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Eric VI of Denmark
View on WikipediaEric VI Menved (1274 – 13 November 1319) was King of Denmark (1286–1319). A son of King Eric V and Agnes of Brandenburg, he became king in 1286 at age 12, when his father was murdered on 22 November by unknown assailants. On account of his age, his mother ruled for him until 1294.[1]
Key Information

Regency
[edit]Eric Menved's rule was a central period during the "Age of Decay" in Denmark 1241–1340. His early reign – during which he was led by his mother and her German relatives – was affected by the unrest and wars that followed the murder of his father.[2]
The first act of the new government was to settle the case of the former king's murder at a court convened at Nyborg at Whitsun 1287. Twenty-seven honorable men were appointed to decide the case. Marshal Stig Andersen Hvide and Jacob Nielsen, Count of Halland and seven others were accused. After a one-day trial, the jury found all the accused guilty. The properties and incomes of the condemned were declared forfeit and they were exiled from Denmark on pain of death. Even the pope became involved when he excommunicated those who had been judged guilty.[3][4]
The verdict was questionable on several counts. None of the accused could be proven to be in the immediate vicinity when the king was stabbed to death. The accused were not allowed to swear their innocence before the court or have other honorable men swear as to their innocence, a right granted to them by law. Despite the unclear circumstances surrounding Eric V's death, the jury only took one day to arrive at a guilty verdict. The accused had all belonged to Erik V's inner circle; it is uncertain what they were supposed to gain by the king's death.
For these reasons historians Erik Arup (1876–1951) and Hugo Yrwing (1908–2002) labelled the verdict as a miscarriage of justice. They consider the murder a result of a power struggle between two noble factions, one led by Marsk Stig and one led by Valdemar, Duke of South Jutland. Duke Valdemar had fallen from grace in 1283, but quickly rose in influence after 1288. They suggest that Valdemar and his allies conspired to kill the king and then to successfully cast suspicion on their rivals at court. Another historian, Kai Hørby (1935–1993) pointed out that the murder might well have its origin in the dynastic struggle for the throne of Denmark. There were others who thought they had equal or better claim to the throne than Eric V, such as Norway's king, Eirik Magnusson and his brother and successor Haakon V who were grandsons of Eric IV of Denmark.[5][6]
Andersen and the others fled to Norway where they were welcomed by King Eirik who gladly supported enemies of the Danish king. He gave Andersen the fortress of Kongshelle near the border with Denmark. Andersen became a pirate who harried the coast of Denmark for years. The exiles managed to build forts on Samsø, Hjelm, Sprogø, and Helgenæs. No ship was safe and no coastal town immune from Stig Andersen Hvide. The high point of his depredations occurred in 1289 when he landed with a small Norwegian army at Stubbekøbing on Falster. Wizlau II of Rűgen, Denmark's regent, used his Wendish fleet to drive Andersen back to Norway. Andersen's activities sparked four decades of conflict and warfare between the Nordic kingdoms.
