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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: EMS-EUD |
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ERIC %IV. (1533-1577), king of Sweden, was the only son of Gustavus Vasa and Catherine of Saxe-Lauenburg. The news of his father's death reached Eric as he was on the point of embarking for England to press in person his suit for the hand of Queen Elizabeth. He hastened back to Stockholm, after burying his father, summoned a Riksdag, which met at Arboga on the 15th of April r561, and adopted the royal propositions known as the Arboga articles, considerably curtailing the authority of the royal dukes, John and Charles, in their respective provinces. Twomonths later Eric was crowned at Upsala, on which- occasion .he first introduced the titles of baron and count into Sweden, by way of attaching to the crown the higher nobility
From the very beginning of his reign Eric's morbid fear of the upper classes drove him to.give his absolute confidence to a man of base origin and bad character, though, it must be admitted, of superior ability. This was Goran Persson, born about 1530, who had been educated abroad in Lutheran principles, and after narrowly escaping hanging at the hands of Gustavus Vasa for some vile action entered the service of his son. This powerful upstart was the natural enemy of the nobility
contract any political treaty without the royal assent. An army of 10,000 men was immediately sent by Eric to John's duchy of Finland, and John and his consort were seized, brought over to Sweden and detained as prisoners of state in Gripsholm Castle. But Eric did not stop here. His suspicion suggested to him that, if his own brother failed him, the loyalty of the great
young
ambassador extraordinary, and despatched to Lorraine to resume the negotiations for Eric's marriage
marriage
parliament in a speech which, as he explained, he had to deliver extempore owing to " the treachery " of his secretary. Two days later Nils Sture arrived at Upsala fresh from his embassy to Lorraine, and was at once thrown into prison, where other members of the nobility were already detained. On the following day Eric murdered Nils in his cell with his own hand, and by his order the other prisoners were despatched by the royal provost marshal forthwith. These murders were committed so promptly and secretly that it is doubtful whether the estates, actually in session at the same place, knew what had been done when, on the 26th of May, under violent pressure from Goran Persson, they signed a document declaring that all the accused gentlemen under detention had acted like traitors, and confirming all sentences already passed or that might be passed upon them.During the greater part of 1567 Eric was so deranged that a committee of senators was appointed to govern the. kingdom. One of his illusions was that not he was king but his brother John, whom he now set at liberty. When, at the beginning of 1568, Eric recovered his reason, .a reconciliation was effected between the king and the duke, on condition that John recognized the legality of his brother's marriage with Karin Mansdatter, and her children as the successors to the throne. A month later, on the 4th of July, he was solemnly married to Karin at Stock-holm by the primate. The next day Karin was crowned queen of Sweden and her infant son Gustavus proclaimed prince-royal. Shortly after his marriage Eric issued a circular ordering a general thanksgiving for his delivery from the assaults of the devil. This document, in every line of which madness is legible, convinced most thinking people that Eric was unfit to reign. The royal dukes, John and Charles, had already taken measures
governor , Johan Henriksen.See Sveriges Historia, vol. iii. (Stockholm, 1880) ; Robert Nisbet Bain, Scandinavia, cap. 4-6 ( Cambridge , 1905) ; Eric Tegel, Konung Eriks den XIV. historia (Stockholm, 1751). (R. N. B.)End of Article: ERIC If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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