HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. FROM THE EARLT TIMES NORTHMElf A¥D VIKINGS TO THE PRESENT DAY. B V PROFESSOR PAUL C. SINDING, OF COPENHAGEN, DENilARKj IfOBUERLT PROFESSOR OP THE SCANDINAVIAN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURH AT THE USrVEESlTT OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK. Non forte ac temero hamana negotia aguntur atque volvuntur. — CnRTius. NINTH EDITION. NEW YORK: PUBLISHED BY THE AUTHOR HIMSELF. PRINTED BY JOHN F. TROW & CO. 1866. ^ 9 ^ 1 1 D O D 1 PREFACE. Although I soon learned by experience, after my arrival in the city of New York, only a few years ago, what indeed had been long before reported to me, that the enlightened people of the United States pay great attention to science and the arts, and specially among their intellectual pursuits, have explored some of the wide fields of history with zeal and suc- cess, I was yet almost immediately aware that Scandinavian affairs — the past history and present condition of a kindred people — were too little known in this country. Indeed by that ardent love of my native land, which might well prompt me to effort in such a case, and which is a feeling said to be peculiarly strong in the race of the Northmen, I resolved, as far VI PREFACE. as lay in my power, to throw some light on this, here, almost terra incognita, by writing a brief history of the people of Scandinavia — a people and a land neither unknown nor undistin- guished in the history of the past, having not only played an important part in the history of Europe, being even at one time the arbiter of the European system, but having also amongst their archives authentic records of early voya- ges of adventure and discovery extending to this new Western world, even as much as five centuries before Columbus reached St. Salvador or Guanahany. But while thus making refer- ence to these interesting traditions, which trace the discovery of this great western continent to the hardy and adventurous "Kings of the Northern Sea/' let me not be understood as say- ing that these traditions, though certainly exist- ing, and possibly even well known to Columbus himself, when he undertook his remarkable voy- age, have at all eclipsed the splendor which never will cease to invest the name of this unex- ampled discoverer. The value of history being so generally ap- preciated, I need offer no apology for attempt- ing to write such a work as the present, espe- PREFACE. Vll cially as the aim was, not to supplant any previous work, but actually to meet a want which was felt, because no such work existed here. But in submitting to the American and English public my first essay in writing English — to the somewhat ambitious extent of a book, I mean — let me claim some forbearance and kindly criticism, where certain unavoidable diffi-" culties interposed themselves, and have not, per- haps, in every case, even where most earnestly grappled with, been successfully overcome. Nevertheless, should the result of my labor, the work which I here offer as an Introduction to the History of Scandinavia, be found cal- culated to promote even a little interest in the subject, my desire and purposes will be fully realized, and the great difficulties under which I have labored, amply rewarded. THE AUTHOR. PROF. PAUL C. SINDING. My Dear Sir : The Scandinavian peninsulas — one hanging down from the mys- terious North, the other jutting forth from the central mass of civilized Europe, to meet its comrade — are emblematic (in their geographical position) of the twofold historic interest with which they are clothed: While the legendary period of other peoples occupies a place subordinate to their clearer history, Scandinavia calls up before us, with equal power, the mist-robed Odin and the mail-clad Vasa. The strange adventures amid Northern seas, in a primitive age, are as prominent as the leadership of European poli- tics in an age of remarkable light. We oddly mingle the old and the new, the dim and the bright, when we turn to Scandinavia, as we do with no other land. This double character naturally lends peculiar attraction to its history. Yet, with all this attraction, the history of no part of Europe is less familiar to the general mind ; probably because the Scandinavian countries lie somewhat off from the world's great highways, and participate but moderately in the world's chief commerce. This should not be. The ignorance is a fault, especially among us of English descent, whose ancestral history is so intimately and variously associated with that of Den- mark, Sw^eden, and Norway. The Norsemen have left the memo- rials of their habitation on the coasts and islands of Scotland, where Runic inscriptions tell the story of their prowess, while through much of England the familiar names of towns and hamlets are purely Norse. These are the fruits of the wild adventures of the Vikings. A Danish dynasty once ruled our fatherland, and the Con- queror who founded the present succession of British monarchs, was himself of Scandinavian blood, transplanted to a more southern 9 X LETTER FROiM PROFESSOR CROSBY. clime. The stalwart men, wlio could venture upon unknown, cold, and stormy seas, in their small barks, on lengthy voyages, until, passing the new-found shores of Iceland, they landed among the green leaves of the Viinland coast, deserve to be known and saluted by every succeeding age. And their posterity, still maintaining the best characteristics of the fathers, invite our regard and claim our encomiums. The names of Tegner, Hans Andersen, Fredericka Bremer, in literature ; of Clausen, Madvig, and Rafn, in theological, philological, and archae- ological research ; of Thorvaldsen in art. and of Ole Bull and Jenny Lind in music, are as household words in our American homes. Our merited regard for these well known worthies of our own day, must render keener our appetite for Scandinavian knowledge. This appetite amounts to a necessity, when we mark, that our ancestral jistory and mythology, and our composite philology, must be eluci- dated by the light of these chronicles and languages of the Norse- men. It is, therefore, full time that our Universities should liave their chairs of Scandinavian literature, as a needful part of the apparatus for a thorough English education, to render more complete the ex amination of the roots of our speech and race. While this want ia felt, we may gladly hail any contribution to American literature which tends to open this interesting field of research. In your vol ume, my dear sir, I recognize such a pioneer, and rejoice to give ' welcome. In it may many laggards in this lore find an introduc tion to the old romantic legends of the Skalds, as well as to th more recent but no less romantic stories of the great and magnani mous Gustavus Vasa, Gustavus Adolphus, and the brilliant comets Tordenskjold (Thundershield) and Charles the Twelfth. HOWARD CROSBY, A. M., Professor of Greek Language and Literature tn tfi University cf the City of New-York, ^ SUMMARY OF CONTENTS. The Origin ^the People — Mjtliologj — Language — Scalds or Bards — Runes - ^he Warfaring Lif e — Piracy — Ijue ls-^oster-brcther Covenanfr'S ^Rtatfi and Co n dition of the Female Sex — Means of getting a Lrcelihood by — Victuals — Trade — Dwelling-places — ® Weapon s — ^uneraLgolfimaitics — State Aifairs — King — Pea- sants and Prefects - ^Slaves — Viking Expeditions — The Oldest Kings , Page 19-49 First Period, from A. D. 811-1241. 1. Promulgation of the Gospel by Ansgarius — Gorm the Old and his Queen Tbyra Dannebod — Harold Bluetooth — Christianity — Civil War — Palnatoke — Swen Splitbeard — Viking Association — Battle by Svolder — Conquest of England — Harold — Canute the Great — England and Denmark united — Pilgrimage to Rome — Battle by Helge-River — Ulf Jarl (Earl) — Conquest of Norway — The Disc overy of Americajby, thf Mnrthmgn — The Union with England ceases 50-8G 2. Magnus the Good — Swen Estrithson — Expedition to England — Ecclesiastical Affairs — Canute the Pious — NewExpedition against England — Eric the Good — Expedition to Vcnden — Canonization of Canute the Pious — Canute Lavard — Nicholas — Civil War be- tween Swen Grathe, Canute Magnusson, and Waldemar — Frede- rick Barbarossa — Battle on Grathe-heath in Jutland 87-108 I. Waldemar L the Great — Absalon — Canute VI. — Bugislaw, of Pomerania — Waldemar II. the Conqueror — Conquests along the Baltic — Esthonia — The Captivity of the King — Science and the Arts , 109-130 (xi) XU SUMMARY OF CONTENTS. Second Period, from A. D. 1241-1536, the Introduction of the Reformation. 1. Eric Ploughpenniug — Expedition to Esthonia — Abel — Christo- pher I. — Conflict with the Clergy — Archbishop Jacob Erlandson — Interdict — Eric Clipping — Battle on Loheath — War with Nor- way — Eric Menved — The Regicides — Archbishop John Grand — Peace with Norway — Expedition to Pomerania and Mecklenburg — The Hanseatic League , 131-1-15 2. Christopher II. — Charter — War with Geert, Count of Holstein — Battle on Tapheath — Niels Ebbeson — WaldemarlV., Atterdag — Insurrection in Jutland — Magnus Smek of Sweden — War with the Hanseatic Towns — Rebellion — Waldemar leaves the country — Olaf — Queen Margarethe (the Semiramis of the North) — King Albrecht of Sweden — The Battle at Falk6ping in Sweden — The celebrated Union of Calmar 145-107 i. Queen Margarethe — Attempts to regain Schleswig — Eric of Pomerania — Dispute about Schleswig — War with the Hanseatic Towns — Rebellion in Sweden — Engelbrechtson — Charles Canut- son — Dethronement of the King in Denmark and Sweden — Chris- topher of Bavaria acknowledged King of all three Kingdoms — Rebellion of the Peasantry 1G8-182 4. The House of Oldenburg — Christian I., the first King of the House of Oldenburg — Charles Canutson — Archbishop Jens Bengtson — Stcno Sture, the Elder — Battle on Brunkehill — Pilgrimage to Rome — University of Copenhagen — The Charter of King Hans (John) — Division of the Duchies — Expedition to Ditmarsh — Re- bellion in Sweden and Norway — War again with the Hanse Towns — Christian II. the Tyrant — Expedition against Sweden — Archbishop Gustav Trolle — The Slaughter of Stockholm — Sigbrit- Dyvcke — Torben Oxe — The Beginning of the Reformation — Re- bellion — The King flees — Frederick I. — Civil War — Rebellion in Skane — Soren Norby — The Reformation spreads — John Tausen — Diet of Odensee — Diet of Copenhagen — The War of the Count — Christian III — Shipper Clemens — Battle by Oxenhill — Litera- ture and Language 183-236 Third Period, from A. D. 1536-16G0; the acknowledgment of Lutheranism until the Introduction of Absolute Sovereignty. 1. Christian III. — Diet of Copenhagen — Charter — The Reforma- tion introduced into Iceland — Intolerance — Univci-sity and School SUMMARY OF CONTENTS. Xlll Affairs — Alliance with Sweden — New Division of the Duchies — Frederick II. — Conquest of Ditmarsh — Three Crowns — The Northern Seven Years' War — Daniel Ranzau — Peace in Stettin — Peter Oxen — Foundation of Kronborg — The Sound Dues — LJibeck — Hamburg — Science and Arts — Henrik Ranzau — Tycho Brahe — Christian IV. — The Queen-Dowager Sophia of Mecklen- burg — Guardianship — Peasantry — Nobility 237-26G Christian IV. — Care and Interest for Norway — Variance with Sweden — Calmar War — Peace at Knoer6d — He encourages Science and the Arts — Commercial Affairs — Discoveries — Regulation of the Post Affairs — Manufactures — Buildings — Participation in the Thirty Years' War — Battle by Lutter, near the Barenberg — Peace of Liibeck — Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden plays a prominent part .n the Thirty Years' War — Dissatisfaction amongst the Peasantry and Burgher Class with the Aristocracy — Dispute with Hamburg — ^Sound Dues at Elsenore — War with Sweden — Inroad of the Swedish General, Torstenson — Battle of Colberg by Femern — Danish National Song — Peace of Bromsebro — Frederick III. — Election of King — The Charter — Alliance with Holland — Corfitz Ulfeldt — Rupture with Sweden — Peace of Roeskilde — Renewal of the War — Siege of Copenhagen — The Dutch Admiral Opdam — Battle at Nyborg — Peace of Copenhagen 2GG-30] Fourth Period, from A. D. 1G60-1863 ; {from the introdudion of the Absolute Sovereignty till the conclusion of the War with the rebellious Duchies.) Frederick IIJ. — The Diet of Copenhagen — The Charter annihil- ated, and Absolute Sovereignty introduced — Kay Lykke — Corfitz Ulfeldt — Eleonora Christina — Dispute with Christian Albrecht of Gottorp — Christian V. — Acquisition of Oldenburg and Delmen- horst — War with Sweden and France — Admiral Niels Juel — Peace of Lund and Fontainebleau — Griffenfeldt — Ole Romer — The Peasantry — Olaf Bosenkranz — Masius and Bagger — Frede- rick IV. — War with the Duke of Gottorp — Peace of Travendal — Eleven Years' War with Sweden — The Brilliant Comets Charles XII. of Sweden, and the Danish Admiral Thundershield (Tordenskjold) ■ — Peace of Fredericksborg — Hostile Terms with Russia — Hans Egede christianizes Greenland — Science and the Arts — Christian VI. — The Peasantry — Ecclesiastical Affairs — School Affair s — Science and the Arts — The Navy — Count Danneskjold Samso — XIV SUMMARY OF CONTENTS. Frederick V. — Hostile Terms with Russia — Peter III. of Russia murdered — Manufactures— Commercial and Financial state— The Peasantry — Science and the Arts 302- 2. Christian VII. — Alterations among the Higher Officers of State — C?.re for the Peasantry — The King's going abroad — Struensee and Brandt beheaded — The Queen banished — Ove Guldberg— The Queen-dowager Juliane Marie — Prince Frederick — Deed of Ex- change with Russia — A. P. Bernstorff— The Armed Neutrality — The Finances — The Press — The Peasantry — Care for the Danish Language and Literature — The Charter of Naturalization — Crown Prince Frederick, afterwards Frederick VI. — A. P. Bernstorff — Henrik Stampe — Reventlow — C. Colbjornson — Hostilities with Sweden — Neutrality dui'ing the French Revolutionary War — In- dependence of the United States acknowledged by Sweden and Denmark — Tripoli — Hostilities with England — Renewal of the Armed Neutrality — The Horrible Battle of the Baltic — Copenha- gen cruelly bombarded, and the fleet carried away — War with Sweden — Peace of J6nk6ping — Prince Christian August of Au- gustenburg — His Death — Charles John Bernadotte, Prince of Pontecorvo, elected Crown-prince of Sweden ; later, King of Sweden — He dies — Oscar I. King of Sweden, died 1859, and Carl XV. ascends the Throne — AVar with Sweden, Russia, and Prussia — Alliance with France — Fierce Fight at Sehestedt in Schleswig — Norway granted a Free Constitution from the Danish Prince, Chris- tian Frederick — Denmark loses Norway forever in the Peace of Kiel — Emancipation of the Peasantry from Feudal Bondage — Other important alterations in different branches of the Govern- ment — Care of the King for Public Instruction — University and School Affairs — Literature — Pecuniary Affairs — Representative Council given Denmark and the Duchies — Christian VIII. — School Affairs in Copenhagen and in the Country — Iceland — The Danish East India Possessions disposed of — Care for the Danish Language in the Northern part of Schleswig — Railroads — Frede- rick VII. — He gives Denmark a Free Constitution — Horrible War with the rebellious Duchies — Treaty in London — Marriage of the Princess Alexandra with the Prince of Wales — Death of INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. There is a wide clifFei-ence between History and Philo- sophy. History is the delineation from the past and the present of both the active and the passive forces, and intel- ligence of hnman nature and human action. Philosophy excludes from its consideration human action, and deals with thought as referable to reason alone. History in- forms us of the product of human passion and thought. Philosophy considers the latter undisturbed by the weak- ness of the former. But, nevertheless, if the cultivator 3f History is not guided by Philosophy, or the rules of reason, History will to him be only a barren act of memory, without life or nourishment for the under- standing and heart ; in short, History will not bo a science to him ; he will not clearly comprehend the consequences of events in their pragmatical connection * " It little concerns us to know," says Rollin, " that there were once such men as Genghis-IOian, Csesar, Alexander, Gustavus Adolphus, Napoleon, Washington, and so on, and that they lived in this or that period, or died in this or that day ; but it highly concerns us to know the steps by which they rose to the exalted 16 INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. pitch of grandeur we cannot but admire, what it was that constituted their glory and felicity, what were the causes of their declension and fall, and how in religious and moral respects they have influenced theii' own and after-ages ; all of which we cannot obtain but by Phi- losophy, or more properly, by the Philosophy of History, through which we ascertain the causes of tilings or their phenomena. History itself is immense in refer- ence to compass, circumference, and contents. , A boundless ocean of facts and events lies behind us, while each day and each hour the stream of time is swelling in new and large billows of events, visions, and names ; all of which, seen in the light of truth and pragmatical connection, are of exceeding interest and use. And of such great interest and use is the His- tory of the Scandinavian Kingdoms, talven, as all His- tory must be, in due connection with the contempora- neous History of other lands. This History is that of a brave and interesting people, which, on a large scale, has influenced the world, and is yet so little known to the United States, and even, I am told, to the mass of the people of Great Britain. A talented young American wrote, a few years ago, an eloquent arti- cle in the Journal of Commerce^ inscribed " Scan- dinavian History, — a Work Wanted," wherein he INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. 17 says : " There is a nation, even now extant, possess- ing as brave a History as that of the Romans, as poetic as that of the Greeks ; a nation that has con- trolled the World's History in many things, and at many times, and whose achievements in war and in letters, are worthy the most heroic age of Rome and the most finished period of Greece ; a nation whose Philo- sophy outran their age, and anticipated results that have been slowly occurring ever since. This reference," he says, " can be true of but one people, and that people is the Norsemen, the dwellers in Scandinavia, who lived as heroes, lords, and conquerors ; who, sailing out of the ice and desolation in which they were born and nurtured, conquered England, Scotland and Ireland ; ravaged Brittany and Normandy ; discovered and colo- nized Iceland and' Greenland ; and they can be said, with confidence, to have crossed the Atlantic in their crazy barks, and to have discovered this very conti- nent, before Columbus, to have anchored in Vineyard Sound, and left a monument behind them ; and where- soever they went, they went as lords and rulers. And then their religion," he continues — " what a wild, massive, manly mythology! With nothing of the soft sentimentalities of more southern people, but continent of much that revelation has assured u3 to be true in 18 INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. doctrine — ^preacliing ever the necessity of right, ami doing right— of manliness, honesty and responsibility rewards and punishments." And ho thus concludes : " Is there not some one who will plunge in medias res, and, bringing order out of confusion, give us this so greatly desiderated History of Scandinavia ?" These eloquent words, a corresjwndence with the talented writer, and later, an interview with liim, have inspired me, a native Dane, having completed my studies at the University of Copenhagen, and im- bued Avith patriotic feelings, with a mind and cour- af'e to plunge in inedias res, and to the best of my ability to do justice to that undeniably interesting sub- ject. Jacta est alea, and I will commence by describing the state and condition of Denmark, in the most ancient times, until the Provincial Territories were united, and Christianity began to he promulgated hy Ansgarius, a learned and pious monk from Westphalia, in Germany. HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Tho Origin of llio People — Mytholos^ and Public Worship — Language— Skalds or Bards — Runes — The Warfaring Life of the People — Piracy — Duels — Foster-brother Covenant — State and Condition of the Female Sex — Means of getting a livelihood by — Victuals — Trade — Dwelling- places — Weapons — Funeral Solemnities — State Affairs — King — Peasants and Prefects — Slaves — Xorse Expeditions — The Oldest Kin^s. The present inhabitants of Denmark, as well as of Norway and Sweden, are successors of tiic enormous Gothic tribe formerly dwelling round about the Black Sea and the Sea of x\zov, to which district this tribe seems to have come from yet more eastern regions, afterwards wandering up to the northern coasts of the Baltic, whence the one branch of the Gothic tribe departed to the opposite tracts of Scandinavia, peopling and settling the southern part of Sweden, Skane, Hal- land, and Bleking, the Danish islands, together with the northern part of the Jutlandish peninsula, and likewise spreading itself over the greater part of Norway. The other branch of these ancient and distinguished Goths remained south of the Baltic, and oftentimes 20 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. I changing their dwellings, afterwards prevailed in Ger A. D., many, scattering under the great European 375. emigration over a great part of southern Europe, Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal and France, making considerable conquests, and even often exacting tribute. A. D., Divided here into Ostro and Visi- Goths, they ^33- erected, under their chief leader, Theodorik, the Ostrogothic kingdom in Italy, and the Visigothic in A. D., Spain under Astulph, and their influence and ^23. that of their descendants have since been per- manent in Europe and the world. On the southern borders of Denmark, in the present Duchy of Holstein, dwelt the Saxons, belonging to the German Goths ; higher up in Schleswig and in the southern and western part of Jutland dwelt the Angles and Jutlanders, forming, in a certain way, an intermediate line between the Scandinavian and German Goths. But as a great A. D., number of Angles, Saxons, and Jutlanders, in the ^^9. middle of the fifth century, led by the brothers, Hengist and Horst, departed for England, founding there the Saxon Heptarchy, the more northern Goths settling in the regions which those had left, were after- wards the prevailing tribe in all Jutland and Schleswig. On the entrance of the Goths into Scandinavia, the land was inhabited by two reciprocally kindred nations, whose present names are Laplanders and Finns. Both of them had come from the east, but the Laplanders were forced by the Finns up to the remotest parts of HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. ' 21 Norway and Sweden, where remnants of them are yet to be found. The Finns themselves were, after a vaHant resistance, pressed back by the Goths, whose descendants at present live in Finland, which now belongs to the Russian Empire. It is also possible that some Celtic tribes, the primitive inhabitants of the south and west of Europe, have lived in the Scandi- navian countries. The culture of the oldest dwellers of the north was at a very low ebb ; they lived dispersed, rambling about the immense and impenetrable forests, and on the coasts adjacent to the ocean and the numerous lakes, many of which are now transformed into moors and marshy land, or dried up altogether. Game from the forests, and fish from the sea and lakes, supplied the inhabitants with nutriment and hides and furs to protect their bodies .against the severe climate ; and in such respects they were very well off, wanting notMng fortune could supply. Their weapons and hunting-tools were stones, but often made with curious and admirable workmanship — ^the use of metals being yet unknown. Very