Reign
[edit]At the same time an ecclesiastical conflict appeared because of the ambitious new Archbishop of Lund Jens Grand who supported the outlaws, his kinsmen, despite his oath to support the king. Once his selection was confirmed by the pope, Bishop Jens reneged on his oath of allegiance. "It doesn't matter to me whether Duke Valdemar, a Jew, a Turk, a pagan, or the devil himself is King of Denmark so long as it is neither Erik nor his brother Christopher," he said.[7] Bishop Jens gave a piece of church land at Hundehals to the exiles to build a fortress and entertained them at his table in public. The king could not tolerate this and ordered Bishop Jens' arrest in 1294. The archbishop was sent to Duke Christopher in chains to be close confined in Søborg's "dark tower". After some months in terrible conditions, the king sent a messenger to Bishop Jens to see if he would swear allegiance again and promise to seek no revenge for his captivity. "Rather than bend to his will, I would rather that the king sliced me apart joint by joint than submit to his commands," the bishop replied. After two years in awful conditions, Bishop Jens managed to escape with the help of a kitchen servant. Bishop Jens fled directly to Rome to lay his case before the Holy See. The pope immediately excommunicated the king and put all of Denmark under interdict until the kingdom paid Archbishop Jens Grand 49,000 silver marks. Denmark could not or would not raise such a sum and languished under interdict for four years. In 1302 King Erik wrote to the pope asking for mercy for himself and the kingdom which had been without any of the sacraments for years. Promising to do whatever the pope said, King Erik humbled himself in public. Pope Boniface VIII – negotiated by Martin (Morten Mogensen) of Dacia – agreed to reduce the fine by 80%, interdict and excommunication were lifted and Archbishop Jens accepted another papal assignment which kept him out of King Erik's hair.[8]
Erik had a great love of tournaments, and money poured out of the treasury for his entertainments. At one knightly tournament at Rostock, wine, mead, and beer "flowed" for an entire month for any who wished to drink. The king paid for the upkeep of all the horses and livestock at the tournament including a mountain of oats for any and all. He crafted new and unusual taxes to squeeze peasants and nobles alike. When the tax money didn't cover his expenses, the king borrowed money heavily from various German nobles, going so far as to mortgage pieces of Denmark to them. Erik sent several expeditions to Germany to win new territories in an attempt to recover Denmark's position as a Scandinavian great power. Through alliances with German princes, among them the Duke of Mecklenburg he managed to become the formal lord of several Hanseatic cities which meant fighting Brandenburg and some other minor states. He also intervened in Sweden in order to support his brother-in-law against the opposition in 1305 and again in 1307–1309 while fighting in Germany at the same time, hiring German troops to turn the tide in his favor.
In 1312 famine struck Denmark and when the king demanded the same taxes as before, the peasants on Zealand rebelled. Erik put down the rebellion fiercely, hanging hundreds of peasants outside Copenhagen. The very next year at the Viborg Assembly (Danish: landsting) the peasant and nobles declared open rebellion against the king. Those who refused to aid the rebels were hanged from their own house beams. Erik put down the rebellion with mercenary troops from Germany, ravaging as far north as Randers. The king began a round of fortress building with peasant slave labor, one of the penalties imposed for rebellion. The nobles involved were exiled or executed and their property taken by the crown. Four such strongholds were constructed; Bygholm in Horsens, Kalø north of Aarhus, Borgvold in Viborg and Ulstrup east of Struer. Niels Brok was executed for hiding Rane Jonsen (1254–1294) who had aided those who murdered Erik's father at Finderup.[9]
In 1313 King Erik surrendered all crown property in southern Jutland to the Duke for cash. From 1315 to 1317 the crops failed yet again. There was nothing left to tax. The treasury was empty. In 1317 Erik mortgaged all of the island of Funen to Gerhard III, Count of Holstein-Rendsburg and John II, Count of Holstein-Kiel for 200 mounted knights. Before he died, Erik also mortgaged Skåne to German nobles for money to continue his extravagances. As a last blow to Danish pride, Henry II, Lord of Mecklenburg captured the Danish fortress at Rostock.[10][11]
When Erik died in 1319, having survived all 14 of his children, Denmark was bankrupt. He was succeeded by his younger brother Christopher (1276–1332) who ruled Denmark as King Christopher II between 1320 and 1326.[12]
Judgements
[edit]Traditionally the rule of Eric VI has been regarded one of the few bright spots of the period because of his attempt to recover Denmark's far-flung empire. He has been hailed in Danish romantic literature. Viewed today, however, his policies began the dissolution of the Danish empire in the Baltic and northern Europe that followed during the next generation.
The nickname of King Eric has been much discussed. A popular explanation is that it is an abbreviation of his alleged favourite oath (“ved alle hellige mænd” – Eng.: by all holy men). Another explanation is that it derives from the elder Danish “menvett” (Eng.: bird of ill omen).
