeat at Dannevirke. Under the terms of the settlement between the counts, Christopher was allowed to retain the title of king, but in reality had no power whatsoever. He was given a simple house at Sakskøbing on Lolland, but even that was burned by German mercenaries. Christopher was imprisoned at Ålholm Castle on Lolland where he died a ruined and broken man the next year.[3]

Upon his death Denmark ceased being a formal kingdom, and for the next eight years it was subdued by various mortgagees to German military rule.

History's judgment of Christopher has been extremely hard, and he has often been regarded as a weak, unreliable and incapable tyrant— "the king who mortgaged Denmark to the Germans". He in many ways simply carried on the policy of his predecessor. The policy of mortgaging parts of Denmark was common practice by nobles and kings alike to raise money. It would be incorrect to call him a passive ruler; the power of the Danish and German high nobility and their co-operation with church establishment undermined his freedom of action.

Issue

With his wife, Euphemia of Pomerania, whom he wed in 1300;

Illegitimate with ? Lunge:[citation needed]

  • Regitze Christofferdatter Løvenbalk, married Peder Stigsen (Krognos) of Krapperup
  • Erik Christoffersen Løvenbalk, had issue. From this son descends the modern day line of the Dukes of Schleswig-Holstein and the former Prussian House of Hohenzollern.

Ancestry

Family of Christopher II of Denmark
16. Valdemar I of Denmark
8. Valdemar II of Denmark
17. Sophia of Minsk
4. Christopher I of Denmark
18. Sancho I of Portugal
9. Berengaria of Portugal
19. Dulce of Aragon
2. Eric V of Denmark
20. Mestwin I, Duke of Pomerania
10. Sambor II, Duke of Pomerania
21. Swinisława of Poland
5. Margaret Sambiria
22. Henry Borwin II, Lord of Mecklenburg
11. Mechtild of Mecklenburg
23. Christine of Sweden
1. Christopher II of Denmark
24. Otto I, Margrave of Brandenburg
12. Albert II, Margrave of Brandenburg
25. Judith of Poland
6. John I, Margrave of Brandenburg
26. Conrad II of Landsberg, Margrave of Niederlausitz
13. Mathilde of Landsberg
27. Elisabeth of Poland
3. Agnes of Brandenburg
28. Bernard III, Duke of Saxony
14. Albert I, Duke of Saxony
29. Brigitte of Denmark
7. Jutta of Saxony
30. Hermann I, Landgrave of Thuringia
15. Agnes of Thuringia and Meissen
31. Sophia of Bavaria

References

  1. ^ a b http://runeberg.org/dbl/4/0556.html
  2. ^ a b Danmarks Historie II www.perbenny.dk
  3. ^ a b Huitfeldt, Arild. Danmarks Riges Krønike

External links

Media related to Christopher II of Denmark at Wikimedia Commons

Christopher II
Born: 29 September 1276 Died: 2 August 1332
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Denmark
Duke of Estonia

1320–1326
with Eric Christoffersen (1321-1326)
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of Denmark
1329–1332
with Eric Christoffersen (1329-1332)
Vacant
Title next held by
Valdemar IV