interesting, deep, and instructive is the religion or the mythology of the Norsemen, wherein their char- acter and peculiar views of life have received a proper embodiment, containing much of the spirit of obedience, for which St. Paul praises the heathens that are without the law, but do by nature the things contained in the law, showing the work of the law written in their 22 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. hearts. Their religion, better, perhaps, called their mythology, announced also clearly the important doc- trine of future responsibility — rewards and punislunents. At all events, it was great, nervous, and poetic, and, in many respects, fit for facilitating the introduction of the higher light of Revelation, which first in the ninth century was brought to them. In the abyss of ages — thus read the old Sagas — all was without form and life, and darkness was upon the face of the deep, on which B. c, the warmth was continually operating, until '^^- Ymer, a giant sprang forth. But Odin, a Scandinavian Deity, yet supposed to be a liistorical person, having come from Asgard on the river Don (Tanais) in southern Russia, killed Ymer and his whole offspring; the bad and evil Jetters and Thyrsers (giants) were drowned in that stream of blood proceeding and flowing from Ymer's corpse, except one, who propagated the generation of Jetters or Thyrsers, and lived in con- tinual enmity with gods and men. Of Ymer's body — thus read the old Sagas — Odin moulded and framed the ordained and settled world with mountains, rivers, lakes, trees, and clouds ; and of the great ash-tree, YggdrasiU, whose topmost branches were said to dance eternally in the heavenly light, he moulded the first couple of men, Askur and Embla, who resided in Midgard. The gods themselves live in Asgard, close by Upsala, in Sweden. Odin, superior to all the other gods, is father of gods and men, and rules the whole world, which he, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 23 by his wise and judicious eye, contemplates and views from his high Hlidskjalf, his heavenly scat, his royal palace. The peculiar God of War and Thunder is Thor, a son of Odin, most ardently worsliipped by the warlike Norsemen, and kept long in memory even after the other gods were thrown into ohlivion. He being consi- dered the good principle, and chosen to bruise the head of all the evil principles, is incessantly fighting with the Jetters, slaying them with his hammer, the heavy Mjolnir. The brave having found an honorable death on the battle field were taken up to the mansion of the gods, and came to the splendid castle, Valhalla, radia- ting with shining shields and gUttering swords, and where Odin, Thor, Freia, Frigga, and the Nomas, with their irrevocable decrees, were assembled. Odin's maidens, the Valkyriers, were continually rushing through the ether, seeking in all countries for the bravest heroes, whom they marked with their spear- point, when the hour of death had come. The departed heroes, called Einheriars, pass their time in Valhalla, having every day the pleasure of arming themselves, marshaling themselves in military order, fighting and knocking down one another ; but in the evening they get up again and return to Valhalla, where a fes- tival meal is prepared for them, consisting of the flesh of a boar, called Sahrimner, wliich, though butchered every day, returns to life again, and the beautiful virgins, the Vallvyriers, present to them tlie 24 mSTORY OP SCANDINAVIA. mead-horn, of which they drink till they are in a state of intoxication ; but the pleasures of love do not enter at all into the joys of this extraordinary Paradise. Odin sits by himself at a particular table. A different lot or fate fell to the cowards who feared the battle and dangers of war, and allowed themselves to be cut off by disease. Cast down to Helheim (hell) they had to continue their Ufe there, as silent, trembling shadows, without pleasure and exploits, and under the perpetual suffering of anguish, remorse, and famine. Odin him- self, Thor, and the keen Tyr, belonged to the Asatribe ; while Freia, the goddess of love, together with Njord and Frigga, disposing of tranquil occupations, hunting, fishing, favorable winds on the ocean, and plenteous years, were ascribed to the gentle Vane-tribe. Nevertheless, the dominion of the Valhalla gods was not to last forever, but the power to be given to another god, who should judge men conformably to a higher law, not as they were brave or cowardly, but as they were ^ood or evil, for the Edda of Snorro says: "The world shall be judged in righteousness." The Yalhalla gods, however, were safe as long as Baldur, the wisest and most righteous of all gods, and protector of innocence, was living. But the cunning and designing Loke, the evil deity and the father of treachery, by birth half related to the gods, half to the Jetters, and father of Hcla, the Fenriswolf, and the dreadful Midgards serpent, smuggling himself into fflSTORY OF SCANUl.XAVlA. 25 the fellowsliip of the gods, so prevailed, by his crafti- ness, upon Baldur's own brother, as to kill him. Now nothing can avert the declension of the gods and the perdition of the world. The sun becomes eclipsed, the ocean overflows, and the Midgards serpent rises from the deep. Loke and Jetters confederated with the burning and consuming Surtiir, rush now upon Yalhalla, which, together with Nifthcim (Helheim) perish in Ragnarok, the twilight of the gods. All gods and Einheriars fall in the battle, and the whole world perishes. Bnt a new earth rises from the ocean, and the Almighty God descends himself to judge men in righteousness. The honest and true get permission to enter into Gimle — Odin's gold-radiating palace — to live there in eternal joy with the Almighty, and in fellowship with the other gods, who had been purified through the flames. Gimle has no need of the sun, neither of the moon, for Odin gives it light himself. But the evil, perjurers, mur- derers, and seducers, could not enter into that society, but are cast down to Nastrond, the eternal fi^re, where they have to expiate their misdeeds crossing streams of yellow matter, and suffering great pain in the eternal flames prepared for them. The gods were worshiped partly in the open air, in groves, or places encompassed by a circle of huge stones, partly in wooden temples, among which that in Upsala (Sweden) was most famous. The public worship — the main point of which were sacrifices — ^was in general 26 IIlSTORy OF SCANDINAVIA. administered by the head of the family ; at the temples priests were appointed — sometimes, also, priestesses/^ In order to honor the gods several great annual feasts were established, among which Juel (Christmas) was mosi remarkable as the most joyous and festival season to the Norsemen. From all quarters of the country men and women then resorted to the temples, making large offerings ; friends and relatives presented one another with gifts, and many days were spent in feasts and gay compotations. In the spring there was a saeriffcial offering, to ensure luck in war and in Viking expedi- tions (piracies) usually beginning at that season. With these barbarous people the number nine was supposed to have something in it of peculiar sanctity. Every ninth month, therefore, a sacrifice was offered up to the gods. The usual victims were horses, oxen, young swine, hawks, and cocks. From the entrails and the running blood the priests told the people their fortunes, and the flesh was prepared for a meal to the assembled sacrificers. Sometimes even men were offered — mostly slaves and prisoners of war — for the Norsemen, in their uncultivated state, were, to a certain extent, cannibals ; to which Ditlimar, a reliable historian' of the eleventh century, bears witness, telling that before Odin's arrival the goddess Hertha was, in Leira, in the island of Sjelland, (Zeeland,) worshiped with great solemnity ; and that every ninth year, in the month of January, the Danes offered up to her ninety-nine men, and the HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 27 same number of horses, dogs, and cocks, in the firm assurance- of thus obtaining her favor and protectio n. J The different classes of Norsemen, being of the same extraction, had also the same language, except some provincialisms, idioms, and differences in pronuncia- tion, entirely inevitable where the same language is spoken over extensive tracts and territories. While thus the old Scandinavian language, in process of time, was undergoing several alterations, it was in the remote Iceland kept in its perfect purity, free from all foreign idioms. The general appellation of the common lan- guage was Dmiish tongue, the Danes being a long time considered the main people, and through several cen- turies playing the most important parts in the North. The language improved by discourses in public meet- ings, and by the songs of Skalds or Bards ; and later, when the use of letters became customary, by a multi- tude of historical writings, particularly composed by the Icelanders skilled in old sayings, which were handed down to them from antiquity, a considerable number of which writings are yet left. The poets, generally called Skalds, who by their songs have immortalized ancestral achievements and exploits, were seldom mis- sing in public meetings, drinking bouts, and other festival occasions. They stayed often at the royal courts and the manors of the Prefects, where they propagated, through their songs, achievements and exploits of Kings and Prefects to succeeding generations ; and being often, 28 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. not jnly eye-witnesses themselves, but even partakers ol the achievements they have glorified in their songs. Their poetic productions, a great numher of which have been preserved uncorrupted down to our very days, are of importance for History. The Norsemen had some peculiar letters, consisting of sixteen marjts or characters, called Runes, the origin of which ascends to the remotest antiquity. They were used not only by the Norsemen, but also by kin- dred tribes abroad. The signification of the word Rune (mystery) seems to allude to the fact that, originally, only a few have known the use of these marks, and that they mostly have been applied to secret tricks, witch- craft, and enchantments. There were both plain and artificial Runes, called Lonrunes, (the Scandinavian word Lon denoting secret,) with the latter of which a great superstition was connected, the priests believ- ing, by aid of them, to be able to haunt a place, to dull weapons, to stop thunder and hurricanes, to cure or occasion diseases, and so on ; and, when engraved on naUs, wrists, rudders of ships, handles of swords, these Lonrunes were supposed able to bring a thing to a happy issue, or avert dangers. But the Runes were also used as communications in writing ; for instance, on being engraved on thin wooden tablets, \s^hich were sent away as letters, or on being used to record a series of kings, genealogical tables, and the like. Worthy to be noted is also the use of Runes for inscriptions on HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 29 stones, in order to preserve the remembrance of cele- brated men and their achievements. To the most remarkable of such Rmie-stones, to be found round about in the Scandinavian countries, belong the two Jellingstones in Southern Jutland, where it is sup- posed that the king, Gorm the Old, and his queen, Thyra Dannebod, have their sepulchre. The warlilce mind, so strongly and clearly expressed in the Northern mythology, appears in ail parts of the popular life. Tranquil occupations did not enjoy any reputation among the ancient Norsemen, while war and fighting were a sure way of acquiring an eminent name with contemporaries, glorious fame with succeeding generations, and means and riches in abundance. To eat bread in the sweat of the brow was considered inglorious. ' Life was of little value, and had to be risked at any cost for honor ; and an old warrior, when unable to wield his sword, often caused one of his friends to kill him, to avoid a n'\tural death, which was'an exclusion from the privileges of Valhalla. But, although frequent wars and mutual challenges were carried on in Scandinavia, the Norsemen often sailed to far-off regions to win honor and renown. Yet, however, not only desire for warfare allured the Norsemen from homo, but much more, the necessity of procuring such necessaries of life and such enjoyments as they could not have m their own countries. In the spring, great crowds of new-raised men, fit to bear arms, usually 30 HISTORY or SCANDINAVIA. went away from home, mercilessly plundermg coeista and lands, wherever they made their appearance, and in the fall returning with rich spoil and prisoners of war, who thereupon became slaves. Such expeditions were called Vikingcfarter^ and the partakers Vikings. Some made even such a life a business, and spent nearly all then* time on the ocean as pirates, despising the easier country life, and speaking disdainfully of sleeping under a sooty ceiling, or sitting round a warm stove with old women. 'According to the character of the Norsemen, their disputes were nearly always settled by arms. " It was more honorable for men," say the old Sagas, " to fight by sword than to quarrel by tongue;" and when, therefore, a quarrel arose, either on account of personal ofi'cnces, or concerning inheri- tance and borders, then the sword was usually the judge. After challenging one another to a duel, they met on a place surrounded by a circle of big stones, oi hedged in by wicker-work, or also on a small island, and if the challenged did not punctually make* his appearance, he lost his reputation ; nobody would keep company with him, and sometimes even a high pole was erected, on wliich Runes were engraved, announcing his name and infamy. The challenged, however, was permitted to prevail upon another to fight instead of himself; but, in general, they were loth to do so, as it always set the principal in an unfavorable light. One murder became generally the cause of another ; for, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 31 although fines could be paid as atonement for a murder committed in an open and honest duel, the near rela- lives often required blood for blood ; a manner of thinking which a father, being offered money for a murder committed on his only son, properly expressed in answering : "I will not carry the corpse of my dearly beloved son in my pocket-book." And if a murder was' committed cunningly and treacherously, then vengeance of blood was an unavoidable obligation, from which the surviving relatives could not withdraw without total loss of their reputation. Revengeful and inexorable as the Norsemen were in their enmity, so faithful and self- denying they proved themselves in their friendship. Warriors valuing one another highly, often made a contract called Foster-bwllter Covenant, by which they, under the observance of different solemn ceremonies, mixed blood together, swearing allegiance, and binding themselves by a fearful oath to avenge the death of one another, by indicting severe punishment upon the mur- derer. This covenant was now and then extended even so far as to promise not to outlive one another ; and the ancient History of Scandinavia sets forth many beautiful examples of such faithfulness and self-denying love. Though bloody and implacable m war, they were not strangers to the virtues of peace ; hospitality and kindness to strangers, which are the common virtues of rude nations, the dwellers of Scandinavia possessed in a very high degree, and appreciated highly, and they 32 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. entertained for each other the most kindly feelings of regard. Every traveler was received kindly, and tha person of the guest considered holy ; and when a man entered into the house of liis enemy, with whom he everywhere else would have to aLide the issue of a bloody fight, ho was, as long as he was liis guest, safe from any outrage or mischief. On the whole, it was as if the Apostle's words had been known to the ancient Norsemen : "Be not forgetful to entertain strangers, for thereby some have entertained angels unawares." It is, therefore, very wrong, when some partial historians, as for instance Voltaire, set forth a few instances of bru- tality and barbarism among the Norsemen as character- istic of the manners and genius of the whole race. The respect, likewise, which the dwellers of Scandi- navia entertained for the female sex, was a striking feature in their character, and could not fail to human- ize their dispositions. The state and condition of the female sex in society at large, was better in the north than in most other countries where Christianity had not produced a salutary revolution. The daughters, brought up in their paternal home, and taught occupations per- taining to females, were permitted to partake in social enjoyments and public meetings. Even the females appreciated bravery and a manly mind ; the v/ant of which \vith the males, was, in their opinion, not repa- rable from other excellencies. The father or guard iau HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA 33 disposed, according to custom, of the hand of the unmarried gu-1, but m reality she was, however, at her own disposal, being very seldom given in marriage against her own option. The wedding cerernony, per- formed under the observance of religious ceremonies, was attended with festivities during several days, whereafter the husband guided his wife to her new home, handing her the bunch of keys (Nogleknippet) as a sign of her duties as the mistress of the house. Monogamy was customary ; nevertheless the husband cohabited now and then with concubines, — a cause of frecjuent divorces and bloody fights. As for chastity and pure manners, the . old sayings report well, and speak in high terms of the women of the north. They were true to their country, their husbands, their friends and their home, and their love did not cease on this side the grave. The science of healing, imperfect as it might be at that time, was mostly practiced by women, to whom, also, the peculiar gift to interpret dreams was ascribed ; which gift, according to the old sayings, Odin had sent down to all women from his splendid Hlidskjalf. The business of the Norsemen was hunting, fishing, and breedmg of cattle, also a little -agriculture. Pytheas. a merchant from Marseilles, in Southern France, who^ about tliree hundred years before Christ, arrived in & country wliich he calls Thulc, generally considered to have been f:;outhcrn Norway, tells that the inhabitants 34 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. understood how to till barley, and prepare a drink of honey, and that they did not, as in Southern Europe, thresh their grain in the open air, but binding it up into sheaves, carried it into large barns to be threshed. The most common food of the Norsemen was the flesh of wild and domestic animals, fish, and vegetables ; horse and swine flesh were considered the finest dishes ; beer and mead were their drinks. Trade was exercised by the keen northern navigators on far-off coasts, but their traffic was often turned into piracy, and the sword was substituted for gold and silver. Grain, honey, flour, salt and cloth were brought from England. Oriental commodities came by land to Russia, from whence the Norsemen imported them, and the harbors of Northern Germany drew together commercial connections with Middle Europe. Scandinavia herself had only very few wares to export; nearly none but fish, fur, and amber, which was found on the shores of the Baltic ? — and on the M^estern coast of Jutland. Coins were unknown, and payment was, therefore, made by pieces of gold and silver, or wares exchanged for wares. Of mechanical arts there were in ancient times only very few. ' Nevertheless, the art of ship-building, and dex' terity in hammering arms and ornaments were higlily valued and exercised by free-born men, while plainer works and domestic services were made by slaves. The women, were very skillful in weaving tapestry, and interweaving figures of men, animals, and landscapes HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 35 V • The dwellings of the Scandinavian people were made of timher, and the construction was plain, one room being both kitchen, bed-chamber, and sitting-room. In the middle of the room were the stove and the chimney, and to let out the smoke an opening was made ia the ceiling, which also let in light to the room ; for windows were unknown. Nevertheless the rich and prominent families had more convenient dwellings : kitchen, parlor, bed-cliamber, batliing-room, and often a handsome hall. ^The Norseman's dearest and most important property \ were his arms. In ancient times they were plain and arffess. and, like other implements, made of stones ; later, CI copper ; for it was a long time before the Norsemen learnt how to forgo iron. Their aggressive weapons, fre- quently mentioned in the old sayings, were clubs, stones, swords, battle-axes, slings, bows, arrows, and spears ; then' defensive were shirts of mail, helms, and sliields, adorned with figures of animals, as armorial ensigns, and so highly appreciated as to be hereditary. On the whole, for the young Norseman, whose education was, lilce the ancient Spartan's, exclusively calculated for a military life, the practice in using arms was necessary to make his body pliable and hardy ; by the early and frequent exercises of wliich they also acquired an ahnost incomprehensible dexterity and muscular strength in using and wielding the sword. Braver men never lived ; truer men never drew the bow. They had courage, fortitude, sagacity, bodily strength, and perseverance ; .36 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. they shrunk from no dangers, and they feared no hard- ships. " Odin is for us — who can be against us?" was their watchword ; and the old Sagas say : " Here it was beautiful to live, sad to die." Penetrated with a lively desire for acquiring honor and renown, the ancient Norsemen employed all their eflbrts to keep their famous ancestors in an unshalcen memory ; and when an emi- nent chief had died, his relatives and friends decreed solemn funeral honors, called Gravol, (parentations,) by which a glorious mention was made of the actions of the deceased, and drinking cups of beer emptied m his honor, the present guests obliging themselves to honor his glorious and sacred memory by promising to perform some distinguished deed. To make such a vow, and empty such a cup of memory, wliich was called the Minniciip^ was a duty indispensably incumbent on the son, before he could place himself in the chair of state of Ills celebrated father. In remotest antiquity the corpses were buried in the earth ; later, burnt, the ashes being stored up in urns — a custom ascribed to 0dm. At a later period it became agam customary to bury the corpses, and heap up gigantic hills, many of which are yet to be found. Tlje corpses of more distinguished persons were, however, seldom buried m the bare earth, but in a vault (mauso leum) surrounded with big stones ; and upon the vault was generally laid a tall stone, with an inscription— (Rune-stone.) Accordmg to the general opinion, that in HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 37 the life to come the deceased would have to acquit him- self of the same office as here, the best decorations, and things which had belonged to his situation and office, were laid down in the sepulchre ; wherefore, also, in said sepulchres, frequently are found swords and other arms, different implements, finger-rings, bracelets, neck- laces of pearl and amber, and mosaic work, and the like ornaments. Denmark, Norway, and Sweden were, in ancient tunes, divided into small portions, districts and pro- vinces, (Herreder, Sysler,) more of which by degrees were so united as to form small states, until at last all these single provmces made up three kingdoms, which for many centuries had mostly only one king. • These ancient kmgs t)f Scandinavia were — thus record the old saymgs — beloved and honored by theu* people, as fathers and friends. They