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  1. Frederick I ( Swedish: Fredrik I; 28 April 1676 – 5 April 1751) was King of Sweden from 1720 until his death, having been prince consort of Sweden from 1718 to 1720, and was also Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel from 1730. He ascended the throne following the death of his brother-in-law absolutist Charles XII in the Great Northern War, and the ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Scanian_WarScanian War - Wikipedia

    Franco–Swedish alliance. In the 1660s and early 1670s, the Swedish Empire experienced a financial crisis. In hope of subsidies, the Swedish government, acting on behalf of king Charles XI of Sweden during his minority, had entered the anti-French Triple Alliance with the Dutch Republic and the Kingdom of England, which broke apart when Charles II of England rapproached France in 1670, after ...

  3. Monarch – Charles XI; Events. Barnängens manufaktur is established in Stockholm. - The city of Jönköping burns down. - The crops fail all over Sweden. Sven Andersson (farmworker) is executed for having sex with a nymph. The theater company Dän Swänska Theatren is dissolved. Births. March 28 - Charles Emil Lewenhaupt, general (died 1743)

  4. Eric X [1] ( Swedish: Erik Knutsson; Old Norse: Eiríkr Knútsson; c. 1180 – 10 April 1216) was King of Sweden between 1208 and 1216. Also known as Eric the Survivor ( Swedish: Erik som överlevde ), he was, at his accession to the throne, the only remaining son of King Canute I of Sweden and his queen. The name of his mother is not known ...

  5. 8 de nov. de 2010 · That means I would have control over what is practiced and preached in the church. Then I required all citizens to attend the Sunday service in the church at the risk of arrest if anyone is found outside. In 1689, I also required all citizens of Sweden to be able to read catechisms from the church.

  6. In 1713, the son and successor of Charles XI, Charles XII, issued a new working order for the Chancellery to enable him to conduct government from the battle-field, but his sudden death at the siege of Fredricshald in Norway in 1718 provided the opportunity for the parliament (Riksdag of the Estates) to write a new constitution in 1719 and 1721, that gave Sweden half a century of first renewed ...

  7. Charles XI. Charles. XI. Pour le prétendant légitimiste français, voir Charles de Bourbon (1848-1909) . Pour les articles homonymes, voir Charles, prince de Suède . Charles XI (en suédois : Karl XI ), né le 24 novembre 1655 à Stockholm et mort le 5 avril 1697 dans la même ville, est roi de Suède de 1660 à sa mort.