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  1. Karin Månsdotter, llamada también Katarina (Catalina) Månsdotter y Katarina Magnusdotter (Uppland, 6 de octubre o 6 de noviembre de 1550 - Birkaland, 13 de septiembre de 1612), fue reina de Suecia entre 1567 y 1568, siendo la esposa del rey Erico XIV.

  2. Karin Månsdotter (in English Catherine; 6 November 1550 – 13 September 1612) was first the mistress and then the Queen of King Eric XIV of Sweden . Early life. Karin was born in Stockholm to a soldier and later prison guard named Måns (her surname is a patronym, literally "daughter of Måns") and his wife Ingrid.

  3. Katarina "Karin" Hansdotter (1539–1596) was the royal mistress of King John III of Sweden during his time as Prince and Duke of Finland in 1555–1562. Biography [ edit ] Karin Hansdotter was the daughter of the Lutheran priest Hans Klasson Kökkemäster , a former monk of the Dominican Order , and his wife Ingeborg Åkesdotter, a former nun ...

  4. (1550 - 1612) Queen of Sweden. Sarcophagus, Turku Cathedral, K. K. Meinander, Porträtt i Finland, 1931. On both sides of the Gulf of Bothnia, this queen - known as Kaarina Maununtytär in Finnish and Karin Månsdotter in Swedish - is regarded as one of the most interesting personages in Swedish history.

  5. Type: Ilegítimo [ 2 ] Karin (Katarina) Hansdotter was the royal mistress of King John III of Sweden in the 1550s before his marriage during his time as Prince and Duke of Finland. [ 1] Notes. John cared for Karin and their children even after he married Catherine Jagellonica, in 1562.

  6. When Karin Hansdotter was born in 1589, in Bommarsbo, Dalarna, Sweden, her father, Hans Jönsson Grontuv, was 39 and her mother, Kerstin Larsdotter, was 34. She married Jöns Erlandsson in 1615. They were the parents of at least 9 sons and 3 daughters. She died on 27 October 1672, in Grangärde, Dalarna, Sweden, at the age of 83.

  7. Her stepson John's lover Karin Hansdotter originally belonged to her court. In 1554 and in 1556, there were signs that she was pregnant, but no pregnancy was ever officially announced and none was ever confirmed. In 1555, she and the royal children accompanied the King to the province of Finland, where they stayed until 1556.