did not expect their subjects to kneel to them when they came to ask a favor or advice, nor did their subjects ever prostrate themselves, like those of great monarchs of Asia or Egypt. Their power v/as limited, and their function, as written laws had not yet existed, was to settle disputes which might arise among the selfish and ignorant, to make laws and alter the old ones, by which the people and the influential men con- sented to be governed, and to lead their subjects in war. To offer sacrifices, and take a leading part in divine worship, was also often the Icing's business. For this the subjects gave their king large farms and lordships, a ^8 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. considerable part of the spoils of war, and the highest {)Iaces at all feasts, and in the public deliberations — *.hat is, in the assemblies or assizes (Thinge) — wliere they consulted together concerning public affairs ; and they always addressed him with respect. Moreover, forests and unfilled tracts of land, and ornaments found in the earth, belonged to the king. Wlien a king died, the people convened to elect his successor ; but, though heu'ship was not fully entitled to ascend the throne, the eldest son of the deceased king was generally chosen, in order to avoid disputes. Upon the failure of the blood royal, the election was entirely free. The government seems, on the whole, to have been almost an absolute monarchy, of a mixed, hereditary, and elective nature. The peasantry was, in this early age, almost tho only corporation of Scandinavia. By a peasant was understood, not alone a husbandman, an agrieultor, but every free-born person who was possessed of real estates, with whatever office he else might be invested. Thus tho peasantry constituted the people. But above the peasants ranked the chiefs or leaders, not on account of peculiar privileges, but of the greater credit and influ- ence they enjoyed, because they were in possession of larger property, and descended from distinguished families. From among such families the Icings in general took earls (Jarler) to rule the conquered pro- vinces, and all the warriors and officers who constituted their court (Hird). The peasants and the chiefs consti- HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 39 tilted the Diet, and met at the assize (Tiling), a place selected for this very purpose, and surrounded with holy- ash trees or with a circle of stones. Here they con- sulted concerning war and peace ; here the kings were elected ; here the laws were passed or annulled, and law- suits decided ; and without the consent of the Diet the king could not decide upon anything of consequence. The laws were few and simple, consisting mostly in customs ; the punishments were mild, and most crimes could be atoned for by paying a fme ; yet assassination, high-treason, arson, and burglary, were now and then punished, either by slavery, outlawry, or forfeiture of life. The slaves were divided into, native Scandinavians and foreigners. In the many wars which the Norsemen waged with southern Europe, they made prisoners, who became slaves, if their relatives or friends could not pay for their liberation. Also, many slaves were made by trade. Their condition was miserable. The ancient Norsemen hardly acknowledged slaves to be men. A slave might be beaten, starved, and otherwise tormented, or be killed by his master's order, and the abuser might go unpunished. They could not buy, sell, nor inherit — not take oath, not marry — but were sold and bought as other wares. Slaves never carried arms, except when expressly armed for military service. One of the most toilsome but necessary labors of slaves, was the preparation of corn or wheat. In those ages there were neither wind nor water mills, corn being 40 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. * beaten by slaves, or pounded, or ground in a hand-milL There were, however, many slaveholders who never practised these cruelties, and the slaves of Scandinavia were, on the whole, treated with more humanity than in other parts of Europe. Slaves were even sometimes let out to serve other citizens, and in that case they were permitted to have a part of their wages, and the money thus earned was often saved to purchase the liberty of the slaves. A kind master granted, some- times, a faithful slave his liberty, whose children then could become citizens, and enjoy all civil privilegos. Of course, the introduction of Christianity put a stop to many abuses of slavery, and the first Scandinavian Christians treated their slaves kindly, approving of St. Paul's words to the Athenians : " God made of one blood all nations of the earth, bond and free." Upon the whole, nothing is more horrible and affecting than such debasement of a follow creature. The Greek poet. Homer, who lived about twelve hundred yeara before Christ, says truly : " Whatever day makes man a slave takes half his worth away." Of the great European Emigration the Norsemen were, properly speaking, not partakers, except as far as Jut- A. ])., landers, Angles and Saxons, at about the same 4^3- time, under the command of the two brothers, Hengist and Horsa,* set out for and conquered England, and erected the Saxon Heptarchy, the history of which is very obscure. The duration of the several kingdoms^ * The Btalliou and the mare are perhaps the namos of the Icailers, or perhaps only the iiaines of tlic vesgeU they commanded HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 41 till their union under Egbert, is almost all that a. d , can be noted with any approach to historical ^27. certainty. But it is beyond all question, that the Cimbri and Teutons, and later, the Groths and Longo- beards, and the other people mentioned, have emigrated from Scanilinavia, except, perhaps, that some single crowds from the north might have joined the kindred tribes south of the Baltic. But after that great agita- tion, called the European Emigration, had subsided, an emigi'ation from Scandinavia commenced in the seventh and eighth centuries, breaking out violently in the ninth and tenth centuries. The Normans (the Danes, Norwe- gians, and Swedes, commonly styled so in southern Europe,) had undoubtedly formerly made frequent expe- ditions (Vikingefarter) to near and far-oIF regions ; but now their expeditions began to be made in greater num- bers, intending not only to obtain booty, but even possessions and dwellings abroad. The union of the provincial territories under one king, both in Denmarlc and Norway, and the introduction of Christianity, and the change of mamiers and customs connected therewith, had made many dissatisfied with their native country. This, together with a strong desu-e for a warfaring life, induced numerous crowds from all regions of the North to go away to seek a new home ; and the southern lands, wliich by the dissolution of Charlemagne's a. d., empire, were enervated and entirely defenceless, ^*3. were a tempting bait for the Normans. Their expedi- 42 mSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. tions extended from the Baltic straight down to the coasts of Africa, and to the innermost parts of the Medi- terranean sea, wliich had so often formerly resounded with the strife of Latin arms. Nor were their enter- prises confined to these coasts. They descended all along the shores of Portugal and Western France, and there- after along the largest rivers of Europe — Elbe, Rhine, Scheldt, Seine, Loire, Garonne, and Rhone. They dared, on their small flat-bottomed vessels, to make irruption into the inland parts of the countries, spreading terror and causing the most terrible havoc wheresoever they went. The flourishing cities of Holland and Grermany, Nimvegen, Liege, Bonn, Cologne, and Aachen, were con- sumed by their fire, and they went over the entire dreadful drama of warlilic glory. Finally Arnulf, the German Emperor, put a stop to their invasions and A. D., cruelties, after having completely defeated them s^i- near Luven, in Belgium. To France was the cruel Danish Viking, Hastings, a horrible scourge. He marched twice to the gates of Paris, plundered, and exacted tribute. The third time A. D., Paris was saved by the bravery of Count Odo, 8SG. afterwards King of France. Then he prepared to set out for Rome, resolving to give full way to his natural desire for conquest ; but mistaking the city Luna for Rome, he attacked and obtained it. Yet no A. D, rest for France, until Charles the Foolish, 911- King of France, gave up to Rollo, or Rolf HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 4S Gauge, a Norwegian chief, a whole province, which was now called Normandy. Alfred the Grreat, of England, had, in resisting the cruel Hastings, to withstand a skillful veteran. For three years he had, undismayed, contended against Alfred, till he at last had to yiek' mdignantly to that noble King of England. Has- a. d., tmgs had marked his course with hlood ; hut ^ar. whatever was done hy liim, fell short of the merciless ferocity of other Danes, who, about the same time, laid England waste. Scotland, the Hebrides, and Ireland were thrown into the most extreme desolation by the Danes and Norwegians, who in Ireland were called Ostmen (men of the east.) The exclamation of a monk of AVorcester is forcible : " O quam crebris vexationibus, quam gravibus laboribiis, quam tUris et lamentabilibus modis, non solum a Danis, verum etiam ab filiis satan- icis ITashngii, tola vexata est AngUaP Not till the Norsemen had won pleasant dwellings, and states by them were founded m Franco, Italy, Ostangel, Northum- berland, on the Island of Man, and the Orkney Isles, as also in Russia, where they were called Vareg-er, did the tumult gradually subside ; wliile, at the same time, the fierce passions of the Norsemen were in some degree moderated by the mild precepts of the Grospel. The oldest events in Scandinavia are only known from the old sayings or traditions, wliioh first, at a later period, have been written down, and therefore do not give the events back in their true form, but are mixed 44 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. up with fiction, which has given rise to an insuperable chronological difficulty. The traditions are so varied, that it is often impossible to discover the truth of any of the circumstances. The materials from which these traditions are compiled, are in Scandinavia, as in Rome, and Grreece, the legendary ballads, wliich are in every country the first records of warlike exploits. Of conse- quence are also the calendars and annals kept by the priests, and the genealogical tables kept by the earls and other distinguished families. But poetic historians have afterwards mingled so much fiction 'vvith truth, that often only few of their assertions can \ o deemed authentic. The history, therefore, of Scandinavia, thi'ough the first eight centuries after Christ,' until King A. D., Grorm the Old, is properly and correctly called 683. the Fabulous Ag-e, because " deprived of the nature of historical evidence, and often involved in impenetrable obscurity, and accordingly, full of the greatest improbabilities ; while the period before Christ, destitute of all light, is called the Obscure Ag-e. Odin, supposed to have arrived in Scandinavia about seventy years before Christ, and, according to the religious ideas of the Norsemen, considered the Supreme G-od, is by some historians described as a real historical person — a mighty king— who has ruled the northern countries. Several sons are ascribed to him, who, after his death, divided Scandinavia into equal parts. Heimdal is said to have reigned in Skane, Niord in Sweden, Seming IirSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 45 in Norway, Balder in Angel, (Sclileswig,) and Skjold in Sjelland (Zealand) and Jutland ; the latter being the head of an illustrious generation of kmgs, called Skfoldmig-er, who are said to have resided in Leire, (Lethra,) twenty English miles from Copenliagen. In Christ's time Frode Fredegod (Pacific) is said to have been King of Denmark. The rulers at that time were not called kings, but Drots, and Rig", ruler of Skane, adopted first the title of king. A new generation a. d., begins with Da7i MykiUati (The Splendid). 250. Almost all historians agree that he was the founder of the country called Denmark. Some have from him derived the name Denmark ; but it is more probable that it has originated from the word Daw, denoting loiu ox flat, and from Mark, denoting overgrown with luood ; the name Denmark thus denoting a flat land, overgrown with wood. After a reign of forty years, with the utmost justice and reputation — thus record the old say- ings — he died greatly lamented by his subjects. He ordered his courtiers to bury him solemnly, and in full equipage, in a hill ; and because it from his time became customary to bury the kings in such hills, the following age is called the Hill Age. At a subsequent time Rolf Krake was king. The graces of his person are said to have equaled those of his mind'; and his stature and strength to have been so extraordinary, that he was surnamed Krakc; an old Danish word expressive of these qualities. He has become famous for his bravery 46 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. and martial spirit, and for the twelve giants (Berserkers) he kept at his court ; among whom BJarke, HJelle, and Wig'g'o ought to be named. Berserker is a word of frequent occurrence in the Sagas, and denotes giants or warriors. They were often seized with a kind of frenzy, ei-ther arising from an excited imagination, or from the use of stimulating liquors — committing then the wildest extravagances, and striking indiscriminately at friends and foes. Rolf Krake was killed by the base perfi- diousness of his own sister, Skulda, married to Hjartvar, Rolf's viceroy in Skane, whom he had distinguished by numberless instances of his favor, and even exempted hfhi from paying taxes for three years. Meanwhile Hjartvar, prompted by his wife, buckled for war : making haste, at the time expired, to Leire, where he in the night assaulted the sleeping king and his Ber- serkers, who had intoxicated themselves at a banquet Rolf had given in honor of his sister's arrival. Rolf and A. D., all his Berserkers were put to the sword, except 600. Wiggo, who promised to avenge the death of the king, l^e kept his promise, and pierced Hjartvar with seven dagger-stabs. In the middle of the seventh century the brothers Rerek and Helge, thus sing the old Sagas, reigned jointly in Leire, at the same time as Ivar Vidfadmc {i. e., who surpasses his bounds,) made himself ruler over a great part of the North, besides Sweden, which he already ruled. To enter into possession of Sjclland, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA, 47 liO gave his daughter, Audur, in marriage to Rerek, though she herself preferred the more warlilce Helge. After that, he Ivindled variance between the brothers, so that Rerek, in a fit of jealousy, killed his brother, whereafter Ivar Vidfadme succeeded in conquering Rerek and becoming master of Sjelland. But some time after, Ivar lost his life on an expedition to Russia a. d., (Grarderige), whither his widowed daughter had '^^^^ fled for refuge. About tliis time Hamlet, a Danish prince, whom Shakspeare has immortalized, is said to have enjoyed for a great number of years the Danish throne. It is, however, doubtful, in spite of assertions to the contrary, whether Hamlet ever was king of Denmark, all the best critics affirming that he was killed in a battle, just as ho was endeavoring by force to succeed to the crown ; and even Saxo Grrammaticus does not place him among the Danish monarchs. Harald Ilildetand, a son of Rerek and Audur, now brought under subjection all the countries his grandfather, Ivar Vidfadme, had ruled, and became a mighty and sove- reign king. But, after bearing sway a long time in peace, Sigurd Ring, his nephew, and viceroy in Swe- den, raised a sedition against him. The memorable battle was fought at Bravallahede, in Smaland, a. d., Sweden, where the most noble heroes and giants ''^^■ of the whole North encountered ; amongst whom was the notable Stoerkodder, whose bravery and gigantic size have been so much praised in the heroic songs. But 48 HISTORV OF SCANDINAVIA. Harald HilJetand fell in the battle, Sigiird Ring gaining the victory ; whose reign, however, is not worthy of much notice. He is said to have founded the city of Ringsted, in Sjelland, called after him. The more remarkahle has his son, Regner Lodbrok, become, of whose exploits and enterprises of hazard the old sayings record so much. Perpetually roving in defiance and war, partly on the southern and eastern coasts of the Baltic, partly in Flanders, partly in Scotland, Ireland, and England, and being lord and ruler wheresoever he went, he was, at last, captured by Kmg Ella, of Nor- thumberland, who, so say the English historians, threw him, bound, into a dungeon filled with snakes, vipers, A. D., and poisonous animals ; thus ingloriously putting ''^*- an end to a life grovvm old in glory and victory. The great Danish historians, Saxo Grrammaticus, Pon- tanus, and Meursius, correspond with the English in tJiis circumstance. His four sons avenging his death, divided now the wide-spread realm which Ivar Vid- fadme, Harald Hildetand, and Sigurd Ring had gathered together. BJorn Jernside obtained Sweden, Hvidsmrk Jutland and Wenden, Ivar Beenlus Northumberland, and Sigurd Snake-eye Denmark, Skane, Halland and Southern Norway. The historian, Meursius, speaks in high terms of Sigurd Snake-eye. "God," says he, "enabled him to complete a reign as pregnant with real felicity as any which the annals of Denmark can show." A grandson nf his was Gorm the Old^ who mSTORV OF SCANDINAVIA. 49 collected the separate Danish provinces into one aggre- gate body. Thus has been traced the History of Scandinavia, from the fabulous age down to the period of historical evi- dence ; on the accounts of which we accordingly could bestow an implicit credit. Christianity, also, now com- menced to bo preached ; paganism at lengJi entirely disappeared, and the influence of a purer faith became fliscernible in the lives and actions of the old Norsemen. . FIRST PERIOD. FIIOM THE COLLECTION OF THE SEPARATE PROVINCES INTO ONE BODY, AND FROil THE FIRST ENDEAVORS TO INTRODUCE CaRIS- TIANITY, UNTIL THE DEATH OF VALDEMAR VICTOR, AND THB ISSUING OF THE JUTLANDISH LAW, 1241. Frovi the Foundation of the Danish Kingdom till A. D. 1042. Promulgation of the Gospel by Ansgarius — Gorm the Old and his Queen, Thyra Dannebod — Harald Bluetooth — Christianity — Civil War — Palnatoke — Svend Splitbeard — Viking Association — Battle by Svolder — Conquest of England — Harald — Canute the Great — England and Denmark united — Pilgrimage to Rome — Battle by Helge-River — Ulf Jarl — Conquest of Nor- way — The union with England ceases. A FEW years before Gform's accession to the Danish throne, the promulgation of Christianity was com- menced, but met with great opposition from the warUke mind and rude manners of the people. The humble and self-denying spirit taught by Christianity was in no accordance with the stubborn mind of the ancient Norsemen. The Christian idea of the life to come, as a spiritual union with G-od and the Saviour, was very much opposed to the hope of the northern pagans for 50 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 51 Valhalla, and the sensual enjoyments expected there. The doctrine of fasting, abstemiousness, and chastening the body, displeased the Norsemen, who wished to enjoy the pleasures which this life offered them, and appre- ciated a strong and vigorous body. A long time, there- fore, passed away, till Christianity as an active principle entered their hearts ; but it is to be observed, that the victory was gained, not, as in many adjacent countries by violence and compulsion, but by the intrinsic power of the Grospel itself. Several points, also, of the heathen doctrine faci^tated the introduction of Christianity. The doctrine of the pious Balder, of the destruction of the gods, after which a holy and righteous Grod was to rule, paved the way for the Christian ideas. The hea- thens' Loke, Gimle, and Nastrond, became easily the Christians' devil, kingdom of heaven, and hell ; as also the outward pomp and splendor of the Catholic divine service influenced the tractable mind of the ancient Norsemen. The Prankish emperors (the Franks were some petty Grerman tribes, who in the fifth century had established themselves as a nation in the provinces lying between the Rliine, the Weser, the Maine and the Elbe, including the greater part of HoUand and Westphalia,) endeavored to spread Christianity among the Norsemen, in order thereby to bridle these troublesome neighbors. Charlemagne had wi^ violence compelled the Saxons to embrace Christianity, and thus deprived the people of its independence. But the daring and efficient Godfred, 52 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. King of Jutland, apprehending his designs, protected the Saxons, and commenced war. Making large progress, and even threatening to visit Charlemagne in his resi- dence, Aachen, the emperor was happy enough to get rid of that, intelligent and brave enemy, Gfodfred unfor- tunately being treacherously killed by one of his own people. His successor, Hemming, made peace a. d., with Charlemagne, by which the river Eider was dis- appointed the limit between Denmark and Grermany. Louis the Pious, a son of Charlemagne, not so able as his father, but of a more pious mind, concerned himself very much in spreading Christianity in Denmark, send- ing thither the Archbishop Ebbe, of Rheims, who, never- theless, did not perform anything of consequence. But a Jutlandish sub-king, Harold Klak, who had been banished from the country, fled to the emperor for refuge, hoping by his aid to regain the kingdom. While staying there, Harald was baptized in Ingelheim, by Mainz, the emperor himself being sponsor at the chris- tening, and putting on him the white baptismal robe. It was after his return from Germany that we may date the era of Christianity in Denmark. Ansg-arius, called the Northern Apostle, a learned and pious monk in the cloister of Corvey, Westphalia, was the happy instru- ment of spreading Christianity in the North. The emperor was looking for a man who could guide Harald Klak home, strengthen his faith, and spread the Chris- tian doctrine amongst his people. Ansgarius undertook HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 53 this bold and difficult enterprise ; and, attended by another energetic monk, Autbert, arrived in Denmark, A. D., where he first resided in Hedeby (now the city 827. of Schleswig), at that time a flourishing commer- cial city, and erected a missionary school, preaching the Kingdom of G-od, and teaching those things which con- cern the Lord Jesus Christ. Such was the force of truth — or such, perhaps, the inconstancy of human nature, always eager after novelty — that Christianity spread with amazing rapidity, and was greatly aided in its progress by the zeal and piety of the king. After some years' preaching and baptizing in Denmark, he went, advised by the emperor, to Sweden, preaching Christianity there for a year and a half. The emperor, learning what rapid progress the new doctrine had made in Scandinavia, purposed now, in order to promote it A. D., still further, to erect an archbishopric in Ham- ^'^^- burg ; and Ansgarius, with whose Christian zeal he was highly pleased, was accordingly appointed Arch- bishop. Autbert, his faithful and pious attender, was aheady dead, deeply bewailed by Ansgarius. But the Northern Vikings (freebooters) some time after attacking and ravaging Hamburg, put unfortunately a consider- able stop to the missionary undertaking of Ansgarius. Through several years he had to ramble about, helpless and forsaken; while the disturbances, which broke out at the soon ensuing death of the emperor, could but withdraw attention from the advancement of 5« 54 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Christianity in the North. Finally, Louis the a. d., German, interesting himself in the subject, ^^5- united the bishopric of Bremen with the archbishopric of Hamburg, and took care of Ansgarius, who anew commenced to preach, set the school of Hedeby again on foot, and, because of the favor he enjoyed with the Jutlandish sub-king, Erik, was permitted to build in this city the first church — the very first — in Denmark. But upon returning from another journey in Sweden, he found King Erik dead, and Christianity under persecu- tion of the new king, who put several of the most devout and zealous Christians to death, who had refused to abjure their religion. Others ho forced or bribed into a compliance with his will. He leveled all the churches with the ground, and sent an army to ravage Saxony, chiefly because the people of that country had received the light of the Gospel. But Ansgarius spoke so con- vincingly to the king, that he not only withdrew his resentment, which had grievously oppressed the Chris- tians, but published entire liberty of conscience, and embraced the true faith. He erected, at his own expense, a magnificent church at Ripen, in Southern Jutland, ordered the pagan temples to be razed, and now became as zealous a Christian as a little before he had been a bigoted heathen. Upon the recommendation of Ansgarius, ho appointed persons properly qualified for teaching the Gospel in every corner of his dominions, allowed them handsome salaries, and took Ansgarius for his counselor, not only in spirituals but in temporals HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA.' 55 likewise. He died the proselyte and cliief support of that reUgion which, only a few years before, he had persecuted with such cruelty and bitterness. Of the new church erected by him at Ripen, Rembert, a disciple A. D., of Ansgarius, was appointed minister. At sixty- 865. four years of age Ansgarius died in Bremen, after a powerful and self-denying endeavor for spreading the Gospel in Scandinavia. Rembert, above mentioned, succeeded him in the archbishopric, acting with the same apostolic zeal as his great teacher, whose biography he has written and published in Latin. A follo^ving king of Denmark, by the name of Frotho, prepared, the better to propagate the faith, an embassy to Pope Sergius III., to acknowledge his supremacy in spirituals, and to request that he would send some persons perfectly qualified to teach the Gospel in Denmark, when death claimed him, and deprived his people of an excellent prince. The spread of Christianity in Scandinavia gave ~-^ additional vigor to the papal power, for the Norsemen, ' with all the zeal of now converts, became eager to prove their sincerity by some enterprise in support of the 1 pontiflT, whom they regarded as the great director of their J faith and hope. Shortly before the death of Ansgarius, the famous and heroic king Harold Hairfair, of Norway, so called be- cause of his long and beautiful hair, commenced his bold A. D., and glorious career. He ascended the throne in 863. 