See also

Family of Magnus I of SWEDEN and Richeza

Husband: Magnus I of SWEDEN (1106-1134)
Wife: Richeza (1116-1156)
Children: Knud (1129- )
Niels (1130- )
Marriage 1127

Husband: Magnus I of SWEDEN

Name: Magnus I of SWEDEN
Sex: Male
Father: Niels (1065-1134)
Mother: Margaret FREDKULLA (c. 1080-1128)
Birth 1106
Occupation Duke of Denmark
Death 4 Jun 1134 (age 27-28)
Cause: battle wounds in the Battle of Fotevik

Wife: Richeza

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Richeza

Name: Richeza
Sex: Female
Father: Boleslaw III + (1085-1138)
Mother: Saloma of BERG (1099-1144)
Birth 12 Apr 1116
Title Princess of Minsk
Title Queen of Sweden
Occupation Queen Consort of Sweden
Death 25 Dec 1156 (age 40)
Cause: murdered

Child 1: Knud

Name: Knud
Sex: Male
Birth 1129

Child 2: Niels

Name: Niels
Sex: Male
Birth 1130

Note on Husband: Magnus I of SWEDEN

Magnus I of Sweden, son of Nicholas (Swedish: Magnus Nilsson ; Danish: Magnus Nielsen[1]), later called Magnus the Strong (born about 1106, died June 4, 1134 in the Battle of Fotevik), was a Danish duke who ruled Gothenland in southern Sweden from 1125 to 1130. His status as ruler of Sweden was disputed in his own time, but today he is recognized as one of the Swedish monarchs.[2][3]

 

Magnus was the son of King Niels I of Denmark and Margaret Fredkulla, the second or eldest daughter of King Inge the Elder of Sweden.

 

When Margaret's first cousin King Inge the Younger died in 1125, Magnus claimed the throne as the eldest grandson of Inge the Elder. Magnus was recognized by the Geats (Göterna) of Gothenland, but according to the Westrogothic law, had to be accepted also by the Swea, another tribe to the north of the Geats. The Swea, however, had selected Ragnvald Knaphövde. According to Saxo Grammaticus, Ragnvald had shown disrespect towards the Geats by not taking a Geat hostage. As retaliation, Ragnvald was murdered by Magnus's supporters not long after.

 

Magnus married Richeza, daughter of Boleslaw III of Poland around 1127. In 1130, Magnus backed Boleslaw III in conquering Rügen. The Polish forces together with a Danish fleet compelled the Rani to recognize Polish rule over the island.[4] Magnus is not mentioned as King in the law of Västergötland and was probably ousted from Sweden by his successor Sverker I of Sweden around 1130.

 

In 1131, Magnus had his cousin and potential rival for the Danish throne, Canute Lavard, murdered, in order to position himself as heir presumptive to his father King Niels.[1] Though he was eventually backed by Niels, Magnus found himself in a civil war against Lavard's half-brother Eric Emune.[1] He died on June 4, 1134 during the Battle of Fotevik in Scania, where his father was also decisively defeated. Niels died later the same year.

[edit] Legacy

 

After Magnus's death, his widow Richeza returned to the east where she married Volodar of Minsk, a Rurikid ruler of Viking origins. She later returned to Sweden and thirdly married the man who defeated Magnus, King Sverker I.

 

Magnus's son, Canute V, contested the Danish throne with his second cousin, Svend III. When Canute died in 1157, Magnus's legitimate descent went extinct. Canute's elder son Niels, born by his wife Helena of Sweden, died in 1180. Canute's illegitimate posthumous son, Valdemar, bishop of Schleswig and Prince-Archbishop of Bremen, died in 1236 as the last descendant of king Magnus.

Note on Wife: Richeza

Richeza of Poland[1] (Polish: Ryksa Boles?awówna, Swedish: Rikissa Burislevsdotter; 12 April 1116 – after 25 December 1156), was a Polish princess and member of the House of Piast, and by her three marriages Queen consort of Sweden and Princess of the Principality of Minsk (now the capital and largest city in Belarus).

 

Richeza was the daughter of Boles?aw III Wrymouth, Duke of Poland, by his second wife Salomea, daughter of Henry, Count of Berg. Tradition describes her as unusually beautiful.

 

he Polish ruler Boleslaw III Wrymouth entered in an alliance with King Niels of Denmark against Wartislaw I, Duke of Pomerania (now in northwestern Poland and northeastern Germany). In order to seal this alliance, a marriage was arranged between Boleslaw III's daughter Richeza with Niels' eldest son, Crown Prince Magnus. The wedding took place around 1127. Richeza bore her husband two sons: Knud in 1129 and Niels (Saint Niels) in 1130.[2][3]

 

As one of the heirs of his maternal grandfather King Inge I, Magnus claimed Sweden and was recognized King of Västergötland by the Geats (Göter) in 1129 after the death of his uncle King Inge II. Then Richeza became Queen consort of Sweden. However, Magnus' rule wasn't accepted by the Swea, another tribe to the north of the Geats, who vetoed him and elected Ragnvald Knaphövde as the new King. According to Saxo Grammaticus, Ragnvald was murdered by supporters of Magnus, who then won the realm ("imperium") as King of Sweden. However, there soon appeared another contender for the throne, Sverker I, who was proclaimed King of Östergötland.

