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  1. Sverker I, King of Sweden 1130; Sverker II, King of Sweden 1196 This page was last edited on 30 December 2019, at 06:09 (UTC). Text is available under the ...

  2. Sverker II or Sverker the Younger (Swedish: Sverker den yngre or Sverker Karlsson, born before 1167 – 17 July 1210) was King of Sweden from 1195 or 1196 to 1208 when he was defeated in the Battle of Lena by Prince Eric. Read more on Wikipedia. Since 2007, the English Wikipedia page of Sverker II of Sweden has received more than 129,740 page ...

  3. The Battle of Lena occurred on 31 January 1208 and probably took place near Kungslena, in the Tidaholm Municipality in Västergötland, Sweden. It was an important battle between the Danish-backed King Sverker II of Sweden and Prince Eric. Eric's forces won a crushing victory; however, in July 1210, Sverker returned with a second army and was ...

  4. Sverker II (English exonym: Sweartgar; Swedish: Sverker den yngre or Sverker Karlsson, born before 1167 – died 17 July 1210) was King of Sweden from 1196 to 1208.[1][2] Sverker was a son of King Karl Sverkersson of Sweden and Queen Christine Stigsdatter of Hvide,[3] a Danish noblewoman. His parents' marriage has been dated to 1162 or 1163. When his father Karl had been murdered in Visingsö ...

  5. King of Sweden. This page was last edited on 22 April 2024, at 08:45. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  6. The House of Sverker were a powerful political force in medieval Sweden, contesting for royal power. [1] Their origins were in Östergötland. [1] After the extinction of the House of Stenkil and the ascension of Sverker I of Sweden in 1130, a civil war commenced. In the beginning, there were several pretenders, of whom Sverker I emerged as ...

  7. John was the son of King Sverker II of Sweden of the House of Sverker and Queen Ingegerd of the Bjälbo dynasty. When he was one year old, his maternal grandfather Jarl Birger Brosa died. King Sverker appointed his son as nominal jarl in order to strengthen his own ruling powers and secure the increasingly important jarl institution.