863. At that time Norway was divided between 5G HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. thirty-one petty kings, against whom he immediately commenced making war, till they all were subdued and he had become the sole ruler of all Norway himself. That which induced him to wage so long and hazardous a warfare, was, besides his ambition and strong desire of superiority, his intense love of the two handsome prin- cesses Ragna and Gyda. Ragna he saw at a Christmas festival, and wooed her ; but she said that, before con- senting, she should wish to know whether he or another should rule Norway. At this bold question the king flew into a passion ; but the young lady answered calmly, "I should deem it more proper if thou didst pour out thine anger upon all those petty kings with whom the country swarms." Apt words have power to assuage the heat of a passionate mind. The king confessed the truth of her remark, and promised not only to war against all of them as long as one was left, but he even enacted a law that forbade all violence against women, under the penalty of banishment. Afterward, Harold was enamoured of the beautiful Gyda, who had been brought up with a rich peasant. Embassadors were sent to court her in behalf of the king. The proud Gyda answered, "Please tell the king that I will give him my hand and my heart, but only upon the condition that he makes himself indisputable sovereign of all Norway, and rules this realm with the same supremacy with which the kings of Denmark and Sweden- do theirs." No sooner was this answer conveyed to Harold than he exclaimed, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 57 "I swear, by Him who made mo and all that is, that I will neither cut nor comb my hair until all Norway has A. D., submitted to my authority!" Harold faithfully 936. kept his word, and at his death the whole king- dom was subject to his sceptre. But not only the tre- mendous power which he wielded in a military point of view makes him remarkable; he is still more remarkable for his trampling under foot all the objects of credulity and idle superstition then so deeply rooted in his sub- jects, and for raising his mind to the invisible Master, the Father of the sun and all the universe. His words in a political assembly in the year 932, when Christianity had not yet found its way to that country, deserve to be quoted: "I SAvear, in the most sacred manner, that I will never offer sacrifices to any of the gods adored by my people, but to Him only who has formed the world and what I behold in it." He was succeeded on the throne by his son Erik, who had to wage incessant wars against his brethren, all of whom he killed with the exception of Hakon, who went to England, where he ingratiated himself with Mie Eng- lish king Adelstan, who adopted him. Erik, to whom on account of his cruelty was given the surname Blood-axe, was, after a reign of two years, dethroned, and went to the Orkney Isles, where he for a long time made his living by piracy, till he finally was elected King of Northumberland. Already before Erik was dethroned, Hakon had returned to Norway with the view of taking 58 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. possession of his ancestral throne, assisted by a powerful army and fleet equipped by the English king Adelstan. The enormous cruelties committed by his brother Erik Blood-axe, and an argumentative, eloquent, and forcible speech of Sigurd Jarl, at that time considered the wisest man of all Norway, facilitated his plan, and upon Erik's dethronement Hakon was unanimously elected a. D., King of Norway, and, in grateful remembrance ^38. of his foster-father, he assumed the name Sahon Adel- stan. The sagas of the old Norwegian kings, composed by the celebrated Icelander Snorre, speak in the highest terms of him: he protected the country against foreign aggression; increased it by the two Swedish provinces Jemteland and Helsingland; enacted judicious laws, and tried to introduce Christianity, by building churches and sending for preachers from England. But an influential peasant, by the name of Asbjdrn, delivered a public speech strongly in favor of the pagan worship, in Avhich he told the king that all Norway would desert him and swear allegiance to another, unless he desisted from his purpose. Hakon Adelstan had, therefore, to abandon his noble plan, and to be satisfied with introducing the Christian faith at his court. For nineteen years he ruled Norway in peace, when suddenly the sons of Erik Blood- axe laid claim to the throne, one of whom, Harold Grey- skin, unexpectedly arrived with a mighty fleet just as Hakon was sitting at a festival-table on the island Stord, close by Bergen. Eivind, the king's court-skald, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. §9 seeing the hostile fleet from a hill, hastened to the king, crying out, "It is no longer time to eat, king: the sons of Blood-axe are about to attack thee!" The king, im- mediately jumping from his chair, asked, "What shall we do? — remain, or flee?" But they all cried that they would rather die than betake themselves to their heels. At this answer the king's mind abandoned itself to ecstasy; and, with a gilded helmet on his head, the costly sword at his side called quern-biter, because it was so. sharp that it could cut a hand-millstone through right to the eye, — a present from the English king, — and a javelin in his hand, he went to meet his foes, who were drawn up on the shore. The victory gained was de- cisive; but when, in the heat of his passion, he was fol- lowing up the victory, the noble Norwegian king was A. D., mortally wounded by an arrow, and died. His 963. death was universally lamented, and the respect in Avliich he was held was strikingly exhibited at his funeral. And, indeed, all Norway had good reason to lament the loss of the noble Hakon Adelstan; for his successor, Harold CrreysMn, so called from a grey skin with which some Icelandic merchants had presented him, showed himself highly unequal to the task of a ruler. Contemporaneously with Rcmbert's efforts for preach- A. D., ing and spreading Christianity, Cform the Old 882-941. ^as king of Denmark. He is chiefly to be re- membered for collecting all the small provinces into one body. At that time the Danish kingdom com- 60 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. prised Sjelland, with the adjacent islands, Jutland and South Jutland (now Schleswig), where the Eider river was the limit towards the south, and Skane, Hal- land, and Bleking, in Southern Sweden. But, though these parts were now thus united, they preserved for a long space of time their popular peculiarities, each part having its own laws, and the king receiving his homage separately in each province. We are not able to detail many facts of the reign of Gorm the Old, hut we know, however, that he was a bitter enemy to the Christians, whom he persecuted in every quarter, demol- ishing their churches and banishing their clergy. Amongst other sacred buildings, he totally destroyed the famous cathedral in Schleswigj and ordered the pagan idols to be erected wherever they had formerly stood. Wliile his two sons, Canute and Harald — twins by birth, and rivals in glory — were gathering laurels abroad, G-orm took arms against the Saxons, with a view to oblige them to renounce Christianity, but the emperor, Henry the Fowler, soon came to the a. d., relief of the Saxons, defeated Gorm, and forced ^-O. him to permit Christianity to be preached in Denmark. Gorm's queen, generally called Thyra Dannebod (the ornament or solace of the Danes), has rendered herself distinguished by founding Dannevirke (a great wall of earth and stones across Schleswig, strongly fortified by moats and tower bastions), to protect the country against inroads of the Germans. Already Godfrcd, before men HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 61 tioned, had erected a like fortification, called Kurvirke, but the irruption of Henry the Fowler had proved that the country needed a stronger bulwark, wherefore the queen founded that famous Darmevirke, remnants of which are yet to be seen. G-orm, loving his son Canute, generally called Canute Danaast (the Splendor of the- Danes), more than JHarald, declared, dreading the death of his dearly beloved son, of whom he for a great while had received no intelligence, that whosoever might tell him of his son's death should lose his life. Finally, notice was given of liis death on a Yikmg expedition in England. The queen, not risking to toll it to the king, made the courtiers observe an unusual silence at the table, and had the apartment covered with black cloth. Gruessing the reason, Gorm cried out : " Surely Canute, mj dear son, is dead, for all Denmark is mourn- ing I " " Thou sayest so, not 7," answered the queen ; A. D., upon which the king sickened with grief, and 941- died in a £;ood old age. Harald Bluetooth, liis son, was immediately elected king, but he refused to accept the crown until he had first performed his father's obsequies with all the magni- ficence becoming his high rank. About the same time Hakon Adelstan was King of Norway, who had to fight with his nephews, sons of King Erik Bloodaxe ; of all of wliom, Harald Grreyskin, countenanced and supported by the Danish king, succeeded, after the death of Hakon Adelstan, in ascending the throne of Norway. But, as 62 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. he did not pay the tribute promised the Danish king for his support, hostility broke out, and Hakon Jarl, whose father, Sigurd, had been killed by Harald Greyskin, now found refuge in Denmark, inflaming the enmity between the kings to an extreme degree. At the same time Gold Harald, a son of Canute Danaast, above mentioned, and consequently a nephew of Harald Bluetooth, had come back from his piracies, and claimed now, by virtue of supposed right, a share of the Danish Kingdom. Hakon Jarl advised the king to kill Harald G-reyskin, and then, to gratify his nephew's wish to a certain extent, to let him have Norway ; of which advice the king approved. Accordingly, Harald Greyskin was now, under pretence of friendship, allured down from Norway, and killed by the Lymfiord (a river running through the northern part of Jutland), by Gold Harald ; who was, however, soon after insidiously murdered by Hakon Jarl, who had made the king believe that Gold Harald hardly could bear so great honor. This heinous action done, Harald Bluetooth sailed with wind upon the beam to Norway, which he easily conquered, and divided between Hakon Jarl and Harald Grsenske, a Norwegian prince ; after / whose death, soon ensuing, Hakon Jarl became ruler of all Norway ; under oath, however, of allegiance to Harald Bluetooth. Thus Norway became a province to Denmark. After Harald Bluetooth had settled this affair, he sailed against the Venders, who committed horrid depredations on all the coasts of the Baltic, but fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 63 he attacked them with such vigor, that he reduced and plundered all their strongholds, and, among the rest, the rich and important city of Wollin, built on an island of the same name, wliich is formed by two branches of the river Oder. But he had scarce rid his hands of this war when his aid and protection were solicited by Styr- ' bear. King of Sweden, who was driven out of his own dominions by Erik Victor. To enforce his request Styr- bear had brought along with him Gyntha, his sister, a lady of admirable beauty. The stratagem had the intended effect ; Harald Bluetooth became enamored of her, married her, and promised the brother all the assist- A. D., ance in his power. Nevertheless Styrbear wa^ 983. defeated by Erik Victor, at Fyriswall, neai Upsala. The progress of Christianity, wliich Grorm the Old had 'resisted and disregarded, began now to attract the notice of the ruling power, and was, during the whole reign of Harald BJuetooth, vigorously promoted by Adeldag-, who now was invested with the archiepiscopal see of Hamburg. Besides the two churches in Schleswig and Ripen, above mentioned, a third was built in Aarhuus, sit- uated on the eastern coast of Jutland, and bishoprics were established in said cities. But, although in favor of tlie A. D., new doctrine, the king would not comply with the , ^55- exorbitant and undue claims which the German iemperor, Otho I., arrogated to himself The Grerman kings claimed, by vu-tuo of their dignity as Roman empe- 64 mSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. rors, to he acknowledged the secular head of the whole Christian world, as the Pope was the ecclesiastical ; which claim Otho I. realized by giving to tliose bishoprics above mentioned, immunity and real estates in Den- mark. His successor, Otho II., claiming the same, excited the resentment of Harald Bluetooth, who col- lected all liis forces, and pitched his camp on the narrow neck of land at Schleswig, to intercept Otho, but a. d., was defeated, the mighty emperor demolishing ^^4. the famous fortification, Dannevirke, and making his way through the country right up to the Lymfiord. A treaty of peace was made, and the Icing received baptism by Bishop Popo — Otho, the emperor, being sponsor — and the same ceremony was performed on his son, Svjen. Bishoprics were now also established in Odensee and in Roeskilde, where Harald Bluetooth erected a splendid church. Odinkar Hvide, a native Dane, commenced now to preach Christianity, and annihilate the pagan worship ; all of wliich excited the resentment of the heathen party, in front of which went the king's own son, Swen, and his master-in-arms, Palnatoke, a mighty chief from the Danish island Fjunen, who from the depth of his heart was addicted to heathenism, and besides that, believed to have several personal offences to be avenged upon the king. Harald Bluetooth, however, determined not to be wanting in his duty, raised an army and gave battle to his son, who aspired a. d., to his father's crown. But the kin" was defeat- ®^i- HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. (J5 ed, and shot by the hand of Palnatoke, while he was walking in a grove near his camp. Before leaving Harald Bluetooth, it ought to be noticed that he removed the royal residence from Leu'e (Lethra) to Roeskilde, where the Danish kings resided for about five cen- turies, till Copenhagen, during the reign of Chiistopher of Bavaria, was made the capital. Harald Bluetooth was succeeded by liis son Swen, A. D., generally called Swen Splitbeard, from some ,^91-1014. peculiarity observed about his beard. He is also sometimes called Swen Otho, in compliment to his god- father, the emperor. Nearly all his time was spent in making expeditions to Norway, Germany, and England. Notwithstanding Swen Splitbeard and the mighty chief, Palnatoke, above mentioned, had been on a very intimate footing, their good understandmg soon ceased ; for the murder committed by Palnatoke on his father, Harald Bluetooth, required vengeance of blood. Palnatoke re- sorted to Jomsburg, a fortress on the Island of Riigen, on the coast of Pomerania, founded by Harald Bluetooth to maintain the Danish dominion in these regions. Here Palnatoke establi ihed a band of northern Vikings, who, by severe laws, j reserved the ancient warfaring life and manners, and by the name of Jomsvikings, for a long time struck tho whole North with fear. Palnatoke's institutions tended to instil into his Vikings the contempt of life. "A man," says the chronicle of Iceland, "in order to acquire glory for bravery, should attack a single GG fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. enemy, defend himself against two, and not yield to three, but might, without disgrace, fly from four ;" and it was, on the whole, glorious to seek every opportunity of encountering death. Some instances of their savage heroism are recorded which almost exceed belief. In an irruption made by the Jomsburgers into Norway, the invaders were defeated, and a few were taken prisoners. They were sentenced to be beheaded, and this intelli- gence they received with every demonstration of joy. One said : "I suffer death with the greatest pleasure ; I only request that you will cut off my head as quickly as possible. We have often disputed," said he, " at Joms- burg, whether life remained for any tinje after the head was cut off: now I shall decide the question. But remem- ber, if so, I shall aim a blow at you with this knife which I hold in my hand. Dispatch," said he, "but do not abuse my long hair, for it is very beautiful." Not till the eleventh century was this piratical stronghold destroyed by Magnus the Good. The following cliief of Jomsburg, the designing Sigvald, by stratagem made Swen Splitbeard, who had taken up arms against him, a prisoner," and compelled him to acknowledge the inde- pendence of Jomsburg and Yenden (all the provinces along the Baltic) ; and Swen was fost set at liberty on. promising to pay a ransom of twice his own weight, when full armed, in pure gold. The ransom was settled at three payments, but the king's person was confined till the last payment was made, which was raised by mSTORY OP SCANDINAVIA. 67 the generosity of the Danish ladies, who sold their jewels for tliis purpose. Upon his return he, therefore, ordained that the women should inherit the half of all estates, real and personal ; although it seems more prohable that such an act of benevolence and kindness is to be ascribed to the mild influence of the Gospel, that offers the same rights to both sexes. Swen Splitbeard, thirst- ing for vengeance, induced Sigvald, at a wassail-bout, to undertake a very hazardous expedition against the mighty Hakon Jarl, in Norway, who had shown the same unwillingness to pay tribute to Denmark as his predecessor, Harald Grreyskin ; Swen himself making a vow to wage war against England, which had for some years thrown off* her subjection to the throne of Den- mark. The elsewhere almost indomitable Jomsvikings A. D., were totally defeated at Hjorringebay ; Sigvald ^9^- himself had to make his escape, and Norway was not subdued. Swen Splitbeard was more success- ful in Ills expedition against England. The impotent Anglo-Saxon king, Ethelred II., also called Ethelred the Irresolute, held at tliis time the supreme authority in that kingdom. Putting all to the fire and sword, wher- ever he went, and treating England with the utmost severity, Swen obliged the English king to acknowledge his superiority, and to get rid of the Danes by pay- ing a large sum of money, called Dane geld. But an important event took place now in the North. The Nor- wegian prince, Olaf Tri/gveson, who had been allied to G8 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Swen in England, left him treacherously for Norway, the throne of wliich he ascended, after the death of Hakon Jarl, without taking any oath of allegiance to Swen, who from his ancestors had inherited the sover- eignty over Norway ; and the misunderstanding increased when Olaf, without Swen's consent, married his sister Thyra, who had fled from her husband. King Burislaw, of Venden. Add to tliis, that Sigrid Storraade, Swen Splitbeard's queen, before married to Erik Victor, of Sweden, had been greatly provoked to wrath against Olaf Trygveson, who, when he some years ago had courted her, but without success, had beaten her with a stick, and called her an old hag of threescore and a pagan bitch. She, of course, now urged both her hus- band and her son, Olaf Skotkonung, of Sweden, to ven- geance. Swen Splitbeard, Olaf Skotkonung, and Erik Jarl, a Norwegian prince, who lived at the Danish court, attacked Olaf Trygveson, who with his fleet had gone through Earsound (Oeresund, the small sound between Denmark and Sweden), to Yenden, where his ^^-^ g^ ^ wife was lawfully possessed of some real estates. A. D., A very bloody sea-battle was fought by* Smolder, ^°°^' on the Pomeranian coast. Seldom a more memorable naval engagement has been fought, whether we regard the kings that contended, or the whole kingdom that was in dispute. Olaf Trygveson was, after a most heroic resistance, defeated, and his fleet totally dispersed. Escaping out of the battle with a few ships, he was so HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. (jO closely pursued, that, to avoid the disgrace of being taken prisoner, he precipitated himself into the sea and was drowned. The most renowned heroes of Norway shared in this battle, and the heroic songs of Einar Tam- beskjelver, the great archer, Ulf the Bed, and Thorgeir, who all fought as madmen, resound yet among the rocks of old Norway, which was now divided between the three victors, and had to submit to the conditions which they dictated. But while Swen was taken up with settling the affairs of Norway, Ethelred II. had taken advantage of Swen's absence to perform a dreadful car- A. D., nage among the Danes in England. Informed 1002. of it, Swen immediately appeared in England with a powerful army of the most valiant soldiers, came ofT victor everywhere, turned Ethelred out, who had to dee to Normandy ; and Swen Splitbeard was at his A. D., death an undisputed sovereign of the whole of lou. England. In the beginning of his reign, he per- secuted the Christian doctrine ; but, before he expired, he began to perceive the folly he had committed in per- secuting the faith in which he had been baptized and instructed. Afterwards, in