Everything about Margaret I Of Denmark totally explained
Margaret Valdemarsdatter (
1353 -
October 28 1412) was Queen of Norway, Regent of Denmark and Sweden, and founder of the
Kalmar Union which united the Scandinavian countries for over a century.
Name
She is known in Denmark as "Margrethe I", to distinguish her from the
current queen, but she never (except for a brief period in 1375) actually styled herself Queen of
Denmark; rather she called herself "Margrete, by the grace of God, Valdemar Daneking's daughter" and "Denmark's rightful heir" when referring to her rulership in Denmark. Others simply referred to her as the "Lady Queen" without specifying what she was queen (or female king) of, but not so
Pope Boniface IX, who blatantly styled her "Queen of Denmark" or "Queen of Denmark, Norway and Sweden" in his letters.
With regards to Norway, she was known as Queen (queen-consort, then dowager queen) and regent. And, with regards to Sweden, she was Dowager Queen and Plenipotentiary Ruler. When she married Haakon, in 1363, he was yet co-king of Sweden (and Margaret thus was its queen), and despite being deposed, they never relinquished the title (Haakon actually held Sweden's westernmost provinces throughout his reign up to his death). Therefore, when the Swedes expelled Albert I in 1389, in theory Margaret simply resumed her original position.
Queen
Margaret was born in
Vordingborg Castle, the daughter of
Valdemar IV of Denmark and
Helvig of Sønderjylland. She married, at the age of ten, King
Haakon VI of Norway, who was the younger and only surviving son to
Magnus VII of Norway,
Magnus II of Sweden.
Her first act after her father's death in (
1375) was to procure the election of her infant son Olaf as king of Denmark, despite the claims of her elder sister's husband Duke
Henry of Mecklenburg and their son. Olaf died in
1387, having in
1380 also succeeded his father in Norway and in claims to Sweden; and in the following year Margaret, who had ruled both kingdoms in his name, was chosen regent of
Norway and Denmark. She had already given proofs of her superior statesmanship by recovering possession of
Schleswig from the
Holstein counts, who had held it absolutely for a generation, and who now received it back indeed as a gift (by the compact of Nyborg 1386), but under such stringent conditions that the Danish crown got all the advantage of the arrangement. By this compact, moreover, the chronically rebellious Jutish nobility lost the support they'd hitherto always found in
Schleswig-Holstein, and Margaret, free from all fear of domestic sedition, could now give her undivided attention to
Sweden, where the mutinous nobles were already in arms against their unpopular king,
Albert of Mecklenburg.
At a conference held at
Dalaborg Castle, in March 1388, the Swedes were compelled to accept all Margaret's conditions, elected her "Sovereign Lady and Ruler", and engaged to accept from her any king she chose to appoint. On
February 24 1389, Albert ("Albrecht"), who had returned from Mecklenburg with an army of mercenaries, was routed and taken prisoner at
Aasle near
Falköping, and Margaret was now the omnipotent mistress of three kingdoms.
Stockholm, then almost entirely a German city, still held out; fear of Margaret induced both the Mecklenburg princes and the Wendish towns to hasten to its assistance; and the Baltic and the North Sea speedily swarmed with the privateers of the
Victual Brothers or Vitalian Brotherhood, so called because their professed object was to revictual Stockholm. Finally the
Hansa intervened, and by the compact of Lindholm (1395) Albrecht was released by Margaret on promising to pay 60,000 marks within three years, the Hansa in the meantime to hold Stockholm in pawn. Albrecht failing to pay his ransom within the stipulated time, the Hansa surrendered Stockholm to Margaret in September 1398, in exchange for commercial privileges.