Children and family
[edit]Erik was married in June 1296 to Ingeborg Magnusdotter of Sweden. She was the daughter of King Magnus Ladulås of Sweden and sister of Birger, King of Sweden. The couple had eight sons who died as children, as well as six miscarriages, although the sources differ between eight and fourteen children: her many pregnancies led to miscarriages, or the birth of children who died soon after.[13]
- Valdemar (d. 1302)
- Eric
- Magnus
- An unnamed son (born and died 1318); according to tradition, Queen Ingeborg was so happy to finally have a live born child, she took the boy out for a carriage ride to show him off, holding him out the window, where she lost her grip on him, and he fell and broke his neck. Queen Ingeborg subsequently entered the Convent of St. Clare in Roskilde where she died the following year.[citation needed]
Evidence also indicate Eric VI may have had an illegitimate son or possibly a son of Ingeborg later in life named Erik Sjællandsfar (c. 1300–1364) at Orebygård on Zealand, buried in Roskilde Cathedral with a crown. However, other theories indicate that he was a son of King Valdemar IV of Denmark.[14]
References
[edit]- ^ "Kong Erik VI Menved". Danmarks Konger. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Erik Menved, 1274-1319". Danmarks Historien. Archived from the original on November 21, 2015. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Stig Andersen Hvide d.æ". Den Store Danske, Gyldendal. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Grev Jakob af Hallands arv". Den Store Danske, Gyldendal. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Erik Arup". Den Store Danske, Gyldendal. 17 July 2011. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Kai Hørby". Den Store Danske, Gyldendal. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ Huitfeldt, Arild. Danmarks Riges Krønike
- ^ "Jens Grand". roskildehistorie.dk. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Rane Jonsen". Dansk Biografisk Leksikon. 17 July 2011. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ Gerhard III. (Graf von Holstein). Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie. Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie. 1878. p. 738. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Heinrich II. (Fürst von Mecklenburg)". Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Christoffer 2. 1276-1332". Danmarks Historien (Aarhus University). Archived from the original on July 25, 2018. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Ingeborg, –1319, Dronning". Dansk biografisk Lexikon. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
- ^ "Erik Klipping Menved".
Other sources
[edit]- Arup, Erik (1951) Danmarks historie (Copenhagen: Hagerup)
- Fagerland, Tor Einar (2006) Krigføring og politisk kultur i nordisk middelalder, (NTNU)
- Hørby, Kai (1989) Gyldendals og Politikens -danmarkshistorie. 1250-1400 (Copenhagen: Gyldendal)
Media related to Eric VI of Denmark at Wikimedia Commons
Eric VI of Denmark
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Regency
Birth and Parentage
Eric VI Menved was born in 1274, the eldest surviving son of King Eric V of Denmark (1249–1286) and his wife, Agnes of Brandenburg (c. 1257–1304).[1][4] His parents' marriage in 1273, arranged to forge alliances in the Baltic region, positioned Eric VI within a lineage aimed at consolidating Danish royal power amid ongoing feudal tensions.[5] Eric V, who had inherited the throne in 1259 after his father Christopher I's death, pursued policies of royal centralization that often clashed with the privileges of the Danish nobility and clergy, setting a contentious backdrop for his son's eventual ascension.[6] Agnes, daughter of John I, Margrave of Brandenburg, brought connections to the Ascanian dynasty, which held sway over key territories east of Denmark, potentially aiding Eric V's ambitions in Pomerania and beyond. The couple had at least seven children, with Eric VI among the early-born sons, preceding his brother Christopher II (c. 1276–1332), who later contested the succession.[1]Ascension and Regency Administration