prevailing upon the people to receive the light of the Gospel, he was aided by Popo, a German bishop of great piety and eloquence, who, by dint of example and persuasion, brought about what the king's authority could not effect. Several miracles are related of this prelate ; and, indeed, ho was possessed of the happy talent of impressing the people with whatever 70 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. notions he thought fit ; in which alone, of course, con- sisted his supernatural powers. A see was given to Popo, with power to preside over the Danish clergy ; while at the same time he was suffragan of Adeldag, Archbishop of Hamburg. Swen Splitbeard had two sons, Harold and Canute ; and the Danish historian, Meursius, says, " that Harald, by right of primogeniture, succeeded his father to the throne of Denmark, while Canute, who at Swen's death lived in England, was elected King of the Danes there." But the Englishmen, taking advantage of Canute's youth, threw off the subjection they had promised his father, Swen Splitbeard, and called the fugitive Ethelred II. back from Normandy, and a general msurrection broke out. After having ordered the tongues and ears of the English hostages to be cut off, and, on the whole, shown an inflexible severity, Canute repaired to Den- mark, where he brought together a numerous host of brave soldiers, and a well-manned fleet, with which he went back to England, acoompauied by Erik Jarl, from Norway, Thorkel the High, and Ulf Jarl, who after- wards married Canute's sister, Estrith. He met with the English fleet, commanded by King Ethelred in per- son, whom he defeated after a sharp engagement. The valiant Edmund Ironside, who had succeeded his father Ethelred on the throne of England, was forced a. d., to yield the half of England to Canute. But a i^^''^- month after, Edmund Ironside was treacherously killed HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 71 by his brother-in-law, Edrik Streon, whereupon Canute was acknowledged king of the whole of England. The first measure of Canute was now to seize Edmund's two sons, whom he sent to his ally, the King of Sweden, Anund Jacob, with the request that they might be put to death. Humanity, however, induced the Swedish monarch to spare their lives and send them into Hun- gary. Canute, now ruler of England, tried to make himself both beloved and esteemed there ; he reigned with great judiciousness, paid respect to the privileges of the native people, and raised them to the highesi offices ; advanced commerce and literature, and courted, in a particular manner, the favor of the Church, by munificent donations, and by presenting monasteries with rich gifts ; and he has, indeed, much better title to saintship than many of those who adorn the Roman calendar. To make himself yet more popular, he wisely married the virtuous Emma of Normandy, the queen- dowager of Ethelred, whom the English people loved dearly. But while he thus tried to make himself popular, and provide for the welfare of the State, his despotism and cruelty were often insupportable, and those whose influence seemed pernicious to him, he was not scrupulous in putting out of the way. Thus he caused Edrik Streon and Thorkel the High to be killed ; the fu'st of whom was invested with Mercia, the latter with East Anglia, as absolute fiefs. To confirm his power, and perform the conquests he had in view, ho T2 mSTORY 01' SCANDINAVIA. established a standing army, called the Thingmannalid, consisting of the most famous warriors ; and, on account of the sumptuous armor they had to wear, containing only the richest and most conspicuous. To this army he gave a peculiar law, called the Vitherlagslaw, which for a long time enjoyed a great credit in Europe. His brother Harald, King of Denmark, died after a reign of four years. Weak from his infancy, he a. d., was little able to rule, and his profligacy, entire l^is. contempt of decency and morality, rendered him odious to his subjects. Nothing need bo said of him but that he reigned four y^rs ; whereupon Canute, generally called Canute the Great, was unanimously chosen to succeed him on the Danish throne, which thus, after an interval of only four years, was reunited with England ; which, superior to Denmark in refinement, arts, trade, and agriculture, long exercised a beneficial influence upon the Danish kingdom. To Canute the Grreat has Denmark to ascribe the complete introduction of Chris- tianity ; for under him the last vestiges of the pagan worship were destroyed, its idols overthrown, its altars demolished, and its temples closed ; and Cliristianity has since prevailed in Denmark, and formed the great bond of the social happiness, and the great source of the intellectual eminence which this remote quarter of the globe now so richly enjoys. Many English clergymen migrated in this period to Denmark. English clergy- men were mostly invested with the Danish bishoprics ; HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 73 and, on the whole, Canute considered England the mam realm, and resided there. But he deserved well, also, of Denmark, by bringing a great portion of Venden under subjection, and subduing the formidable Yendish pirates. About the same time Christianity was intro- duced into Sweden, under Olaf Skutkonung^ who was baptized by an English clergyman, Sigfrid ; and into Norway, under Olaf the Pious, who, with three hun- dred brave men, traveled round and destroyed the hea- tlien idols. Before relating Canute's last expedition to Norway, his exploits there, and his end, it may be noticed that he, like most royal persons in the period under consider- A. D., ation, made a pilgrimage to Rome, to pay, in 102G. -ti^at sacred city, his devotion to the relics of some deceased saint, and obtain from the Pope remis- sion of his sins. While in Rome he established, by assent of the Pope, a caravansary for Scandinavian pil- grims ; procuring his subjects, also, on the same occa- sion, several commercial privileges. Upon his journey to Rome he chanced to meet with the German Emperor, Conrad II., whom he induced to renounce his claims to the Margraviate of Schleswig, founded by Henry the Fowler, and a marriage was stipulated between Can- ute's daughter, Gunhilda, and Conrad's son, Henrj/. About this time, or a little before, the Scandinavians began to make discoveries in the North and "West. The Faroe islands had been discovered at the latter end of 74 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. the ninth century, by some Scandinavian pirates, and soon after this, Iceland was colonized by the Norwegians. Tlio Icelandic chronicles also relate, that the Norsemen discovered a great country to the West of Ireland ; and it seems, indeed, very clear that they made their way to Grreenland, in the end oF the tenth century — and they are thus the very first discoverers of America. The settlement made in Greenland, though comprising only a small population, seems to have been very prosperous in mercantile affairs. They had bishops and priests from Europe, and paid the Pope, as an annual tribute, 2,600 pounds of walrus teeth as tithe and Peter's pence. But the art of navigation must have been at a very low pitch, for the voyage from Greenland to Iceland and Norway, and back again, consumed five years ; and upon one occasion, the Government of Norway did not hear of the death of the Bishop of Greenland until six years after it had occurred. Unfortunately, the Norse- men forgot too soon the navigation thither ; and their discoveries have, therefore, not derogated from that immortal renown, which Columbus, five centuries later, acquired. But the discovery of America by the Northmen, in the tenth and eleventh centuries, is of so great interest and importance to American antiquity, that I must dwell a little upon this subject. The great antiquarian of Copenhagen, Prof. C. Rafn, has investigated deeply upon the subject, and his tacts and assumptions resf HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. ^g mainly on the authority of ancient Icelandic manu- scripts, which doubtless are authentic. Iceland was discovered in 863, by the Dane Garder, who was of Swedish extraction. Only a few out places of this distant island had been visited previously by Irish hermits. Eleven years subsequently, thus relates Rafn, a Norwegian, In golf, began the colonization of the island; the colonists established in Iceland a flourishing re^ public, where the Old-Danish, or Old-Northern language was preserved unchanged for centuries, and Iceland became the cradle of a Northern historical literature, of immense value. The location of this remarkable island compelled its inhabitants to exercise and develop their hereditary maritime skill, and thirst for new discoveries . across the vast ocean. The talented American, W Gilmore Simms, of South Carolina, rightfully remarks, that it is in favor of the Icelandic Sagas, that they do not seem to have been written to assert any claim of discovery. The very first of these old documents, to which I will request the reader's attention, is the Saga of Bjarne Herjnlfson. This bold navigator was preceded by Erik the Red, by v/hom Greenland was discovered in 983, and who, three years afterwards, by means of Icelandic emigrants, established the first colony on its southwestern shore, where, in 1124, the Bishop's see of Gardar was founded, which subsisted for more than 300 years. The head firths or bays were named after the chiefs of the expedition. Erik the Red settled in 76 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Ericksfirth, Einar, Rafn, and Ketil in the firths called after them, and Herjulf on Herjulfness. On a voyage from Iceland to Greenland, this same year (985), Bjarnc Herjulfson, a son of Herjulf, was driven far out to sea, towards the southwest, and for the first time beheld the -coasts of the American lands, afterwards visited and named by his countrymen. In order to examine these countries more narrowly, Lcif the Fortunate, son of Erik the Red, undertook a voyage thither in the year 1000, from which his father was discouraged by an omen. His son, Leif, however, was not discouraged. With thirty-five hardy men, he landed on the shores described by Bjarne, detailed the character of these lands more exactly, and named them according to their ajipearance Ilelluland (Nev/foundland) was so called from its flat stones, Hella signifying a flat stone ; Markland (Nova Scotia), from its woods ; Markland, that is woodland, and Vineland (New England) from its vines. It is therefore wrong, when some historians tell, that Green- land was called Vineland by the Northmen, hardly any vines being found there. Here in Vineland (New Eng- land), Leif the Fortunate remained for some time, and constructed large houses, called after him Leifbudis (Leif's booths). A German, named Tyrker, who accom- panied Leif on this voyage was the man who found the wild vines, which he recognized from having seen them in his own land, and he gave the country its name from this circumstance. He departed then in the spring HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 77 t for his native country, where the intelligence of his discovery created great sensation. Two years after- wards, Leif's brother, Thorwald^ pursued the adventure thither, and in 1003, caused an expedition to be under- taken to the South, along the shore, but was killed, in the summer of 1004, on a voyage northwards, in an encounter with the natives. "I have gotten a wound under the arm," says the brave fellow to his comrades, "and it will prove a mortal Avound to me. Now get yc ready to depart instantly, and bear me to that cape where I thought it pleasant to dwell. There shall ye bury me, and set up crosses at my head and feet, and call the place Krossaness for all time to come." The cape where he was buried is supposed to be Cape or Point Aldeston, not far from the Pilgrim city, Plymouth, State of Massa- chusetts, where the fearless Thorwald, shortly before his sad termination of life, chiseled in Runes the exploits of his gallant crew. But among the most interesting of the Sagas at this period, is that of Thorfinn Karlsefne. The word Karl- sefne signifies " a man destined to become great." He is the most distinguished of all the' first American discoverers. He was an Icelandic merchant, whose genealogy is carried back in the Old-Northern annals to Danish, Norwegian, Scottish, and Irish ancestors, some of them even of royal blood. In 1006, this chief, on a merchant voyage, visited Greenland, and married there Gudrid, the widow of Thorstein (a third son of Erik the 78 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Red), who had died the year "before, in an unsuccessful expedition thither. Accompanied by his wife, and by a crew of 160 men, on board three vessels, he repaired in the spring of 1007 to Vineland, where he remained for three years, and had many communications with the aborigines. Here his wife Gudrid bore him a son, called Snorre, who^was the very first child of European parents born in America, and became the founder of an illus- trious family in Iceland, which gave that island several of its first Bishops. But the birth of this child is remarkable for another reason, for up to this child the great Danish sculptor, Albert Thorivaldsen, traces his lineage, along with that of many other eminent Scan- dinavians. The notices given by this illustrious navigator, Thor- finn Karlsefne, and, on the whole, by the old Icelandic voyager chroniclers respecting the climate, the soil, and the productions of this new country, are very character- istic, and correspond with the language of less question- able narrators, five hundred years later. Nay, we have even a statement of this kind as old as the eleventh cen- tury from a writer, not a Northman, Adam of Bremen, who states, on the authority of the learned king of Den- mark, Sven Estridson, a nephew of Canute the Great, that the country got its name from the vine growing wild there ; and it is a remarkable coincidence in this respect, that its English re-discoverers, from the same reason, name the large island, which is close off the coast, Mar- HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 79 tha's Vineyard. Spontaneously growing wheat (maize or Indian corn) was also found there. Upon the whole, it is the total result of the ndutical, geographical, and astronomical evidences, in the origi- nal documents, which places the location of the countries discovered, beyond all doubt. The number of days' sail between the several newly-found lands, the striking description of the coasts, especially the white sand-banks of Nova Scotia, and the long beaches and downs of a peculiar appearance on Cape Cod, are not to be mistaken, and cannot but open our eyes with interest. In addi- tion hereto we have the astronomical remark that the shortest day in A^ineland (New England) was nine hours long, which fixes the latitude of 41® 24'' 10'^, or just that of the promontories, which limit the entrances to^ Mount Hope Bay, where Leif's booths, above mentioned, were built, and in the district around where the old North- men had their head establishment, which was named by them Hop. The Northmen were, also, according to Prof. Rafn, acquainted with American land still farther to the South, called by them Hvitramannaland (the land of the White Men) or Irland it Mikla (Great Ireland). The exact location of this country has not been stated ; it was prob- ably, says Rafn, North and South Carolina, Greorgia and Florida. In 1266, some priests at Grardar, in Greenland, did also set on foot a voyage of discovery to the arctic regions of America, and an astronomical observation 80 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. proves, that this took place through Lancaster Sound and Barrow's Strait, to the latitude of "Wellington's channel. The last memorandum supplied by the old Icelandic records, is a voyage from Greenland to Markland (Nova Scotia) in 1347. Thus the claim that the Northmen were the very first discoverers of America, seems to be placed on good foundation, and it is embodied in the able and elaborate work of Professor C. Rafn, of the Royal Danish Society of Norrtiern Antiquities. However, this does not, I may be allowed to repeat it, lessen the great merits of Co* lumbus, nor have I referred to it for this purpose; but wo ought, nevertheless, not to forget, that Columbus visited the Danish island, Iceland, in 1477, had access to the archives there, and must, doubtless, have heard of the former discoveries of its roving sea-chiefs. Be, there- fore, not ashamed, Americans, of claiming the old North- men, who sailed forth in swarms from their northern hives, as your earliest ancestors. Your lineage is, in the main, Anglo-Saxon, with a large infusion of Scandina- vian blood. And permit me to say, that when you trace your parent stock, through the kindred tribes of Angles, Saxons, Normans, and Danes, up to those hardy mari- ners, whose prows first saluted the American shores, you may boast of an exalted and heroic lineage. And I still dare to pit that race, both here and in England, for all that constitutes individual and national prowess, against any other on God's green earth. Try them yet, man to HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 81 man, on sea ov shore, in peace or war, and they will work out an ultimate and lasting triumph. They are not lag- gards in peace, not dastards in war. On a visit to Plymouth, Massachusetts, while the seventh edition of this work was in process of being printed, all the exploits of the bold Northmen crowded upon my memory, Calliope me inspiravit, and I penciled down the following humble and unpretending lines, which I may be allowed to cite : — Each circling year its darkness casts Over the dim and shadowy past : Those kings who ruled with iron hand O'er many a broad and fertile land, Those crested chiefs, whose dauptless might Turaed the fierce tide of many a fight. Those poets, who, untaught by art, Could rouse, or soothe, or melt the heart. Sleep half remembered and alone — Their deeds, their names, are almost gone; And o'er their fame gray Time has flung His mantle, as he passed along. Yet still some glorious deeds remain Of Norseman bold and fiery Dane ; Those wild, fierce rovers, proud and free, Those daring wanderers of the sea, Well earned the name their Sagas gave Of Vikings, monarchs of the wave. Long ere Columbus dared to brave The dangers of the Western wave, Their keels had grated on the strand That binds New England's rocky land ; Red Erik's hardy sons had seen Her broad blue streams and forests green ; And where the Pilgrim city stands, Bold Thorwald and his fearless band Shook with their rugged oars the brine, riuckcd the thick clusters of the vine. h2 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA And laid their huge, strong Iimb.s to Te% Beneath the wild woods of the West. No shore to which the Northmen came But kept some token of their fame ; Jo the rough surface of a rock, Unmoved hy time or tempest's shock, In Runic letters, Thorwald drew A record of his gallant crew; And those rude letters still are shown, Deep chiseled in the flinty stone. But also with the ea.st had the Northmen connection. The same ago which saw the boarded Vikings, the Grim-visagcd Sea-Kings of thoNortli di.scovcring Iceland and America in the far West, beheld them al.<»oin the East, and with extraordinary energy. Summoned thither from the Scandinavian North, the old Russian historian, Nestor^ a.ssures us, that under tho name of Variago-Ru.ssians they established tho Russian Empire in 862, and for more than a century exercised great influence on ita alFairs, bst cruelty, sparing neither women nor tender children. But the Jutland ers were not inclined to submit to a tyrant upon whom they already had long looked with the gi-eatest aversion, and at the head of them a knight, Niels Ebheson of Norreriis, rose and became the deliverer of his fatherland. Instead of yielding to despondency he employed his hours of retirement to revolve in his mind what was to be done. After debating some time with himself, he rose and called together several of his most esteemed countrymen. He told them that all now depended on their own exertions. If they yielded to the cruel Geert, they had nothing to expect but to be treated tyrannically. But if, on the contrary, they acted with vigor and union, their numbers and courage were still sufficient to rescue them from this scourge of oppression. They willingly adopted the suggestions of the noble knight, who wrote a letter to Geert, in which Niels Ebbeson's plan was communicated to him. Thus says the letter : " To Count Geert : Sir, I hereby swear, by God, in whom I believe, but you do not, thou blood-thirsty tyrant, that wheresoever and whenso- »^vcr I can get hold of you, bo it either at midnight or HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 151 at cock-crowing, either at your table or in your princely bedchamber, or even at the foot of the holy altar, you shall fall by my hand. Your sworn and mortal enemy, Niels Ebbeson." Collecting a body of sixty trusty retainers, he left his manor for Randers, in Jutland, where Geert had fixed ' his head-quarters, seized the sentinels, and pushed on to G-eert's lodging, which he forced open. Greert was awakened with the noise, and seeing Niels Ebbeson enter with armed men, began to supplicate- him, in the most humble terms, to save his life. But considering the life of the tyrant a just atonement for the cruelties the people had suffered, he plunged his sword a. d., into his breast, and then made his retreat with ^240. all possible expedition, after having given the alarm to the whole army, by sounding horns and beating di-uras. The notice of the death of the tyrant was followed by a general acclamation. But the brave and fearless deliverer of his fatherland soon after lost his life by Skanderborg in Jutland, in a battle against Greert's sons, who would avenge the death of their father. But Niels Ebbeson has never lost the grateful memory of the Danes, who, in a charming forest, close by his manor-seat, have erected a marble column, on which an inscription, with Spartan brevity, tells his patriotic exploit ; and yearly, in the summer-season, the citizens of Aarhus,, and the scholars of the Latin school, take a walk to Norreriis, where, by spirited songs, they call 152 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA, f back to their minds, his magnanimous and heroic deed. Greert having been killed, the way to the throne was A. D., paved for Christopher's third son, Waldemar 1341. XY Atterdag^ who was recalled from Bavaria. To "Waldemar's elevation the emperor Louis, at whose court Waldemar was bred, greatly contributed. His elder brother Otho, having renounced his claims to the throne, Waldemar received the homage in Wiborg. Uniting great vigor with the most refined policy, hu- manity and affability, he conciliated good will on all sides, and came into possession of a popularity, which gave him means more powerful than arms for the future improvement and extension of his kingdom. His vigi- lance was equal to his valor, and he quickly made himself master of Jutland, Sjelland, Fjunen, Laaland and Falster ; and the Danish dominions, so lately divided among a number of petty tyrants, were now again united into one sovereignty. For a number of years, as we have seen, Denmark had been the theatre of con- tinual domestic and foreign wars, which filled every place with confusion. One of the most powerful king- doms, after having given laws to such a number of other nations, had at length fallen under the scourge of some petty vassals, who laid desolate her fairest pro- vinces. But now she again began to taste the sweets of liberty and resume her old influence, Waldemar IV. sold immediately the remote Esthonia to the Teutonic Order HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 153 (a confraternity of Grerman knights, instituted by Pope Ceiestin III., A. D. 1192,) for nineteen thousand ounces of silver, to be enabled to redeem more important provinces ; and by marrying Hedevig, a sister to the duke Waldemar V., of Schleswig, who brought him a considerable dowry, he acquired great wealth. The