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Sudreim claim

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House of Suderheim
The modern-day coat of arms ofSørum municipality is based on the medieval coat of arms of the Sudreim dynasty.[1]

TheSudreim claim is an entitlement to the throne of the Kingdom of Norway held among members of the powerful and influential House ofSudreim in the late Middle Ages.

Background

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In the early 14th century, when it was foreseeable that the male line ofSverre dynasty would go extinct, members of the Norwegian nobility arranged theOrder of succession of the kingdom together with the then-kingHaakon V of Norway. King Haakon's youngest daughter,Ingeborg Haakonsdatter instead of her older, illegitimate half-sisterAgnes Haakonsdatter received recognized rights of succession for her descendants. This entitlement came to be referred to as the Stovreim claim (Stovreimsætten).[2]

In the eventuality of Ingeborg's line dying out, it was determined that the issue and line of King Haakon's oldest daughter, Agnes Haakonsdatter, born to her in marriage to Havtore Jonsson (c. 1275–1319), would then be entitled to succession to the throne of Norway. This entitlement is referred to as the Sudreim claim (Sudreimsætten).[3]

Sudreim line

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Ingeborg's descendants brought the kingship to union withSweden,Denmark, and with a variety of Northern German principalities. Norway's kings from her lineage regularly resided elsewhere than in Norway. Nationalistic or separatist forces in Norway sometimes pursued having a native Norwegian king who was not to become any other country's ruler—and the descendants of Agnes Haakonsdatter lived in Norway. Accordingly, their ancient right to inherit the throne was claimed and sometimes was acted upon. Periodically a monarch died without any direct heirs as didEric II of Norway in 1299,Olav IV of Norway in 1387 andChristopher of Bavaria in 1448. In each case, a near relative had to be found to become the successor. In certain cases some native-minded Norwegians offered the throne to a Sudreim descendant, but always unsuccessfully.[4]

In the mid-14th century, Jon Havtoreson, (1312–1397) and Sigurd Havtoreson (1315–1392), sons ofAgnes Haakonsdatter and Havtore Jonsson (referred to asHavtoresønnene), seem to have intrigued against their cousinMagnus VII of Norway (simultaneously King of Sweden), to take Norway from him.[citation needed] Haakon Jonson, son of Jon Havtoreson, is recorded as having been offered the throne in 1387–88, when Olav IV had died. Olav's mother, QueenMargaret I of Denmark, saved the situation for herself by taking a child,Bogislav of Pomerania (later renamed Eric, becoming Eric III, Eric XIII and Eric VII of countries of theKalmar Union) to a session of the Norwegian council and presenting him as legitimate heir. Eric was a maternal great-grandson ofEufemia, daughter of Ingeborg Haakonsdatter and DukeEric Magnusson. Eric was also the grandson of Queen Margaret's elder sister,Ingeborg, Duchess of Mecklenburg—and thus descended from recent kings of all three countries.[5]

In 1448, whenChristopher of Bavaria died, the Norwegian throne was offered toSigurd Jonsson of Sudreim, who was a grandson and ultimately the heir of Sigurd Havtoresonn and his wife Ingebjorg Erlingsdottir of Bjarkoy—but he declined because legally King Eric was still the lawful king. Sigurd held combined hereditary rights of both Ingeborg Haakonsdatter's Stovreim line and Agnes Håkonsdatter's Sudreim line. The 1448 offer to the intended "Sigurd III" was made by more or less the same party who after his refusal, worked toward havingKarl Knutsson from Sweden as Norway's king instead ofChristian I of Denmark ignoring that King Eric was still the only lawful king of Norway although in exile.

In 1458, Eric III, Eric XIII and Eric VII, de-jure King of Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Wends and Goths and Duke of Pommerania, at the request of the Vice-Chancellor of Norway, certified for posterity that the House of Rosensverd remains the lawful and rightful successors as Kings in Norway.[6]

The succession right was not limited in time.

References

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  1. ^"Sørum kommunevåpen". sorum.kommune.no. Retrieved2015-06-23.
  2. ^Jon Gunnar Arntzen."Stovreimsætten". Store norske leksikon. RetrievedJune 1, 2017.
  3. ^Jon Gunnar Arntzen."Sudreimsætten". Store norske leksikon. RetrievedJune 1, 2017.
  4. ^"Sudreimsætta fra Sørum på Romerike". slektinorge.no. 16 November 2015. RetrievedJune 1, 2017.
  5. ^Carl Frederik Bricka."Ingeborg, Hertuginde af Meklenborg". Dansk biografisk Lexikon. RetrievedJune 1, 2017.
  6. ^Traktat 1458 Rugenwald, Arkiv: Nasjonal Arkivet (Oppbevares i klimakontrollert velv) . Regest: Herredagen / (Høyesterett)

Notes

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Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sudreim_claim&oldid=1311635760"
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