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  1. Hace 10 horas · May 14, 2024 ~ Saad719. Happy 20th Wedding Anniversary to King Frederik X and Queen Mary of Denmark! Royal Guests and Relatives from around the world joined the Danish Royal Family for a spectacular Wedding of Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark and Mary Donaldson in Copenhagen on this day in 2004, 20 years ago, following a Gala Performance at the ...

  2. Hace 10 horas · There are three reasons to think that Krieger was right, and each of them paved the way for a dynastic Scandinavianism. 7. The most important reason was that the non-royal marriage “damaged Denmark” by depriving “the country of a queen and the prospect of an heir of the body for the continuation of” the royal house.

  3. Hace 10 horas · The strategy and ideology of the house of Glücksburg that ascended to the Danish throne in November 1863 was that of a classic dynasticism that was incompatible with (pan)nationalism, while the house of Bernadotte clearly embraced an ‘official nationalism’ that combined dynastic ambitions with (pan)nationalism and wars of expansion.

  4. Hace 10 horas · Barton, Dunbar Plunket, Bernadotte and Napoleon 1763–1810 (London, 1921) Google Scholar Barton, Hildor Arnold, ‘The Swedish Succession Crises of 1809 and 1810 and the Question of Scandinavian Union’, Essays on Scandinavian History (Carbondale, IL, 2009) Google Scholar

  5. Hace 10 horas · By clever use of caricatures, the Scandinavianist press made sure to depict Heltzen’s quest as personal vendetta detached from reality, thereby helping to perpetuate impressions that there was no such thing as a serious Scandinavianist plot. Still, the Danish king and government found reason to feel threatened.

  6. Hace 10 horas · This chapter zooms in on the opponents of a Scandinavian union (e.g. a union that included not only Sweden and Norway but also Denmark). To contemporaries and historians alike, this heterogeneous group is known as anti-Scandinavianists.

  7. Hace 10 horas · Taken as a whole, the 1850s were a harmonious time for the Swedish-Norwegian union, a harmony brought about in part by the upsurge of Scandinavianism after 1856. This may, however, best reflect the degree of conflict in the union in the first few decades after its inception in 1814 and before its dissolution in 1905.