most considerable enemies he conquered were the inva- ders of his frontier, or the internal disturbers of his kingdom, and, on the whole, he only made war to secure peace. The Jutlandish nobility, accustomed to disobedience to the laws, headed by Claus Limhek, raised a rebellion, and entered into an alliance with the counts of Holstein, and other enemies of the kingdom, but the powerful Waldemar compelled them to comply with his dictates. Among all the exertions of his active life, he was also very attentive to the improvement of the internal welfare of his kingdom. He frequently traveled round to have an eye upon the execution of the laws, he settled the civil concerns, which were in a boundless chaos, he erected castles and fortresses, he laid out highways, and caused -canals to be dug, and to his people, who, under such chcumstances, were obliged to pay high taxes, he gave a detailed account -of the spending of the taxes he had levied. At this time Magnus Smek was king of Sweden ; of whose improvidence and stupidity Waldemar availed himself to regain the Swedish provinces, Skane, a. d., Halland, and Bleking, thus encompassing hi? ^^eo. 154 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. great aim — the re-union of the Danish kingdom. A marriage was also agreed upon between Hakon VI.. king of Norway, and a son of Magnus Smek, and Mar- g'arethe, a daughter of "Waldemar ; a basis thereby being laid for a continual union of Norway with Denmark. Next year Waldemar seized upon the Swedish island, Gullaiid (Gothland), the capital of which, Wisby, then one of the richest and most flourishing Hanse towns, he demolished, assuming now the title, ^^ King of the Goths y But, upon the taking of the great island of Gulland, a mighty alliance arose against Waldemar Atterdag, between Magnus Smek, the counts of Hol- stcin, and the Hanseatic towns, (which are said to have sent him at once seventy-seven declarations of war,) and Albrecht the elder, of Mecklenburg. Matters being thus disposed, the allies put to sea, attacked Copenhagen, took the citadel, and plundered the city. But Walde- mar rushed fearlessly on his many enemies, attacked the squadron of Liibeck, took six ships, burned several A.D., others, and forced the Hanseatic towns and his 13C2. other enemies to raise the siege. The regency of Liibeck were so incensed at their defeat, that, accusing the admiral of neglect of duty, they ordered his head to be struck off. A peace was concluded between the king and the Hanse towns, Waldemar thus reaping the harvest of glory, and gaining the great honor of having put a prompt end to this dangerous war. Wo have seen that the king of Norway, Hakon VI., fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 155 was contracted to the princess Margarethe. Yet, to oblige the Swedish nation, who insisted on his renoun- cing the alliance with Denmark, he consented to marry Elizabeth, a princess of Holstein, instead of Waldemar's daughter. Every circumstance seemed favorable to the conclusion of this alliance, as both the Swedes and Hol- steiners were equally desirous of it. She was now embarked on the Trave, to pass over to Sweden ; but Heaven disposed events otherwise. Boisterous weather drove the ship on the coast of Denmark.. Waldemar Atterdag received the princess with all the honors due to her rank, but still he kept her under a gentle con- straint, in the meantime hurrying Magnus Smek and Hakon YI. to come to Denmark, where then, by con- sent of the foolish Swedish king, the nuptials between Margarethe and the Norwegian king were cele- a. d., bratcd. But this afTau- deprived Magnus Smek i^gs. of his throne, the people electing in his stead his nephew, Albrcchl, duke of Mecklenburg. Nevertheless Magnus resolved to make vigorous efforts for the recovery of his throne. Having received aid from Walde- mar and his son, Hakon VI. of Norway, he took the field, gave battle, but was defeated at Tillinge, near a.d., Jonkoping, and conducted prisoner to Stock- i^^^- holm, where he was confined for seven years, till he at length was delivered by his son, Hakon. Upon the whole, the cunning "Waldemar bore up well against his a.d, many enemies, until the Jutlandish nobility, ^"^^^ 156 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. headed by Claus Limbek, excited a fresh rebellion, join- ing Henry, duke of Schleswig, the counts of Holstein, the Hanse towns, Sweden and Mecklenburg, who all had concluded a formidable alliance against him. At the sight of such a league Waldemar's courage forsook him. Finding himself unable to resist this cloud of enemies, he determined to abandon all. He left his kingdom for four years, after having previously appointed the sagacious Henning Podebusk viceroy — A. D., who was happy enough to prevail with the Hanse 1370. towns to conclude the peace of Stralsund, after wliich the other enemies broke off all hostilities. By this peace it was decided that the Hanseatic towns should, for fifteen years, possess the maritime towns of Skane, and enjoy special commercial privileges over the whole of Denmark. A. D., Upon his returning home Waldemar found his 1372 kingdom in the greatest confusion, but this un- tiring king signalized himself by a successful and active endeavor to re-establish order, strengthen the enervated country, and infuse into the souls of his subjects a por- tion of that spirit of independence and patriotism of which he was possessed himself. Henry, duke of Schles- wig, being childless, there was a good prospect of again getting this duchy re-united with the kingdom ; upon which important point "Waldemar, in his last days, directed all his attention ; but, unfortunately, he only survived Henry so short a time, that the question , HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 157 whether Sohleswig should belong to Denmark or be yielded to the counts of Holstein (who, pursuant to the treaty of Ripen, 1330, laid claim to it,) could not be decided, but was deferred to the following reign. During the thirty-four years he wore his crown, he devoted himself to reform all abuses, and to revive the whole- some laws of the country. He increased the public revenues, and applied them to the adorning of the cities with public buildings, while at the same time he con- demned the expenditure of the pubhc money for mere show. He also paid particular attention to the com- forts of the poorer citizens, and took care that they should be maintained at the public cost. Altogether, he seems to have been a man superior to the time in which he lived. He had built a beautiful country seat in tho neighborhood of Elsinore, called Gurre, and a. d., there he breathed his last. From the time of ^375. his return from abroad, he was constantly afflicted with the gout ; recourse was had to a variety of medicines, but without effect. His death was greatly lamented. He had shown him- self a brave, active, and just ruler, and in private inter- course he was always cheerful, jovial, and often witty. A nobleman by the name of Calf — his intimate friend — the king presented with the castleofRipen, in Jutland. But Calf proved faithless, and allied himself to the Count of Holstein, who, delighted with Calf's conduct, made him a present of two strong castles. However, Calf 258 HISTORY or SCANDINAVIA. soon after felt the stings of conscience, repented of his perfidy, surrendered himself with his three castles to the king, and took again the oath of allegiance. On re- ceiving the intelligence of this, Waldemar exclaimed : " This calf is, indeed, worth breeding ; he went away a calf, but has returned a cow with two calves." Before leaving "Waldemar IV., (surnamed Atterdag, because he used to say, when a misfortune happened, " To-morrow it is again day,") it may be observed, that under his reign an enemy more destructive than war visited both Denmark and Norway. Tliis was a fright- ful disease, called the Black Death, {den Sorte Dod,) because people, before they died, broke out with black freckles over the whole body. The plague is supposed to have originated in Asia Minor, and to have been transmitted from Constantinople to the European coun- tries. It raged in Denmark with the most destructive effect, taking off a great deal of the population, and the mortality was increased by the crowded and comfortless manner in which the people at that time lived. The plague spread so violently and so rapidly, that physi- cians were of no use. In Liibeck, for instance, there died in one day to the number of 1,500. There might be seen in one place wretches lying in the streets in the agonies of death, deserted by their nearest friends through fear of infection, or crawling to the brink ol some stream or fountain, in the vain hope of quenching the intolerable thirst with which they were parched. By a ship going adrift this horrible disease came, A. D. HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 159 1349, to Bergen, Norway, whence it spread round in the country, nearly dispeopled Norway, annihilated all industry, and enervated everything irreparahly. But it should be mentioned here, that "Waldemar, during the whole time of the plague, regardless of his own safety, was only anxious to lessen its increase and spreading abroad, by unremitting and judicious exertions. Waldemar Atterdag left no male issue, but his two grandsons, Albrecht the Younger, of Mecklenburg, a son of Ingeborg; Waldemar's eldest daughter, and of Henry of Mecklenburg, and Olaf, a son of Margarethe, his younger daughter, and of Hakon VI., of Norway, were now claiming the hereditary succession to the Ihrona One party declared for Olaf, but as he was the son of the younger daughter, his right was consequently very doubtful. But because the house of Mecklenburg had acted hostilely towards Denm'ark, and Olaf had expectation of Norway and claims to the crown ot Sweden, as a grandson of Magnus Smek, Denmark was, by his election, in hopes of one day seeing the three crowns united on the same head. It was, therefore, not long before this important affair was determined. The preference was given Olaf, who, although only six years of age, was, under the name of Olaf V., a. d., elected king of Denmark, under the guardian- 1376. sliip of Margarethe, his mother ; and after the death of his father, Hakon VI., he became also king a. d., of Norway, the two kingdoms thus being united" i^so. 160 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. a union which, till the expiration of four hundred and thirty-four years, was not dissolved. When Olaf V. seven years after died in Falsterbo, both king- a. d., doms elected Margarethe their queen, though ^387. custom had not yet authorized the election of a female. During the reign of this great princess, who de- servedly has been called the Semiramis of the North, Denmark and Norway exercised an influence in Eu- rope, the effects of which long vibrated throughout the Scandinavian countries, their vast extent and rival races. Uniting wisdom and policy with courage and determi- nation," having strcngtli of mind to preserve her recti- tude of character without deviation, and her efforts being crowned by Divine Providence with success, she is duly considered one of the most illustrious female rulers in history, her renown reaching even the By- zantine emperor Emanuel Palaeologus, who called her ^'' Regina sine exemplo maxima." But under her suc- cessors, destitute of her high sense of duty, great ability and consistent virtue, her triumphs proved a snare instead of a blessing ; the great Union she created dissolved in a short time, and its downfall was as sud- den as its elevation had been extraordinary. She was born in the year of our Lord 1353. Her father was, as we have seen, Waldemar Atterdag, her mother A. D., queen Hedevig, and she became queen of Den- 13S'^- mark and Norway in the year 1387. No sooner elected queen of Denmark, and homaged on the hill of Sliparehog, near Lund, in Ringstod, Odonsee and Wi- HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 161 borg, than she sailed to Norway to receive its homage. But a remarkable occurrence is mentioned by historians to have occurred about this time. A report prevailed that king Olaf, the queen's son, was not dead ; it was propagated by the nobility, and very likely set on foot by them, in order to punish Margarethe for her liberality . to the clergy. The impostor claimed the crown of Den- mark and Norway, and gained credit every day by making discoveries which could only be known to Olai and his mother. Margarethe, however, proved him to be a son of the nurse of Olaf, who had a large wart between his shoulders, which mark did not ap]:>ear on the impostor. In fine, the false Olaf was seized, broken on the wheel, and publicly burnt at a place between Falsterbo and Skanor, in Sweden, and Margarethe con- tinued uninterruptedly her regency. But the queen not wishing to contract a new mar- riage, and comprehending the importance of getting a successor elected to the throne, proposed her nephew, Erik, Duke of Pomerania, of which proposal a.d., the clergy and nobility approved by electing him i^ss. king of Denmark and Norway after Margarethe's death. Meanwhile Albrecht, king of Sweden, having, on ac- count of his preference given to his G-erman favorites, incurred the hatred of liis people, the Swedes requested Margarethe to assist them against him, which she promised, if they in return would promise to make her queen of Sweden. Moreover, Albrecht had highly of- fended the Danish queen ; had, though hardly able to 162 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. govern his own kingdom, assumed the title, "King of Denmark," and laid claim to Norway too ; and when she blamed him for it he had answered her disdainfully In a letter he had used foul and abusive language, calling her " a king without breeches," and the " abbot's concubine" (abbedfrillen), on account of her particular attachment to a certain abbot of Soro, who was her spiritual director. It is, however, true, that her inti- macy with this monk gave room for some suspicion that her privacies with him were not all employed about the care of her soul. Afterwards, to ridicule her yet more, king Albrecht sent her a hone to sharpen her needles, and swore not to put on his night-cap until she had yielded to him. But under perilous cir- cumstances Margarethe was never at a loss how to act. She acted here with the utmost prudence, trying first to gain the favor of the peers of the state, and solemnly promising to rule according to the Swedish laws. The war now broke out between Albrecht and Margarethe, whose army was commanded by Jvar Lykke. The en- A. D., counter of the two armies, about 12,000 men on 13S8. each side, took place at Falkoping, 21st of Sep- tember, 1388. A furious battle was fought, in which the victory for a long while hung in suspense. But Marga- rethe's good fortune prevailed: Albrecht was routed and his army cut in pieces, and Margarethe was now also mistress of Sweden. While this was passing, the queen tarried in Word- ingborg, Sjelland, longing with ardent desire to learn HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 163 the result. But no sooner hearing that the victory was gained, and the Swedish king and his son, Erik, taken prisoners, than she hastened to Balms, m Sweden, where the king and his son were brought before her. Lost in joy and amazement at having her enemy in her power, the queen now retorted upon king Albrecht by uttering some reviling and sarcastic expressions, and in causing a large night-cap of paper, nineteen yards long, to be put on him ; a retaliation proportioned to his offen- sive words. Ho and his son were, thereupon, brought to Lindholm, a castle in Skane, where they were kept prisoners for seven years. On entering the castle, a dark, square-shaped room was assigned them, and when the king said, " I hope that this torture against a crowned head will only last a few days," the jailor repUed : "I giieve to say that the queen's orders are to the contrary ; anger not the queen by any bravado, else you will be placed in the irons, and if these fail, we can have recourse to sharper means." To the ex- cessive self-love, intemperance, conceitedness, and want of foresight, which had characterized all his actions, the unhappy Albrecht had to ascribe his being here. The year following, the queen stormed the important city of Calmar, yet siding with the imprisoned a. d., king, and made several wise alliances with i^^^. Richard IT., of England, and other potentates, and concluded a truce for two years with the princes of Mecklenburg, and the cities of Rostock and Wismar, 164 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. which had begun to raise fresh levies in favor of the unfortunate Albrecht. This period expired, she laid siege to Stockholm and other fortified places, of which John, Duke of Mecklenburg, and other fpiends of the imprisoned kmg had become masters. But the cause of Albrecht was but little forwarded, and his opponent, Margarethe, gained ground every day. She compelled the capital to surrender to her and do homage to her as its sovereign, whereafter a peremptory peace was a. d., concluded on Grood Friday, which restored tran- 1395. quility to the three kingdoms. The imprisoned king and his son were delivered up to the Hanseatic towns, aud they obtained their liberty for sixty thousand ounces of silver, upon condition that they should resign all claims to Sweden, if said amount were not paid within three years. As soon as the king and his son were delivered to the deputies, they solemnly swore to a strict observance of this article, the Hanse-towns en- gaging themselves to guarantee the treaty. The money, however, not being paid by the stipulated time. Mar- garethe became an undisputed sovereign of Sweden, the third Scandinavian kingdom. About this time the Victuals-brethren, called so be- cause they, from the Hanse-towns, brought victuals to Stockholm while besieged, began to imperil Denmark, plundering the Danish and Norwegian coasts, and destroying all commercial business along the Baltic. But Margarethe, always able to act properly in unex- mSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 165 pected difficulties, ordered the harbors of the maritime towns to he blocked up, thus putting a quick stop to their cruelties and piracies. The queen's principal care was now to visit the different provinces, to administer justice and redress grievances of every kind. Among other salutary regulations, the affairs of commerce were not forgotten. It was, for instance, decreed that all manner of assistance should be given to foreign mer- chants and sailors, particularly in case of misfortune and shipwreck, without expectation of reward; and that pirates should be treated with the greatest rigor, in order to deter them from that dishonorable profession. Erik of Pomerania, was, as we have shown, elected king of Denmark and Norway, after Margarethe's death; but also wishing to have him elected her successor to the Swedish throne, she brought tliis, her nephew and foster-son, to Sweden, and introduced him ta the deputies, one by one, whom she requested to confirm his election to the succession. The majesty of the queen's person, the strength of her arguments, and the sweetness of her eloquence, gained over the a. d., deputies, who, on the 22d of July, 1396, elected ^^gc. him at Morastone, by Upsala, to succeed her also in Sweden. But Margarethe, soon discovering his inability and impetuousness, took pains to remedy, as much as possible, tliis evil, by procuring him as a wife, the intel- ligent and virtuous princess Philippa, a daughter of Henry V. of England ; and shortly after she got Catha- IGG HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. rinc, her niece and Erik's sister, married to Prince John, a son of the German emperor, Ruprecht, John being promised to assume the Scandinavian crowns if Erik of Pomerania should die cliildless. Thus having strengthened and consolidated her power by the way of influential connections and relationships, the queen, upon whose head the three northern crowns were actu- ally united, now proceeded to realize the great plan she already had long cherished : to get a fundamental law established for a perpetual union of the three iargo Scandinavian kingdoms — the realization of which has immortalized her, and secured for her admiration in the eyes of the world and of the most thorough historians, who do not hesitate to surname her " the Great," and to compare her with the great Greek and Roman heroes Union of Cairaar, and statesmen. On the 17th of June, A,D., 1397. I397j Margarethe summoned to an as- sembly in Calmar, in the .province Smaland of Sweden, the clergy and the nobility of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, and established, by then- aid and consent, a fundamental law. This was the law so celebrated in the North under the name of the Union of Calmar, which afterwards gave birth to wars between Sweden and Denmark that lasted a whole century. It con- sisted of three articles. The first provided, that the tlu-ee kingdoms should, thenceforward, have but one and the same king, who was to be chosen successively by each of the kingdoms. The second article con.sisted HISTORY OF SCANDINMIA 1G7 of the obligation upon the sovereign to divide his time equally in the three kingdoms. The third, and most important, was, that each kingdom should retain its own laws, customs, senate, and pri\'ileges of every kind ; that the highest officers should he taken of the natives ; that an alliance being concluded with foreign poten- tates should be obligatory upon all three kingdoms, when approved of by the council of one kingdom ; and that, after the death of the king, his eldest son, or if he died childless, then another wise, intelligent, and able prince, should be chosen common monarch ; and if any one, because of high-treason, was banished from one kingdom, then he should be banished from them all. A month after, on the queen's birth-day (13th of July), a legitimate charter was drawn up, to wliich the queen subscribed and put her seal ; on which occasion Erik of Pomerania was anointed and crowTied by the arch- bishops of Upsala and Lund as king of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. Te Deum was sung in the churches of Calmar, the assembly crying out : " Hcecce unio esto perpetiia! Longe, longe, longe, vivat Mar- garethe, regina Danice, NorvegicE et Svecics.'" This strict union of the three large states became a potent bulwark for their security, and made them, in more than one century, the arbiter of the European system; the three nations of the northern peninsula presenting a compact and united front, that could bid defiance to any foreign aggression. 