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The Bagler faction which was made up of aristocracy, clergy and merchants contested with the Birkebeiners, essentially a faction of peasants, led by the pretender King Sverre, for control in a Norwegian civil war during the late 12th century. Although the Sverresaga provided Sverre a royal lineage as putative bastard son of Sigmund Mund, which in the Norway of the time provided him a claim to the throne, historians generally agree with the consensus of his time that he was a pretender. The Birkebeiners, led by King Sverre, sought to unite Norway into one nation. ...
This article is a list of rulers of Norway up until the present, including: The Norwegian kingdom (with the Faroe Islands) The Union with Iceland and Greenland (1262-1814) The Norwegian kingdom (with Iceland, Greenland and the Faroe Islands 1262-1814) The Union of Sweden and Norway (1319-1343) The...
Sverre Sigurdsson (Old Norse Sverrir Sigurðsson) (c. ...
(11th century - 12th century - 13th century - other centuries) As a means of recording the passage of time, the 12th century was that century which lasted from 1101 to 1200. ...
For an illegitimate child, see Illegitimacy. ...
Sigurd II (1133â1155) was the son of Harald Gille, king of Norway and his mistress Tora Guttormsdottir. ...
Bagli party has been supporting the rule of king Inge I of Norway and after him, king Magnus V of Norway (killed 1184) and the latter's father and regent, earl Erling Skakke (killed 1179). Inge Haraldson, krokrygg the crouchback (1135 - 1161) was the king of Norway between 1136 and 1161. ...
Magnus Erlingsson (1156-1184) was a king of Norway, from Etne in Hordaland. ...
King Sverre managed to acquire control of much of Norway, but in Hedmark and Østerdal, the Baglers remained powerful. Upon Sverre's death in 1202, his successor, King Haakon Sverrirson, died after a two-year reign in 1204, leaving his posthumous son Haakon Haakonsson in Hamar, which was under Bagler control. In 1206, a group of the Birkebeiners set off on a dangerous voyage through treacherous mountains and forests, taking the now two-year-old Haakon Haakonsson to safety in Trondhjem. Norwegian history credits the Birkebeiners' bravery with preserving the life of the boy who later became King Haakon Haakonsson IV, later around 1240 ending the civil wars and weakening the role of the aristocracy in Norway. Hedmark is a county in Norway, bordering Sør-Trøndelag, Oppland and Akershus. ...
The upper river valleys of Norwegian rivers have distinctive names which are vestiges of earlier cultural distinctions such as building styles, traditional clothing or bunad and domestic crafts. ...
Haakon III (Håkon Sverreson) was a king of Norway from 1202-1204. ...
County Hedmark Landscape Hedemarken Municipality NO-0403 Administrative centre Hamar Mayor (2004) Einar Busterud (By- og bygdelista - The City and Rural areas Party) Official language form Neutral Area - Total - Land - Percentage Ranked 257 351 km² 338 km² 0. ...
Events Temujin is proclaimed Genghis Khan of the Mongol people, founding the Mongol Empire Qutb ud-Din proclaims the Mameluk dynasty in India, the first dynasty of the Delhi Sultanate. ...
County Sør-Trøndelag Landscape Municipality NO-1601 Administrative centre Trondheim Mayor (2005) Rita Ottervik (A) Official language form Neutral Area - Total - Land - Percentage Ranked 258 342 km² 322 km² 0. ...
Håkon IV (1204—December 15, 1263), also called Haakon the Old, was declared to be the son of Håkon III of Norway, the leader of the Birkebeiner, who had seized control over large parts of Norway in 1202. ...
References
- History of the Norwegian People by Knut Gjerset, The MacMillan Company, 1915, Volumes I
- A History of Norway by Karen Larson, Princeton University Press, 1948
- Nordens Historie', ved Hiels Bache, Forslagsbureauet i Kjøbenhavn, 1884.
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