Margaret Fredkulla
Margaret Fredkulla | |
---|---|
Queen consort of Denmark and Norway | |
Helena |
Margaret Fredkulla (
exonym is Margaret Colleen-of-Peace.Biography
Margaret was born a princess as one of four children of King
Queen of Norway
In 1101, she was married to King Magnus of Norway. The marriage had been arranged as a part of the peace treaty between Sweden and Norway. She was often referred to as Margaret Fredkulla (Margaret the Maiden of Peace). She brought with her large fiefs and areas in Sweden as her
Queen of Denmark
In 1105, she married King Niels of Denmark. Niels was made king in 1104, but he was described as a passive monarch who lacked the capacity to rule and who left the affairs of the state to his queen. With his blessing, Margaret governed Denmark.
Her father, king Inge the Elder, died in 1110, and was succeeded on the Swedish throne by his nephews. Her elder sister, Christina, lived in Russia, and was in Sweden counted as too far away to be given a share in the inheritance of their father, leaving only Margaret and her younger sister Catherine among the sisters as heirs.[7] It is known that Margaret shared her inheritance with her niece Ingrid in Norway, and her niece Ingeborg in Denmark, giving each one-fourth.[8]
In 1114, Margaret was sent a letter by Theobald of Étampes (Theobaldus Stampensis) thanking her for a liberality to the Church of Caen.[9]
Death
After her death in 1130, King Niels married Queen dowager
Issue
Queen Margaret had two children with King Niels:
- Inge Nielsen (died as a child)
- Magnus I of Sweden(born about 1106)
References
- ^ Margrete Ingesdatter “Fredkolla” (Store norske leksikon)
- ^ Margrete Fredkulla (Dansk Kvindehistorie)
- ^ Margrete Fredkulla (Dansk Kvindehistorie)
- ^ Margrete Fredkulla (Dansk Kvindehistorie)
- ^ Margrete Fredkulla (Dansk Kvindehistorie)
- ^ Margareta Fredkulla (Ingesdotter) Archived 2007-11-10 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Kungagravar och medeltidshistoria, Beckman, Natanael, Fornvännen 22-47, 1921
- ^ Kungagravar och medeltidshistoria, Beckman, Natanael, Fornvännen 22-47, 1921
- ^ Bernard Gineste, "Thibaud d'Étampes", in Cahiers d'Étampes-Histoire 10 (2009), pp. 43–58, showing that this letter was not sent to Margaret of Scotland, dead in 1089, but to Margaret Fredkulla.
Other sources
- Harrison, Dick Gud vill det – Nordiska korsfarare under medeltiden (2005)
- Nanna Damsholt Kvindebilledet i dansk højmiddelalder (1985)