1G8 HISTORY OF SCANDirrWIA. III. 1397—1448. Queen Margarcthe — Attempts to regain Schleswig — Erik of Pomerania — Dis- pute about Schleswig — War with the Ilanseatic Towns — Eebellion in Sweden — Engelbrechtson — Charles Canutson — Dethronement of the King in Denmark and Sweden — Christopher of Bavaria acknowledged King of all three Kingdoms — Rebellion of the Peasantry — The House of Oldenburg. Although Erik of Pomerania was elected king, and in the year 1407 past minority, Margarethe continued governing until the day of her death. " You have done all well," wrote the people to her, " and we value your services so highly, that we would gladly grant you every thing." The union of the three Scandinavian kingdoms having been established in Calmar, all her efforts now aimed at regaining the duchy of Schleswig, A. D., which circumstances had compelled her to resign 140*- to Gerhard IV., Count of Holstein. For such a reunion with Schleswig a favorable opportunity ap- peared, when Grerhard was killed in an expedition against the Ditmarshers, leaving behind three sons in minority. Elizabeth, Gerhard's widow, fled to Marga- rethe, for succor against her violent brother-in-law. Bishop Henry of Osnabriick. Margarethe, fond of fishing in foul water, was very willing to help her, but availed herself of the opportunity to annex, successively, dif- ferent parts of Schleswig. The dethroned Swedish king, Albrecht, never able to HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 169 forget his anger with Margarethe, or her severity against him, and continually cherishmg a hope of re-ascending the Swedish throne, and considering the Union of Cal- mar a breach of peace, contrived to make the Swedish people displeased with her, and thought it a suitable time to revolt from her dominion. He established a • strong camp before Visby, the capital of the island of G-ulland, having six thousand foot and, at some distance, nine thousand horse. Determined to engage before this junction could take place, the queen's commander-in- chief, Abraham Brodcr, immediately auivanced until in sight of the enemy, and then endeavored to gain pos- session of Yisby and the ground near by. In this he was so far successful, that Albrecht and his army had to leave the camp, and conclude a truce. But, neverthe- less, he did not, till after a lapse of seven years, give up his hope of remounting the throne of Sweden, a. d., making a final peace with Margarethe, and hence- i**^^- forward living in Gadebush, Mecklenburg, where he, in the year 1412, closed his inglorious life. Soon a. d., after (27th of October) queen Margarethe died on 1^12. board a ship in the harbor of Flensburg, fifty-nine years of age, and after an active and notable reign of thirty- seven years. Her funeral was performed with the greatest solemnity, and her corpse was brought to the cathedral of Roeskilde, where Erik of Pomerania, her successor, in the year 1423, caused her likeness to be carved in alabaster. Her acts show her character; 170 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. judiciousness, united witli circumspection, wisdom in devising plans, and perseverance in executing them ; skill in gaining the confidence of the clergy and pea- santry, to have a weight sufficient to counterbalance the imperious nohility. On the whole, she applied herself to the civilization of her three kingdoms, and their improvement by the enactment of excellent laws, the great aim of which was to undermine the nobility. She pursued the plan of her great father, to recall all rights to the crown-lands, which, during the reign of her weak and inefficient predecessors, had been granted the nobility. The prosecution of this plan for the perfect subversion of the feudal aristocracy was unfortunately interrupted by her death ; her imprudent and weak suc- cessor having no power to restrain the turbulent spirit of a factious nobility. Previous, however, to giving an account of his rule of the internal affairs of the states, it is necessary to take a connected view of the reign at large of this mean and base monarch. Erik of Pomerania' s inability in ruling the three Northern kingdoms, now appeared more and more dis- tinctly ; for during the reign of Margarethe, all his under- takings were mostly under her guidance. He possessed no vigor of mind, no bold and enterprising spirit, and was never guided by prudence. The three 3ons of the duke Gerhard IV. took advantage of his inability, endea- voring to withdraw themselves from his yoke, and to be enfeoffed with the duohy of Schleswig. At a Diet of fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 171 Nyborg the king cited the young dukes, and open- a. d., ed the assembly himself with a full explanation of i^^^- the circumstances of the dispute. When he had finished his speech, the archbishop, in a fulminating harangue, declared, that the duchess-dowager, Elizabeth, and her brother-in-law, Henry of Osnahriick, as tutors and coun- selors to G-erhard's children, had forfeited all right to the duchy of Schleswig, in consequence of having, before Margarethe's death, taken arms against their lawful sovereign, and that Schleswig should, therefore, be an- nexed to the crown of Denmark. Scarce had the arch- bishop pronounced this sentence, when the eldest son of the deceased duke, G-erhard, threw himself at the king's feet, and besought liim to grant the investiture of the tluchy as a fief; but the king replied in the negative The three young dukes now began to concert measures for shaking off his yoke ; and, although Erik of Pome- rania had the military power of three large kingdoms at command, and marched an army of a hundred thousand men against them, he was defeated near Immer- a. d., vad, in Schleswig, with great loss, insomuch that I'^^i. his flight became a proverb : "At Immervad the Danes were driven to the devil." Although this defeat did not terminate the war, it produced a truce, in order to settle preliminaries for a peace. Arbitrators were chosen, and the whole affair of the duchy of Schleswig was again canvassed. Nevertheless, the young dukes embraced every occasion of frustrating the intention of the truce, 172 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. and chose to decide the difference by the sword. Erik ')erceived their aim, and equipped a fleet with the design to invade the island of Alsen. Here he met with no success ; the admiral, Tvar Brusk, died on board, and a hurricane dispersed and shattered the wbole fleet. Erik now took the course of appealmg to the German empe- A. D., roi") Sigismund, and repaired to Of en (Buda), 1424. -where the emperor then resided. Construing the appeal in favor of the king, Sigismund declared, that all Schleswig should henceforward be annexed in full right to the crown of Denmark, and that the dukes Henry, Adolphus, and Gerhard, had, by their conduct, divested themselves of their right to Schleswig. The king, now A. D., believing the whole to be settled, resolved upon a 1425. pilgrimage to Palestine. But, after returning, he found the ancient leaven of contest revived and violently fermenting in the breasts of the dukes, who, making alliance with the Hanse-towns, continued the war ; an^ though king Erik collected all his strength to oppose them, and even gained a complete victory over the Hanse fleet, yet at last they overmatched him, and weakened the kingdoms by horrible ravages. However, their attempts to seize upon Copenhagen failed ; the city being saved by the bravery and intelligent pre- parations of his queen, Philippa, of England. At length the unlucky war with the dukes was ended by the treaty A. D., of Wbrdingborg', by wliich AdoIpJms, the only 1435. one yet alive, should enjoy, during hi.^s life, the fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. -173 duchy of Schleswig, except the city of Haderslev and the island of Aro, and his heirs, for two years after his decease ; Denmark thus again being dispossessed of Sclileswig. Some disturbances in Sweden had accele- rated the peace of Wordingborg. Sweden, from the very beginning displeased with the Union of Calmar, was. embroiled in commotions, which chiefly proceeded from the mean pohcy of the king in bestowing his offices of trust on foreigners, in usurping the rights and preroga- tives of the Swedish people, and from disproportional taxes. Encouraged by the weakness of their sovereign, they resolved to attempt a change in the government, and to wrest the sceptre from the hand of Erik, whom they generally nicknamed " the Pomeranian knave." The circumstance which caused the first operations ol the Swedes towards the recovery of their lawful privi- leges, was the tyrannical oppression exercised by Jens Erikso?i, the royal bailiff", in the province of Dalecarlia. A mountaineer and miner, Engelbrecht Engelbrechtson, accused the bailiff before the king. The officer was de- posed, but Engelbrechtson had spoken with such ardor and bluntness, that the king forbade him his presence, and ordered him to leave Denmark "That I will," replied Engelbrechtson, "but to return in a different manner." The Dalecarlians, ever watchful of their liberties, ' resolved to tlirow off the Danish yoke, and to die Uke free men, rather than live like slaves under the lash of Erik's tyranny ; and the disturbances were 174 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. carried on, headed by Engelbrechtson, whom Erik Puke, an influential nobleman, had joined. It went so far that A.D., Engelbrechtson forced the Senate to send the 1436. king a formal sentence of deposition. In a meet- ing, however, of the Council of all three kingdoms, Erik of Pomerania was again acknowledged King of Sweden. To appease the growing displeasure, the king summoned a Diet at Vadstena, where he agreed that Charles Carmtsoii Bonde and Cltristiern Nielson Vasa should be appointed to digest a new plan of government. But the rebellion soon broke out with renewed power. A rivalship commenced 1)etween Canutson and Engel- brechtson. Both were fired with the glorious emulation of being the deliverer of their country. Engelbrecht- son, in particular, was extremely successful, when he was suddenly murdered by the artifice of his rival ; between whom and Erik Puke a new dispute arose, that once more restored the king's affairs. Canutson and Christiern Vasa, however, soon seemed resolved to over- turn the whole arrangement of the offices of govern- ment, and to substitute creatures of their own in place of those who formerly had filled them ; wherefore the nobility and the clergy, perceiving their aim, remonstra- ted against the continuance of this junta in office, and A. D., summoned a general Diet at Calmar, where the i^^'^- senators of all three kingdoms met tc^ether to draw up more precise terms for the Union. Here it was stipulated, that after the death of the king, forty men HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 175 of each kingdom should meet together m Habnstad, to elect the new ruler ; that the king should always have two intelligent men with liim, and war could not be declared, or peace concluded, without the consent of all thi'ee kingdoms ; and that the king should never prefer to the offices of trust any foreigners within the limits of • the Swedish monarchy. This delineation, in some respects more accurate and complete than that of Cal- mar, 1397, never gained, however, any vaUdity ; and the rupture between the kingdoms was incurable, until at length the Union of Calmar, which had promised the North so great blessings and stability, after a series of wars and immense bloodshed, and only after a course of one hundred and twenty-three years, was broken and nullified. Even in Denmark a great dissatisfaction with the reign of Erik of Pomerania began to appear, occa sioned by the long and unlucky wars, by the debase- ment of the coin, and by the heavy taxes lavished on unworthy favorites of the king, or wasted in idle exhi- bitions of magnificence.. The people were also highly displeased with his bestowing the liighest offices on G er- man noblemen, and with his endeavors to get his cousin- german, Bugislaw of Pomerania, appointed his joint governor and successor. Vexed at the senators' non- compliance with his request about that, Erik of Pome- rania left Denmark, repairing to the island of a. d., - Gulland with a large body of troops, A^ith all the i*39. jewels of tl\e crown, and with liis concubine, Cecilia, of 170 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. whom he was passionately enamored. He was now jjj^jj j^jjjp dethroned in all three kingdoms, and his namo A. D., rendered both odious and despicable. It was the ^*^^' time for a competitor to start forth, and to avail himself of this general disaffection to the dethroned king, who had no more expectation of re-ascending the throne. This competitor was Christopher of Bavaria, a son of Erik's sister, Catharina, and Pfalzgrave John. Erik being childless, Christopher, who now returned from Bavaria, stood thus plainly in the hope of succession, A. D., and the regency of the three Scandinavian king- 1439. (loms was, at the Diet of Halmstad, conferred upon him. The despicable Erik of Pomerania lived for ten years on GuUand, where he, with ignominy, dragged on a life of piracy, from whence he went to Pomerania, A. D., where he, having no resource but in the society 1459. of his concubine, at the expiration of ten years, died unlamented. His noble and magnanimous queen, Philippa, whom he often had treated unkindly, betook herself to the monastery of Vadstena, which she herself had founded, and here she expired, on the fifth of July, 1430. The king perceiving his loss, and repenting of his conduct, caused many requiems to be sung for a speedy entrance of her soul into the dwellings of the blessed. The taste for classical learning, at this time, was far from being universally diffused in the Scandinavian HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 177 countries, and it is, therefore, highly to he appreciated that some monkish writers preserved alive the embers of the literary spirit, and contributed to the preserva- tion of such of the Greek and Roman authors as we now possess entire ; and however miserable an indi- vidual Erik ol Pomerania rightly may appear, he seems, nevertheless, to have had some taste for literature, or disposition to patronize science and the arts, since he prevailed with the Pope, Martin V., to permit him to found a University in Copenhagen, which, however, on account of his tumultuous reign, was not carried into cflect. Christopher of Bavaria succeeded now to the throne A. D., of his uncle, and received homage in Wiborg. ii40. Immediately on his arrival in Denmark, the senate published a decree, whereby all those were declared enemies to their country who should visit Erik' J court on Gulland, and a manifesto was issued containing the articles of accusation against Erik of Pomerania, which were affixed on the gates of all the northern Hanse-towns. Although Christopher of Bava- ria was elected by the senators, the peasantry being yet regarded as too inconsiderable to have any voice, he fol- lowed, nevertheless, the old custom, to travel round to receive homage in the different kingdoms. In Sweden there were some hindrances to liis election ; but the clergy, taking as much pains in preserving the union of the three kingdoms as the nobility did in nullifying it, 178 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA prevailed upon the senate to acknowledge Christopher king of Sweden, and to swear allegiance to him as A. D., their sovereign, whereafter he was cro^med in 1^*1- Stockholm. In the year following Christopher went from Sweden to Norway, and received, at Opslo, the crown of that kingdom. Thence he passed to Den- A. D., mark, and was crowned at Ripen, hy the arch- 1443. tishop of Lund. Charles Canutson Bonde re- signed his office, but the Diet declared, that, in conside- ration of his services, he should enjoy Finland and the island of Oland, but on condition, that the crown should, at any time, have power to redeem them for the sum of forty thousand marks in silver. Christopher confirmed this donation of the Diet, and granted, thereafter, the investiture of Schleswig, as a hereditary fief, to duke Adolphus, in order to have a support in him, if need be. In the beginning of his reign a violent rebellion broke out amongst the peasantry of Jutland, who re- fused paying taxes, unless they were permitted to pay them to their late king Erik, of whom they yet were in favor. The peasants, whose army is said to have amounted to the number of twenty-five thousand men, routed the royal troops, slew the commanders, and put to death all the noblemen they could catch, with every circumstance of cruelty. Incensed at their obstinacy, Christopher marched against them in person, gave them battle, and obtained a cojmplete, but bloody victory. Henry Togon, a senator, who had always espoused the HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 179 cause of the dethroned king, together with several others of his adherents, was taken prisoner, and broken alive upon the wheel. But the main body of the rebellious peasants, called the Vendelbo'ers, who lived north of the Lymfjord, gained a neighboring hill, which they so intrenched with wagons and trains, as to withstand all the attacks of the king's cavalry. At last, Christopher was advised to offer them pardon, if they would submit, which expedient induced them to throw down their arms. To pay tithes to the clergy, of which there so long time had been a dispute, and with which the peasants were yet highly displeased, was decided upon under Christopher, by a sentence from the senate. He also tried to limit the commercial privileges of the Hanse-towns, confirming their privileges only upon con- dition that they should interpose no obstacles to the trade of other nations, and that Scandinavian merchants should enjoy the same privileges in the Hanseatic har- bors. In Sweden they were not satisfied with Christo- pher's reign, though it came not to any rebellion. He was there surnamed the bark king (Barkekongen), be cause an unfruitful year happened, in which the people, to get sufficient bread, had to grind flour of bark. But, ill all reason, his subjects were very much displeased with his connivance at Erik of Pomerania's piracies, which he passed over, saying: " My uncle must also do something for the support of his life." Christopher of Bavaria received an embassy from the Sultan of Turkey, 180 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. A. D., who offered him his daughter ; but the king de- 1*^*- clined accepting the offer, Dorothea, a daughter of the markgrave, John of Brandenhurg, surnamed the Alchymist, being more agreeable to his incUnations. Before leaving Christopher, it may be added, that he removed the royal residence from Roeskilde to Copen- hagen, where, since that time, the kings of Denmark have resided, and that he entered upon a treaty of Roeskilde, whereby Copenhagen, until then a dependency A. D., on that diocese, was ceded to the crown. After ^**^- a reign of eight years he died. On assuming the reins of government he gave some indications of a vigorous administration ; but this was only of short duration. He was abandoned to his pleasures, and, like most kings, a slave to unworthy favorites. The prosperity and esteem of the peasantry, who tilled the ground and constituted the majority of the nation, seem to have been very lightly considered in this period. Frequent rebellions of the peasants, quelled by much bloodshed, under Erik Ploughpenning, Chris- topher I., Erik Glipping, Erik Menved, Waldcmar At- terdag, and Christopher of Bavaria, prove that the peasants were sensible of the yoke resting upon them, but in vain tried to shake it off. The almost uninter- rupted internal disturbances and external wars, of which the nobility and the clergy availed themselves to enlarge their power and riches, weakened and impover- ished the peasantry, and they were considered only a fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 181 part of the property belonging to the noblemen, trans- ferable along with horses, cows and other movables, at the will of the owner ; while, on the other hand, the clergy and the nobility were floating in riches and ex- tensive privileges. The clergy were allowed a free election to all vacant church preferments, the king renouncing his power of presentation. No tax could be imposed upon the clergy, except in one particular case — the king's captivity. No freeman (nobleman) could be taken or imprisoned, or dispossessed of liis free tene- ments or liberties, or outlawed, or banished, or any way hurt or injured, unless by the legal judgment of his equals ; the clergy and the nobility thus being set far above the common level. In tliis period, about the end of the twelfth century, the commercial spirit had begun to make some progress toward the North. The Baltic was then infested by pirates, who ravaged the coasts. The city of Liibeck, on the Baltic, and Hamburg, at the mouth of the Elbe, were obliged to enter into a league of mutual defence for the protection of their merchantmen against these piracies. Tliis association, which was, as before men- tioned, termed the League of the Hanse-toivns, became .soon so formidable in the eyes of the kings and states of Europe, that they even courted its alliance. The burgher class of Scandinavia and the cities were very much pressed by the Hanseatic towns, which had made themselves masters of all trade with foreign countries, 182 mSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. and imported German commodities to the Scandinavian cities ; and the condition of the burgher class was about on a level with that of the peasantry. During the greater part of this period, the general state of literature was at a very low ebb ; but a brighter period was now at hand, and classical learning began to be universally diffused, and a more genuine taste was revived for polite literature, when the admirable invention of the art of printing was made, in tHe year 1436, by John von Sor- genlock, called Gansefleisch, from Guttenberg, gene- rally, therefore, called John Guttenberg. This inven- tion was, as is well^ known, considerably improved by John Faust, a rich jeweler, and Peter Schdffer, an ecclesiastic from Gernsheim. In the year 1457 the first book was printed, in Latin, namely, the Psalms of David, of which five copies yet remain — in Gottin- gen, Vienna, Mainz, Paris, and in the royal library in Copenhagen. HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 183 THE HOUSE OF OLDENBURG. lY. 1448—1536. Christian I. — Charles Canutson — Archbishop Jens Bcngtson — Stono Sture tho Elder — Battle on Bmnkehill — Pilgrimage to Rome — University of Copen- hagen — i7ans-Charter — Division of the Duchies — Expedition to Ditmarsh — Rebellion in Sweden and Norway — War with the Hanse Towns — Chris- tian II. — Expedition against Sweden — Archbishop Gustav Trolle — The Slaughter at Stockholm — Sigbrit-Dyveke — Torben Oxe — The Beginning of the Reformation — ^Rebellion — The King flees — Frederick I. — Civil War — Rebellion in Skane — Soren Norby — The Reformation spreads — John Tau- sen — Diet of Odensee— Diet of Copenhagen — The War of the Count (Grevens Feide) — Christian III. — Shipper Clemens — Battle by Oxenhill — Literature and Language. Christopher of Bavaria, dying without is.sue, the advantages w^hich would have accrued from annexing the duchy of Schleswig to the crown, made the senate first cast their eyes on Adolphus. But because of old age, declining accepting the crown offered him, Adolphus proposed to them his nephew, Christian, a son of Count Diderick the Happy, of Oldenburg, whose answer to the ambassadors is remarkable: "I have three sons," said he, " of very opposite qualities ; one is passionately fond of women, another breathes nothing but war, but the third is moderate in his disposition, prefers peace to the din of arms, and is srenerous and mao;nanimous," With 184 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. one voice, of course, the senate declared for that prince whose panegyric the father had drawn ; and the house of Oldenburg, at this day seated on the tlirone of Den- A. D., mark, assumed the government ir the person of 1**^- Christian L, Count of Oldenburg, and a nephew to Adolphus, duke of Schleswig and count of Holstein "Willingly accepting the offer, Christian I. sought to enter into favor with the people by marrying the queen-dowager Dorothea. Next he gave a communication in writing to the Diet, declaring Denmark an elective kingdom, and binding himself not to impose taxes, not to declare war, and not to grant any deed of feoffment, unless con- sented to by the Diet ; after which he was anointed and 28th Oct crowned in Copenhagen, and received from the A. D., archbishop, Yvon, the standard of the kingdom Christian I. now sought the affection and friend- ship of the Swedish nation, in order to pave the way for an unshaken union of the three crowns. But the Swedes endeavoring to break the Union of Calmar, which they considered a thorn in their flesh, rose in rebellion, and chose, diametrically opposite to the statutes of said Union, and against the express wish of arch- bishop Jens Bengtson Oxenstjerna, and the whole Swe- dish clergy, their grand mareshal, Charles Canutson, for their king. Even in Norway, assisted by his kins- man, the archbishop Aslach Bolt, Charles Canutson was A. D., crowned in Drontheira as king of Norway. But 1449. lYi the following year, at a meeting in Halmstad, ^HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 185 the Swedish and Danish senators agreed that Charles Canutson had to renounce