Eric of Pomerania
It had been understood that Margaret should, at the first convenient opportunity, provide the three kingdoms with a king who was to be a kinsman of all the three old dynasties, although in Norway it was specified that she'd continue ruling alongside the new king. In 1389 she proclaimed her great-nephew,
Eric of Pomerania (grandson of Henry of Mecklenburg), king of Norway. In 1396 homage was rendered to him in Denmark and Sweden likewise, Margaret reserving to herself the office of regent during his minority. To weld the united kingdoms still more closely together, Margaret summoned a congress of the three
Councils of the Realm to
Kalmar in June
1397; and on
Trinity Sunday, on
June 17, Eric was solemnly crowned king of Denmark, Norway and Sweden. The proposed act of union divided the three Councils, but the actual deed embodying the terms of the union never got beyond the stage of an unratified draft. Margaret revolted at the clauses which insisted that each country should retain exclusive possession of its own laws and customs and be administered by its own dignitaries, as tending in her opinion to prevent the complete amalgamation of
Scandinavia. But with her usual prudence she avoided every appearance of an open rupture.
A few years after the
Kalmar Union, Eric, when in his eighteenth year, was declared of age and homage was rendered to him in all his three kingdoms, but during her lifetime Margaret was the real ruler of Scandinavia.
Policy
So long as the union was insecure, Margaret had tolerated the presence near the throne of "good men" from all three realms (the Rigsraad, or council of state, as these councillors now began to be called); but their influence was always insignificant. In every direction the royal authority remained supreme. The offices of high constable and earl marshal were left vacant; the
Danehofer or national assemblies fell into desuetude, and the great queen, an ideal despot, ruled through her court officials acting as superior clerks. But law and order were well maintained; the licence of the nobility was sternly repressed; the kingdoms of Sweden and Norway were treated as integral parts of the Danish state, and national aspirations were frowned upon or checked, though Norway, as being more loyal, was treated more indulgently than Sweden.
Margaret also recovered for the Crown all the landed property which had been alienated during the troubled days before Valdemar IV. This so-called "reduktion", or land-recovery, was carried out with the utmost rigour, and hundreds of estates fell into the hands of
the Crown.
Margaret also reformed the Danish currency, substituting good silver coins for the old and worthless copper tokens, to the great advantage both of herself and the state. She had always large sums of money to dispose of, and a considerable proportion of this treasure was dispensed in works of charity.
Margaret's foreign policy was sagaciously circumspect, in sharp contrast with the venturesomeness of her father's. The most tempting offer of alliance, the most favourable conjunctures, could never move her from her system of neutrality. On the other hand she spared no pains to recover lost Danish territory. She purchased the island of
Gotland from its actual possessors,
Albert of Mecklenburg and the
Livonian Order, and the greater part of Schleswig was regained in the same way.
In
1402, Queen Margaret entered into negotiations with the King of England,
Henry IV about the possibility of a double wedding alliance between
England and the Nordic union. The proposal was for a double wedding, whereby King Eric would marry King Henry's daughter,
Philippa, and King Henry's son, the Prince of Wales and future King
Henry V would marry King Eric's sister, Catherine. The English side wanted these weddings to seal an offensive alliance between the Nordic kingdoms and England, which could have led to the involvement of the Nordic union on the English side in the ongoing
Hundred Years' War against
France. Queen Margaret led a consistent foreign policy of not getting entangled in binding alliances and foreign wars. She therefore rejected the English proposals. The double wedding didn't come off, but Eric's wedding to Philippa was successfully negotiated. On
26 October 1406 King Eric married the 13-year-old Philippa, daughter of Henry IV of England and
Mary de Bohun, at
Lund. The wedding was accompanied by a purely defensive alliance with England. For Eric's sister Catherine, a wedding was arranged with
John, Count Palatine of Neumarkt. Margaret thus acquired a southern German ally, who could be useful as a counterweight to the northern German princes and cities.
Death
Margaret died suddenly on board her ship in
Flensburg harbour on
October 28,
1412. Her sarcophagus made by the Lübeck sculptor
Johannes Junge (1423) stands behind the high altar in the
Roskilde Cathedral, near
Copenhagen. She had left property to the cathedral on the condition that
Masses for her soul would be said regularly in the future. At the
Reformation (1536) this was discontinued; however, to this day a special bell is being rung twice daily in commemoration of the Queen.
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