Eric VI ascended the Danish throne on 22 November 1286, immediately following the assassination of his father, King Eric V Klipping, at the manor of Findbo. Born in 1274, the new king was twelve years old at the time of his proclamation by the royal council.[1][7] Dowager Queen Agnes of Brandenburg, Eric's mother, served as regent during his minority from 1286 until 1293, managing the administration amid instability caused by the regicide.[8][9] The regency prioritized investigating the murder, which implicated high-ranking nobles including Marsk Stig Andersen and Jakob Nielsen, leading to their conviction, exile, and confiscation of estates as a means to assert royal authority and secure the realm.[10] Noble opposition persisted, with magnates suspected of complicity challenging the regency's control, yet the administration maintained central governance without descending into broader civil conflict. Eric VI was crowned on 25 December 1287, reinforcing legitimacy. In 1294, upon reaching maturity, the king assumed personal rule, ending the regency period.[11][12]Reign
Domestic Conflicts with Nobility
Upon ascending the throne in 1286 following the assassination of his father, Eric V, at Finderup on November 29, 1286, Eric VI pursued the noblemen suspected of involvement in the murder, designating them as "outlaws" and initiating legal proceedings that resulted in the exile and expropriation of several high-ranking aristocrats.[10] This action, rooted in the young king's desire to consolidate royal authority, escalated into the War of the Outlaws (1289–1296), a conflict pitting Denmark against a coalition of these exiled nobles sheltered in Norway, who claimed innocence and leveraged Norwegian support to challenge Danish sovereignty over regions like Halland and Skåne.[13] The war concluded with a Danish-Norwegian peace in 1295 at Stigt, involving territorial concessions to Norway, but it deepened domestic fissures by alienating segments of the Danish aristocracy who viewed Eric's punitive measures as overreach against traditional noble privileges.[14] Eric VI's broader efforts to centralize power, including financing expansive foreign campaigns through increased taxation and requisitions on noble estates, provoked sustained opposition from the aristocracy, who resisted erosion of their fiscal exemptions and feudal autonomies.[15] Recruitment for royal armies became problematic as nobles withheld levies, forcing Eric to rely on costly German mercenaries, which further strained the realm's finances and fueled perceptions of his rule as arbitrary and burdensome.[15] These tensions manifested in localized unrest, culminating in the 1313 revolt in northern Jutland, where organizational evidence points to covert support or participation by local magnates and ecclesiastical figures opposed to royal encroachments.[14] To suppress the Jutland uprising and reassert control, Eric VI commissioned a series of fortified strongholds, including Kalø Castle completed in 1313, compelling local peasants under noble oversight to provide labor and resources, a measure that underscored the interplay between peasant grievances and aristocratic reluctance to fully align with the crown.[16] These conflicts left a legacy of aristocratic wariness toward monarchical absolutism, contributing to Denmark's economic distress by the time of Eric's death in 1319, as noble resistance hampered effective governance and revenue collection.[2]Foreign Policy and Baltic Expansion
Erik VI's foreign policy emphasized reviving Danish dominance in the Baltic Sea region, drawing on ancestral claims to territories in northern Germany and Estonia while countering rival Scandinavian powers and securing trade routes.[2] He maintained the Duchy of Estonia, a remnant of earlier conquests, by granting Lübeck city rights to the town of Wesenberg (modern Rakvere) on June 12, 1302, to foster economic development and loyalty amid ongoing threats from local revolts and neighboring orders.[17] In 1303, he enfeoffed his younger brother Christoffer with Estonia as a hereditary duchy, delegating administration while retaining royal oversight to stabilize the eastern frontier.[2] To extend influence southward, Erik pursued expansion into Pomerania and Mecklenburg, capturing Rostock in 1301 and securing a protective alliance with Lübeck in 1307 against Hanseatic rivals.[2] These efforts culminated in military campaigns, including the siege of Rostock in 1312 and conflicts with the Margraves of Brandenburg, resolved by a peace treaty in 1317 that acknowledged Danish gains but exhausted resources.[2] He also leveraged diplomacy with Holy Roman Emperor Albrecht I to renew concessions over lands north of the Elbe River, reinforcing legal claims to Baltic coastal areas previously held by Danish kings.