 

In 1130 Sverker I finally expelled Magnus from Västergötland and unified the country under his rule. Richeza and her husband returned to Denmark. Alarmed by the popularity and Imperial support of his cousin Knud Lavard, Duke of Schleswig, both Magnus and his father King Niels ordered him murdered (7 January 1131). Knud's half-brother Erik rebelled against Niels and Magnus, but was defeated and took refuge in Norway, where he convinced the local nobility and the Holy Roman Emperor Lothair III to launch a retaliatory expedition against Niels. Niels was defeated in the Battle of Fotevik (4 June 1134), and also lost his son Magnus who was slain during the battle. Niels escaped to Schleswig, where he was killed by the citizens (25 June 1134). Now a widow, Richeza returned to Poland, apparently leaving her two sons behind in Denmark.

[edit] Second Marriage

 

Once in Poland, Duke Boleslaw III arranged a new marriage for her daughter. On 18 June 1136, Richeza married with a member of the Rurikid dynasty, Volodar Glebovich, Prince of Minsk and Hrodno,[4][5][6] who at that time was in exile in the Polish court. The union was made in order to seal the alliance of Minsk and Poland against Denmark and the powerful Monomakh Kievan dynasty. During this marriage, Richeza gave birth to three children: two sons, Vladimir (later Prince of Minsk) and Vasilko (Prince of Logoysk or Lahojsk), and a daughter, Sofia, born ca. 1139/40.

 

Around 1145, the political advantages of the Polish-Minsk union began to disappear after the Monomach dynasty lost its hegemony among the Rurikid ruling branches. Likely this was the cause of the dissolution of the marriage of Richeza and Volodar. Richeza returned again to Poland, this time with her daughter Sofia, but left her two sons behind with her former husband. Volodar never remarried and died around 1186.

[edit] Third Marriage

 

In 1148, Queen Ulvhild Håkansdotter, Sverker I's wife, died. Soon afterwards, the widowed King married Richeza, who arrived in Sweden with her daughter. The King likely married her with support from Richeza's first husband's allies in Västergötland.[7] The union produced one son, Burislev, who was named after his Polish maternal grandfather. The chronicles assign Sune Sik Sverkersson as another son from Richeza and Sverker I, possibly the youngest.[8]

 

In 1150, Richeza's oldest son, King Canute V of Jutland, took refuge in Sweden after he was expelled from Denmark by Sweyn III Grathe, King of Zealand. In this way, the marriage with Sverker I give Richeza the opportunity to help her son, and some historians assume that she partially married the Swedish King for this reason.[7] One year later (1151), Knud asked for the help of Henry the Lion, Duke of Saxony and Hartwig I, Archbishop of Bremen, but was defeated by Sweyn III's forces. Only after the mediation of the German King Frederick Barbarossa during the Diet in Merseburg was there made a settlement between both parties: Knud V renounced his claim and was compensated by lands in Zealand, while Sweyn III was made king of Denmark.[9] After this decision, both Knud V and Valdemar Knudsson (son of Knud Lavard, the enemy of his own father Magnus) rebelled against Sweyn III, who was expelled in 1154: Knud V and Valdemar became co-kings of Denmark.

 

In 1156 Knud V married Princess Helena of Sweden, daughter of King Sverker I and his first wife Ulvhild; in consequence, Richeza became in the step-mother-in-law of her own son. On Christmas Day of that year, Sverker I was murdered.

 

In 1157 Richeza's daughter Sofia of Minsk married co-King Valdemar I of Denmark (they were betrothed since 1154); on 9 August of that year, King Knud V was killed during a meeting with Valdemar I and Sweyn III. In 1158 Richeza's second son Niels, probably a monk in Esrom Abbey, also died.[9]

[edit] Death and Aftermath

Sweden's first Queen Richeza (of two) is thought to be buried at Alvastra Abbey.

 

Richeza is known to have survived Sverker I's death, although facts of her later life and her date of death are unknown: the legend says that she remarried the stable master who took part in the assassination of Sverker I.

 

Burislev, Richeza's son with Sverker I, became a rival claimant of the Swedish throne against Knud Eriksson, and in 1167 he finally took part in his paternal heritage and was chosen King of Östergötland. However, in 1169 he was deposed and then disappeared from historical records. He is believed to have either been murdered by Knud's men or to have fled to Poland sometime before 1173.

 

Richeza's daughter Sofia of Minsk, Queen of Denmark by her first marriage with Valdemar I, give Richeza her only known legitimate grandchildren: the later kings Knud VI and Valdemar II of Denmark; Sophie (Countess of Orlamünde); Margareta and Maria, nuns at Roskilde; Ingeborg (the later repudiated Queen of France); Helena (Duchess of Brunswick-Luneburg) and Richeza, named after her grandmother and who, like her, became Queen of Sweden.