House of Erik

The House of Erik (Swedish: Erikska ätten) was a medieval Swedish royal dynasty with several pretenders to the throne between 1150 and 1220, rivaling for kingship of Sweden with the House of Sverker. The first king from the House of Erik was Erik Jedvardsson, later known as Saint Erik. Almost all the subsequent kings of Sweden have been descendants of the House of Erik.

The foremother of the dynasty was Saint Erik's wife Christina Björnsdotter, whom legend claims to have been the maternal granddaughter of Inge the Elder, the king who abolished paganism in Sweden.

The House of Erik favored the Varnhem Abbey, and several of its members are interred there.

History

The ancestral estates of the House of Erik appear to have been Västergötland.[1] The forefather of the house was Erik Jedvardsson, who was elected king after the assassination of King Sverker the Elder in 1156.[2] Erik himself was killed in 1160 by the Danish lord Magnus Henriksen while attending a mass. Magnus ruled part of Sweden briefly, but was soon slain by Karl Sverkersson, who took the throne.

In 1167, the House of Erik returned to power when Knut Eriksson, son of Erik Jedvardsson, killed King Karl. The struggle against the House of Sverker continued until 1172–73, when Knut finally secured his hold on the kingdom. To strengthen his claim to the throne, Knut and Uppsala Cathedral promoted the sainthood of his father, Erik. Knut ruled until his natural death in 1195 or 1196.[1]

After Knut's death, Sverker Karlsson from the rival house was elected king, and ruled until 1208 he was defeated in battle by Knut's son Erik Knutsson. Sverker attempted to return to power two years later, but was again defeated and died in battle.[1] Erik died of natural causes in 1216. His only son, Erik Eriksson, was born after his death. Erik Knutsson was followed as king by Johan Sverkersson, who came to be the last Sverker king.

King Johan died unmarried and childless in 1222, and the six-year-old Erik Eriksson was elected king. Two branches of the dynasty came into conflict in 1226 when Knut Långe, allegedly the adult heir of Filip, younger son of Saint Erik, deposed the underage Erik Eriksson and exiled him to Denmark. Erik Eriksson resumed the kingship in 1234 after Knut Långe's death. Conflict continued between the royal senior branch and Knut's two sons until the sons were executed in 1248 and 1251.

Erik Eriksson was the last king of the male line of this dynasty. He died in 1250, apparently with no surviving children. His nephew Valdemar, the underage son of Erik's sister Ingeborg and Birger Jarl of the Bjälbo family, was elected king, with his father Birger acting as a regent.

Descent from this dynasty was regarded as such hard currency in medieval and early modern power games that King Karl Knutsson even fabricated a lineage (see Tofta, Adelsö) to claim that he, too, was an heir of the House of Erik.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Lindkvist, Thomas (2008), "The Emergence of Sweden", The Viking World, Routledge, pp. 692–698, doi:10.4324/9780203412770-61, ISBN 978-0-203-41277-0
  2. ^ Hildebrand, Bengt (1953). "Erikska ätten". Svenskt Biografiskt Lexikon (in Swedish). Retrieved 2024-10-16.
House of Erik
Preceded by Ruling House of the Kingdom of Sweden
1156–1160
1167–1196*
1208–1216
1222–1229
1234–1250
* In 1167–1173 not in the province of Östergötland.
Succeeded by