[18] In Scandinavia, strategic marriage to Ingeborg, sister of Swedish King Birger Magnusson, in 1296 cemented an alliance against Birger's rebellious brothers, prompting Danish expeditions into Sweden in 1308 and 1309 with up to 2,500 cavalry, though these yielded no decisive territorial victories.[18][2] Norwegian relations remained adversarial; after raids by Danish exiles backed by Norway's Eric II (1289–1293), an armistice in 1295 preserved Danish castles like Hjelm, followed by definitive peace in 1308.[2] The 1310 Peace of Helsingborg, however, ceded northern Halland to Norwegian King Haakon V as a fief, marking a partial retreat from border ambitions.[18] Overall, these initiatives—blending military aggression, dynastic ties, and municipal privileges—aimed to monopolize Baltic trade but provoked widespread opposition, accruing debts that crippled Denmark's finances by Erik's death in 1319.[19][2]Economic Policies and Fiscal Measures
During his reign, Erik Menved pursued fiscal policies aimed at bolstering royal revenues to finance military campaigns, castle constructions, and personal expenditures, including lavish tournaments. Unable to impose taxes directly on the nobility or the Church due to entrenched privileges, he levied heavy burdens on peasants and the German-populated territories under Danish control, such as Schleswig and Holstein, which strained rural economies and provoked widespread resentment.[20][2] In 1304, Erik transformed the traditional lething levy—a communal military obligation—into a fixed monetary tax designated for national defense, enabling the crown to hire professional crews for cogs and other warships rather than relying on feudal levies. This shift centralized fiscal control and supported his Baltic expansionist ambitions but increased the financial load on taxpayers without corresponding relief during peacetime. Concurrently, he introduced extraordinary war taxes, which the Archbishop of Lund opposed by forbidding payments from church lands, highlighting tensions between monarchical fiscal demands and ecclesiastical autonomy.[13][2] The 1312 famine exacerbated fiscal pressures when Erik insisted on maintaining pre-crisis tax levels, sparking a peasant revolt in Zealand that he suppressed through exile and executions of ringleaders. To bridge shortfalls, he resorted to extensive borrowing from German lenders, pledging crown lands and revenues as collateral, which by his death in 1319 had encumbered large portions of the realm to foreign and domestic creditors. These measures, while temporarily augmenting royal coffers, contributed to Denmark's economic distress, marked by debased coinage circulation and rebel counter-minting efforts, such as those by insurgents on the island of Hjelm who seized royal moneyers.[21][22][23]Relations with the Church and Monarchy
During his reign, Eric VI Menved engaged in a protracted conflict with Archbishop Jens Grand of Lund, elected in 1290 over royal objections and confirmed by Pope Nicholas IV despite the king's protests. The dispute escalated in 1294 when Eric arrested Grand, accusing him of involvement in noble conspiracies against the crown and disregarding royal prerogatives in ecclesiastical investitures and prebends.[24] Grand, asserting the church's superior authority, excommunicated the king and appealed to the papacy, leading Pope Boniface VIII to impose an interdict on Denmark and demand 49,000 silver marks in reparations to the archbishop for seized church assets.[25] The eight-year struggle (1294–1302) highlighted the monarchy's efforts to curb ecclesiastical autonomy amid fiscal pressures from wars and domestic unrest, as Eric sought to tax church lands and influence appointments to bolster royal finances and centralize power.[2] Grand's intransigence, backed by papal intervention, forced Eric into negotiations, culminating in a 1303 settlement where the pope ruled in the archbishop's favor but reassigned him to the See of Riga, allowing Denmark's interdict to lift only after royal payments and restoration of church properties.[26] This outcome temporarily weakened monarchical leverage over the Danish church, reinforcing clerical independence and contributing to perceptions of Eric's rule as fiscally aggressive toward religious institutions.[27] The episode reflected broader medieval tensions between secular and spiritual powers in Denmark, where the church leveraged international papal support to resist royal encroachments, while Eric's actions aligned with attempts to emulate stronger monarchical models in contemporary Europe, such as those asserting plena potestas over subordinates.[28] No formal concordat emerged, but the resolution preserved the Handfæstning framework's limits on royal interference in church affairs, as inherited from Eric V's 1282 charter, underscoring the monarchy's vulnerability to ecclesiastical alliances with disaffected nobility.[29]Judicial Actions
