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Valdemar II Valdemarssøn
(1170-1241)
Berengaria de Portugal
(Omkr 1194-1221)
Sambor II Of Pommern
(Omkr 1211-1277)
Mechtilde von Mecklenburg
(-1270)
Christoffer I Valdemarsen
(1219-1259)
Margrete Sambiria von Pommern
(1230-1282)
Erik V Klipping
(1249-1286)

 

Familie

Ægtefæller/børn:
1. Agnes von Brandenburg

Erik V Klipping

  • Født: 1249, "Aalholm Slot", Nysted landsogn, Musse, Maribo, Danmark
  • Ægteskab (1): Agnes von Brandenburg
  • Død: 22 Nov. 1286, Finderup lade ved Viborg, Danmark i en alder af 37 år
  • Begravet: 1286, Viborg Domkirke, Viborg Domsogn, Nørlyng, Viborg, Danmark

punkttegn   Dødsårsag: Myrdet.

Billede

punkttegn  Notater:

Erik V "Klipping - Glipping" (1249- November 22, 1286) was King of Danmark (1259-1286) and son of Christopher I. Until 1264 he ruled under the auspices of his mother, the competent Queen Dowager Margaret Sambiria. In this period he was for some time 1261-1262 a prisoner in Holstein after a military defeat and afterwards he was for some years brought up in Brandenburg. He tried to enforce his power over church and nobility. His conflict with the former was brought to a satisfying result but in 1282 he was forced by the latter to accept an agreement (a "handfastening" - a kind of a Danish Magna Carta) which limited his authority. In the 1270s, Erik Glipping attacked Småland. A never-ending rivalry between Eric and his supporters on one side, and the kin of former King Abel on the other, made Queen Margrethe write to the Pope in Rome around 1262 or 1263, asking the Pope to allow for women to inherit the Danish throne, thus making it possible for one of Eric's sisters to become reigning Queen of Danmark in the event of the young King's death (he had no children as of yet). The Pope seemingly agreed, but it never became an issue; Eric was succeeded by his son, who was named Eric after his uncle, Eric IV "Ploughpenny". Eric Klipping was assassinated November 22, 1286, and a number of the nation's most powerful noblemen, led by Marsk Stig Andersen Hvidewere outlawed by the Danish court. Whether or not they actually had anything to do with the murder, which took place in a small village near Viborg called Finderup, is still being questioned; the King's death meant that they lost almost all the power and influence that the 1282 charter had given them, since a new King would not be bound by the same agreement. The murder of Eric Klipping, who was stabbed to death in his sleep, is a middle-age murder mystery which has never really been solved. Some historians have tried to point out the Duke of South Jutland but no prove has been found. rThe kings nickname Klipping or Glipping has been discussed. Normally it is supposed to mean a medieval coin that has become clipped or cut in orderto indicate devaluation. A former popular explanation - that Eric was often blinking (Danish glippe) with his eyes - now seems to be generally rejected.

punkttegn  Fødselsnotater:

Begivenhedsbeskrivelse: Y

Billede

punkttegn  Om Erik

• Beskæftigelse: Konge af Danmark.


Billede

Erik havde et forhold til Agnes von Brandenburg, datter af Johan I of Brandenburg og Jutta von Sachsen. (Agnes von Brandenburg blev født omkring 1257 i Brandenburg, Germany, døde den 29 Sep. 1304 og blev begravet i Ringsted kirke, Ringsted, Ringsted, Sorø, Danmark.)




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