Key Trials and Legal Judgements
In 1287, at the Danehof assembly in Nyborg, nine nobles were tried and sentenced for their roles in the 1286 murder of Eric V Klipping, Eric VI's father.[1] One noble was directly accused of the killing, while the others faced charges of complicity; all pleaded not guilty but were convicted as outlaws based on available evidence and banished, prompting their flight to Norway.[1] This swift proceeding, occurring under the regency council acting in the young king's name, denied the accused traditional rights to oath-based defenses and fueled subsequent noble unrest, including the War of the Outlaws in the 1290s.[1] A major ecclesiastical-legal confrontation arose between Eric VI and Archbishop Jens Grand, escalating after Eric assumed personal rule in 1293.[2] Accusing Grand of disloyalty, including support for outlaws and interference in royal military efforts, Eric ordered his arrest on April 5, 1294, by his brother Duke Christoffer, leading to Grand's imprisonment at Søborg Castle.[2][18] Grand escaped on December 13, 1295, and appealed to the papal court in Rome, which initiated proceedings in 1296; on December 24, 1297, Pope Boniface VIII issued a verdict reinstating Grand, excommunicating Eric, and imposing an interdict on Denmark pending compensation of 49,000 silver marks for the archbishop's losses and church property seizures.[2][18] The dispute's resolution came through further papal negotiation: in 1302, Eric petitioned for clemency, resulting in a reduced indemnity; he paid 15,000 marks to lift the interdict, while Grand was barred from returning to Denmark and transferred to the Archbishopric of Riga.[18][2] This outcome represented a pragmatic victory for royal authority, as the king avoided full capitulation despite the church's leverage, though it strained Denmark's finances and highlighted tensions over secular versus clerical jurisdiction.[18]Family and Succession
Marriage and Offspring
Erik VI married Ingeborg Magnusdotter, daughter of King Magnus III of Sweden and Helvig of Holstein, on 8 June 1296 at Helsingborg Castle.[30] The union aimed to strengthen ties between Denmark and Sweden amid regional power struggles, though it produced no surviving legitimate heirs.[30] The couple had at least four sons, all of whom predeceased their father: Valdemar, who died in 1302; Erik; Magnus; and an unnamed son.[30] Contemporary accounts and later genealogical records suggest additional pregnancies, including up to eight sons who died in infancy or childhood and several miscarriages, though exact numbers vary and primary evidence is limited.[1] The absence of viable offspring contributed to dynastic instability, as succession passed to Erik's younger brother, Christopher II, upon his death in 1319.[30] Some sources speculate on an illegitimate son, Erik Sjællandsfar (c. 1300–1364), potentially born to Ingeborg later in life or from another union, but parentage remains unconfirmed by reliable chronicles.[30] Ingeborg survived her husband by months, dying on 5 April or 15 August 1319.[30]Death and Immediate Aftermath
Eric VI died on 13 November 1319 in Roskilde, Denmark, at the age of approximately 45, from natural causes.[31][1] He was buried at St. Bendt's Church in Ringsted alongside his wife, Queen Ingeborg.[1] Having produced no surviving legitimate heirs despite his marriage, Eric's death prompted the succession of his younger brother, Christopher II, who was elected king in 1320.[32][33] Christopher inherited a realm burdened by extensive debts accrued from Eric's military campaigns in the Baltic and domestic fiscal policies, including heavy taxation and loans from North German counts.[3] In the immediate aftermath, the Danish nobility, empowered by prior concessions during Eric's reign, extracted further guarantees of privileges from Christopher at his accession, including limitations on royal authority and protections against arbitrary arrests.[34] These arrangements exacerbated the monarchy's financial woes, as the new king faced demands for debt repayment and struggled to maintain central control amid ongoing economic strain and noble influence.[3] The transition marked the onset of intensified instability, with foreign creditors gaining leverage over Danish territories.[34]Historical Evaluation
Achievements and Positive Assessments
Erik Menved avenged his father's assassination in 1286 by convicting senior nobles of complicity, exiling them, and expropriating their estates to bolster royal finances.[3] This action helped reassert monarchical authority amid noble unrest.[3] He temporarily restored domestic order following the turmoil of Eric V's murder, stabilizing the realm against immediate threats from internal factions and German creditors holding pledged territories.[35] In 1304, Erik initiated a comprehensive revision of Danish laws, reforming the leding naval obligation system and delineating tax exemptions to streamline royal administration and revenue collection.[2] Militarily, he suppressed a Jutland peasant revolt in 1312 near Horsens using German mercenaries, then erected four fortified castles—Kalø, Bygholm, Borgholm, and Voldstrup—to enforce compliance and deter future uprisings.[2] Erik pursued Baltic expansion with notable short-term gains, proclaiming lordship over Rostock in 1301 and obtaining Lübeck's fealty in 1307 via an annual tribute of 750 Lübeck marks, thereby enhancing Danish oversight of key Hanseatic trade hubs.[2] In 1309, he commanded a force of 2,500 heavy cavalry into Sweden, seizing Jönköping and mediating a truce that installed a power-sharing arrangement between King Birger Magnusson and his ducal brothers, temporarily advancing Danish influence in Scandinavian affairs.[2] In 1318, he diplomatically assigned Rostock as a hereditary fief to Henrik of Mecklenburg to offset losses from prior conflicts, demonstrating pragmatic alliance-building.[2] Historians assess these initiatives as evidence of Erik's ambition to revive Denmark's imperial stature akin to Valdemar II's era, achieving transient military and economic leverage despite resource constraints.[2] His 33-year tenure (1286–1319), inscribed on his tomb as that of a "just judge of the poor and rich," highlights perseverance in upholding royal prerogatives against persistent noble, ecclesiastical, and fiscal opposition.[2][35]Criticisms and Negative Assessments
Erik VI's reign was marked by severe financial strain resulting from ambitious military campaigns aimed at reasserting Danish dominance in the Baltic region, which ultimately weakened the kingdom's economy and provoked widespread opposition. To fund expeditions and fortifications, the king imposed heavy taxes on peasants and clergy, mortgaging significant territories such as parts of southern Jutland to German counts in Holstein for loans and military support.[11][3] These measures, including demands for labor to construct defensive castles like Erik Menved's Castle in Vordingborg, exacerbated tensions with the nobility and commoners, as they prioritized royal ambitions over domestic stability.[36] A notable escalation occurred during the famine of 1315, when Erik refused to reduce tax burdens despite agricultural collapse, leading to a peasant revolt on Zealand that required violent suppression and further depleted resources.[3] Historians assess this inflexibility as a key factor in eroding public support, with the costs of quelling the uprising exceeding potential tax relief.[3] Similarly, attempts to tax ecclesiastical lands sparked prolonged conflict with Archbishop Jens Grand, culminating in the prelate's flight to the papal court in Avignon around 1302–1303, where he secured excommunication threats against the king; this ecclesiastical feud drained additional funds and isolated Denmark diplomatically.[11][28] Relations with the nobility deteriorated due to Erik's early purges, including the 1287 convictions and exiles of figures implicated in his father Eric V's murder, which alienated powerful families and fueled perceptions of authoritarian overreach.[3] Lavish expenditures on tournaments, such as those hosted in Rostock, compounded fiscal irresponsibility, contributing to a legacy of national indebtedness by 1319.[3] Militarily, the Baltic ventures largely failed, with loss of most German vassal territories—retaining only Rostock and Rügen—while renewed hostilities with Norway and Sweden invited external interference from figures like Duke Valdemar of Schleswig.[11] Overall, these policies are critiqued for prioritizing expansionist glory over sustainable governance, leaving Denmark politically fragmented and economically vulnerable upon Erik's death.[11][3]References
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Eric_VI_of_Denmark