all claim to Norway, to wliich it was certain he had no manner of right, and that Den- mark and Sweden, after the death or deposition of Charles Canutson, were to be re-united. Although Charles Canutson did not approve of that agreement, yet Christian I. was declared king of Norway, and a. d., crowned in Drontheim. At the same time an i^^o. agreement was made in Bergen, that Norway and Den- • mark should always be ruled by one king, happen what might to Sweden. But the Swedes, disgusted with the despotic government of Charles Canutson, determined at length to throw off his yoke. The archbishop Jens Bengtson Oxenstjerna, on. account of some personal grievances, headed the insurrection, entered the metro- politan church, put on his high-priest ornaments, and prostrated liimself before the high altar ; then laying aside his habit, he swore he would never again resume it, until Charles Canutson was driven out of the throne of Sweden. Charles Canutson, finding the greater part of the Swedish nation disaffected, concealed the public treasure in the house of some Dominican friars, and embarked with all his private riches in a sliip, with which a. d., he set sail to Dantzic, in Western Prussia, where i^^'^ he sojourned for seven years. Christian I. was now unanimously elected king of Sweden, conducted into tlie church by the archbishop, and crowned, amidst 186 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA the acclamations of the people. The crown of all three kingdoms was thus now placed upon his head, and the Union of Calmar re-established. His little son, Hans, only three years of age, was elected his successor to all three kingdoms. Shortly after, at the death of Adolphus, who died A. D., without issue, there seemed to be a sure prospect 1459. of re-uniting South Jutland (Schleswig) with the kingdom, but instead of incorporating it with the Danish crown as an escheated fief, Christian I. unwisely engaged himself in negotiations with the nobility and the clergy, to be elected duke of Schleswig and count of Holstein, to which latter, however, Otho of Schaiimburg was more entitled ; wherefore he had to purchase Holstein for the sum of forty-three thousand florins, and to buy off the pretensions of Grerhard and Maurice, nephews to the late Adolphus, for an equivalent of forty thousand florins. Christian I. thus became king of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, duke of Schleswig and count of» A. D., Holstein ; whereupon he forced the Dominicans 1460. "to refund the treasure lodged in their hands by Charles Canutson, after they had for a long time denied the fact. But in a short time new disturbances broke A. D., out in Sweden, where the nobility still sought to 1463. prevent a firm union of the three kingdoms, and the people complained of the king's absence from -Swe- den, and of burdensome taxes. The king, imagining that the archbishop was concerned in it, oraered him to HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 187 be brought a prisoner to Denmark ; whereupon a vio- lent rebellion arose, headed by the archbishop's nephew, Ketil Carlson Vasa, bishop of Linkoping, who invited Charles Canutson to return to the tlu-one, and he was a second time acknowledged king of Sweden ; but his good fortune was of short duration, for when Christian I. released the archbishop, and reconciled himself with him, Charles Canutson had to renounce the crown, and swear that he would never again aspire to re-ascend the tlu"one. Finally, he was sent a prisoner to Finland, with a certain appanage for his subsistence. Neverthe- less, assisted by the lord high treasurer, Erik Axelson, Charles Canutson, whose affairs were ruined in appear- ance, was a third time called back to the Swedish a. d., tlu-one, and died as king of Sweden. His death, ^^''^ however, did not procure Christian I. the Swedish throne, which got a sagacious ruler in Steno Sture the Elder, a nephew to Charles Canutson, who for twenty- six years governed the kingdom with wisdom, curbed the insolence of the nobility, elevated the peasantry and the burgher class, and founded the celebrated a, d., University of Upsala. Christian I. determined to i^"^- support his claim to Sweden by force of arms, set a ])owerful armament on foot, with which he sailed to Stockholm, but was in the bloody battle on a. D., Brunkehill totally defeated and dangerously i^'^^- wounded, thenceforward desisting from any claim to Sweden. 188 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Christian I. had promised to undertake a pilgrimage A.D., to the Holy Land, but to he released from it he 1^74. took a journey to Rome. On his way thither he visited the Grerman emperor Frederick III., who, upon his request, elevated Holstein, Storman, and Ditmarsh to a dukedom, enfeoffing the king with the country last mentioned, which for a long space of time had heen a repuhlic. But the Ditmarshians did not submit to Denmark till the next century, after a most bloody con- test for their liberty. He then pursued his journey to Rome, where he was received with extraordinary dis- tinction by his Holiness and the College of Cardinals. The Pope, Sixtus IV., permitted him to found a uni- versity in Copenhagen. Immediately upon his return from Rome, the king went to Cologne to compose some controversies between the Emperor and Charles the A. D., Bold, duke of Burgundy. The university was i^'^9- at length established, the bishop of Roeskilde being appointed chancellor, but on account of its narrow means it had in the beginning only three professors, and gained no fame till after the introduction of the Re- formation. The young students, therefore, visited so frequently foreign universities, that the king deemed it necessary to lay it upon them as a duty first for somt years to be in a course of study at the University ol Copenhagen. Christian I. resolved now to strengthen the succession by the marriage of his son, and sent therefore, an embassy to Saxony, to demand Christina, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 189 daughter to the elector Ernst, for his son. The pro- posals were accepted, and the marriage ceremony per- formed, on which occasion the Order of the Elephant was first instituted. Originally this order bore a pa- triarchal cross, which after the Reformation was changed for a gold chain with an elephant suspended to it. The Danish kings confer this order only upon princes and noblemen of the first distinction, observing, however, one rule, which is, never to confer it upon those who have not first been favored with the order called Danne- brog. Chi'istian T. was in a continual want of money, occasioned by his two expensive journeys, and by tho amount he had to pay for being elected Count of Hol- stein. The unfavorable consequences of this want of money appeared, when the king's daughter, Marg-arethe, was married to James III. of Scotland ; for as the king was not able to pay down more than 2,000 florins of the dowry, which amounted to 60,000 florins, the Ork- ney and Shetland islands were mortgaged for the 58,000 florins ; and as Denmark for a long series of years was- not able to redeem them, and Scotland, because this debt had waxen so old, raised difficulties in giving them back, these possessions, which originally belonged to Norway, were lost forever. The power and arbitra- riness of the Hanse-towns yet continuing under Chris- tian T. appeared strikingly by the violent acts which their officers and stewards exercised unpunished in 190 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Bergen. Falling upon the royal constable, Olaf NieU son, tliey murdered him, the bishop, and sixty other per- sons. Their power and tyranny, however, did not long continue, their trade began to be limited, and their de- clension to draw near, other lands, particularly Holland and England, beginning to trade in the North, and ex- change commodities from India and the Orient for the produce and manufactures of the North ; and every variety of useful merchandise was now, by means of the Baltic and the great continental rivers, easily con- veyed through most of the kingdoms of Europe, all of which successively annihilated the superiority of the Hanse-towns ; and in order to destroy entirely their detrimental influence in Denmark, Christian T. entered into alliance with England, Scotland, France, and Bur- gundy. He also enacted a commercial law containing many regulations favorable to the mercantile affairs of Denmark ; for instance, that German merchants should not be permitted to travel round in the country and en- gross commodities for the purpose of making their profit by enhancing the price, but should buy them in the towns. The Hanseatic confederacy had, from the year 1438, begun to decline, and it is not to be denied, that it is to this decline Scandinavia and many other European states owe their domestic manufactures and the increase of their real wealth. After having pursued the true interests of his people, and sought to establish order, tranquillity, and an equal admini'^tration of justice, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 19J Christian I. died, after a reign of thirty -three May 2, years, and lies buried in the Cathedral of Ptoes- a. d., kilde. U81. He was succeeded on the tlirone by his son Hans (John), as we have seen, already in his father's life- time elected successor in all three kingdoms. He was immediately acknowledged king of Denmark, but in the two other kingdoms, especially in Sweden, he met with considerable difficulties, Steno Sturo the Elder not being disposed to resign. Even in Norway the interest of Steno Sturo was promoted by the aid of the Archbishop of Drontheim. Nevertheless, at a meeting in a. d., Halmstad, king Hans was declared king of Nor- i^^^. way, but had to sign and seal a charter which bears witness to the increasing power of the nobility and the clergy. All the old privileges of the clergy were con- firmed ; the king could no more meddle with the election of a bishop ; the peasants and attendants belonging to the nobility and the clergy were to be exempted from paying taxes. The king could not confer a feoffinent upon any one, or deprive any of the fief he had, unless the members of the Diet had consented to it. No serf could obtain a demesne, nor the king himself mortgage it ; and the right to fortify manors, abrogated by queen Margarethe, was in this charter restored to the nobility But about any privileges for the commons, who yet were considered in a very abject and despicable light, was not one word spoken ; and if the king, so run the words, 192 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. should dare to violate this charter, the inhabitants were entitled to apply violent means, without being im- peached of having broken their oath of allegiance. In the same year, at a meeting in Calmar, the Swedish Diet declared Hans king of Sweden, but Steno Sturo set all engines at work to frustrate the resolution of the Diet, his arts succeeding so happily, that for fourteen years the king hoped in vain to ascend the Swedish throne. In the duchies, king Hans met with great difficulties in getting elected, his brother Frederick, whom the influential queen-dowager ardently assisted, withstand- ing his election. At length both of them were elected A. D., dukes, the duchies being divided into Gottorp 1490. and Segeberg. Frederick chose the Gottorp part, but was, however, not satisfied, and continued long to show himself very grasping and presumptuous. He assumed the title, " Inheritor of Norway," and laid claim to the islands of Laaland, Falster, and Mona ; but A. D., at the Diet of Callundborg these insolent claims 1494. -yyej-e rejected, as being entirely unauthorized. Nevertheless, the two valuable duchies were unfortu- nately again dismembered from the crown, notwithstand- ing the inconveniencies lately felt from the grant made to the children of Gerhard. King Hans, having now, through fourteen years, in vain hoped that by the way of negotiations he might ascend the throne of Sweden, resolved to enforce his right by arras. His mother Dorothea, wlio had continually dissuaded him from war, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 193 and entreated him to rest satisfied with his present dominions, was now dead and gone, and Steno Sture the Elder was just now very critically situated, being at variance with several influential members of the senate, and with Svante Nielson Sture, who engaged in his interest the archbishop of Upsala, Jacob Ulfson, and all the clergy, who upbraided Steno Sture the Elder with having occasioned numberless losses and disgraces to the kingdom. Hans thought it, therefore, a favorable opportunity to try the chances of war. The Danish army advanced upon Stockholm, opened the gates of the capital, and cut to pieces an army from Dalecarlia consisting of thirty thousand men, in the memo- a. d., rablo battle of Rodebro, where many of the i*^^- brave Swedish Dalecarlians sacrificed their lives with the most desperate courage ; whereafter Steno Sture, encouraged by the Dalecarlians, attacked the royal Danish army at Nordermalm, but was again defeated. Despairing now of being able to make head against the king's army, the administrator, Steno Sture, a. d., signed a treaty, by which he acknowledged king '^^^'^• Hans king of Sweden, agreeable to the Union of Cal- mar, which thus, a hundred years after its founding, was re-established, Steno Sture getting Finland, the ciiy of Nykoping, and some other lands and cities assigned for his maintenance. King Hans was how immediately crowned king of Sweden, and his son Christian elected his successor. The king now prc»bed 194 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. the wounds of the state, applying the most moderate and the wisest remedies to compose the controversies in Sweden, and effect a more friendly spirit. The Swedish affairs settled, the king engaged in a war, which terminated little to liis honor or advantage. It was occasioned by the grant made by the emperor to the late king of that country inhabited by the people called Ditmarshians. For many ages this brave people had thrown off the Danish yoke, and aspired to perfect independence. A considerable royal army was now equipped;, the greatest part of which consisted of levied troops, under the command of George Slentz, a German nobleman. To co-operate with this enor- mous force, duke Frederick, the king's brother, ar- rived, together with the flower of the nobility of Schleswig and Holstein. So sure did the Danes make themselves of victory, that they had shared the booty before the engagement, and every one brought carriages for moving off his proportion of the spoil. But their expectation was dissipated like a summex's cloud. In fact, few enterprises were preceded by more immense preparations, and as few, perhaps, attended with a more unfortunate issue, the great object falling altogether short of its aim. It has been mentioned, that Ditmarsh had been a republic (a district not seven Danish miles in extent), which now the Danish king was desirous of subjugating. The Ditmarshians, penetrated with love of liberty, threw down the dykes, which restrained the HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 195 encroachments of the North Sea, and the whole country was laid under water. A small body of one thousand men, headed by Wolf Isebrant, opposed boldly the royal army, and a murderous battle was fought, the Danes attempting all the time to drain off the inunda- tion. But the sluices being opened, and the water gashing in from all parts, the confusion among the Danes reached the highest pitch, and the great a. d., ro}'al army was totally routed near Hemming- i^oo. sted, in Holstein. "WTiole ranks of the Danes were swept down by the gra})e-shot of the Ditmarsliians ; king Hans himself made a narrow escape; the old banner, Dannebrog^ was lost, and an immense number of German and Danish noblemen covered the battle- field. The Ditmarsliians committed all sorts of cruel- ties on the bodies of the wounded; their eyes wero plucked out, their noses slit, and their ears cut off. This great and decisive victory secured the indepen- dence of the little republic ; and for many years no superiority of numbers could overcome the irresistible bravery of the intrepid Ditmarshians. No sooner the Swedes, dissatisfied with king Hans and with the out- rages of the royal bailifls, had been informed of the defeat of the Danish army at Hemmingsted, than they revolted again, judging this a favorable opportunity to shake off the Danish yoke. Steno Sture was re-elected administrator, and the rebellion increased to such a degr'^e, that soon the king was master of only the 196 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. castles of Calmar and Stockholm, which, with great courage and perseverance, were defended by Hans's queen, Christina of Saxony, until, after a siege of eight months, the whole garrison wasted away by sickness and hunger. The revolt in Sweden was the signal for another in A. D., Norway, which, however, soon ceased, when the 1502 plot was discovered, and the ring-leader, Canute Alfson, put to death ; and a later rebellion, headed by Herlnf Hyde fad and Bishop Charles of Hammer, was quelled with great severity and frequent executions, by the king's son, Christian, who, since the year 1501 had been appointed administrator of Norway. Prince Chris- tian took Herluf Hydefad and the bishop prisoners, con- demned them to death, and ordered them to be broken In the wheel. In a word, the rigor with which his Highness treated the rebels, and especially the nobility, a great number of whom he put to death, gave so rapid a progress to his arms, that he soon saw himself A. D., master of all Norway. Meanwhile Steno Sture 1503. the elder had died, and was succeeded in the administratorship by Svante Nielson Sture. A new ringleader now appeared in Sweden, Hemming Gad, bishop of Linkoping. Possessed of engaging man- ners, of great ingenuity, of military talents, and being a decided adversary of the Union of Calmar, and bearing an inveterate hatred to Denmark, the bishop was very fit for infusing a rebellious spirit into the Swedish mSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 19^ nation ; upon which, by his uncommon eloquence, ho exercised a great influence. The negotiations were car- ried on through several meetings, but without a.d., settling the disputes. At length, at a meeting i^^^- in Calmar, the council of all three kingdoms agreed to compose and accommodate the differences between king Hans and the disobedient Swedes. The Swedish sena- tors not appearing, the Danish and Norwegian senate pronounced .the sentence, that Svante Nielson Sture and his partisans were guilty of high treason and rebellion ; and after the scandalous conduct of Sweden had been represented in its strongest colors to the German empe- ror, Maximilian, he confirmed this sentence, and forbade all German countries and cities to have anything to do with the factious Sweden. A war now also broke out between Denmark and the Hanse-towns, which would not break off their commercial connections with Sweden. Moreover, the Hanse-towns were exasperated at the increase of other nations' trade in the North, and espe- cially at a treaty concluded by Hans with England, by which this country was granted the same privileges as the Hanse-towns had hitherto exclusively enjoyed. In this naval war the Danish sea-heroes, Otto Rud, Soren Norby, Andrew Bilde, and Holger Ulfstand, signalized themselves by the bravest exploits ; and by the peace of Malmo a war with the Hanse-towns for the first a. d., time ended successfully for Denmark ; the mer- i^^^. chantmen of wliich now rode triumphant in the Baltic. 198 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. m The Hanse-towns had to promise to break ofT all mar- cantile connections with Sweden while rebellious , and to defray the charge of war by paying thirty thousand florins. It also came in Malmo to an agreement with Sweden, which, however, put no end to the contests ; the Swedes, in spite of this agreement, electing, after A. D., the death of Svante Melson Sture, his son, Steno 1512- Sture the Younger, administrator. The next year 20th Feb '^i^o Hans died, after a reign of thirty-two years. A. D., Without any brilliancy of talents, his character ^^^^' is generally said to have been tempered with piety, moderation, and simplicity of manners. He was so great an admirer of the simplicity of the ancient Danes, that he even imitated their dress, and always wore an antique sword hung over his robe. Neverthe- less, for having caused his treasurer, Anders, to be beheaded, only on account of a loose suspicion of em- bezzlement, king Hans is blamed very much, the major- ity considering the treasurer innocent. On his death-bed ihe king was also so touched with remorse at having been instrumental in the treasurer's death, that he often called upon his name in a kind of frenzy, and ordered, before breathing his last, requiems to be sung for the rest of the soul of the innocent treasurer. During the reign of king Hans, two Norwegian noble- men stabbed the grand marshal, Paul Laxmand (Sal- mon), as he was passing over a bridge in Copenhagen, and flung his body into the sea, saying that land was HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA, 199 not SO natural an element for a fish as the sea ; alluding to LaxmanJ, which was the marshal's name. The king commenced a lawsuit against the murdered man, who was declared guilty of treacherous connections with the Swedish rebels, and his large estates were adjudged to thi» king. Christian IL, his son, in Sweden generally called Christian the Tyrant^ was now raised to the throne ; a man in every respect opposite to his father. He was of high genius, ability and judgment, but not possessed of any mild and humane, disposition. His administration was like Cromwell's in England, arbitrary, cruel, and vigorous, and he made no scruple to use religion for reaching his aim. In political matters he was both a leveler and a tyrant. He was born on the 2d of July, 1481, two years before the great reformer, Martin Lu- ther. His father, king Hans, put the young prince out to board with a wealthy citizen in Copenhagen, called Hans Bookbinder, where George Hinze, an ecclesiastic, daily came to teach him. The prince being of a wild character, and by his dissipations often hazardmg his own life, Hans Bookbinder was desirous of being freed from the burden of having supervision over him, and proposed, therefore, to the king, to place him with Hinze. He neither being able to moderate the prince, liad to have a watch upon his actions, to take him along with him to church, and make him sing in the choir together with the other singing boys. The king con- 200 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. sidering it below the prince's dignity, took him again to the royal palace, and caused him to be taught by a German master of arts, in general called Master Con- \ad, who instructed him so thoroughly and carefully in Latin, that the young prince spoke it with the greatest volubility and wrote it with classical elegance. On account of his being trained amongst the commons, he had sucked in, as with his mother's milk, a great predi-' lection for the burgher class and the peasantry, while he, on the other hand, cherished a strong antipathy to the nobility and the clergy, who restrained his power and oppressed the lower orders. When twenty years of age, he was, as before mentioned, sent to Norway, to quell a rebellion there, which he performed with great courage, but also with the utmost severity. Thereafter appointed administrator of Norway, he became ac- quainted with Dijveke, a handsome girl, whose mother, Sig-brit, had moved from Amsterdam to Bergen, where she kept a tavern. Both of tljem exercised, from that time, a great but corruptive influence upon Christian 11. A. D., On the death of king Hans he was, without 1513. any opposition, acknowledged king of Denmark and Norway, but Sweden, as usual, raised difficulties concerning his election, and several years passed away before he could ratify his claims there. Meantime A. D., Christian resolved to strengthen his power by ^^^■^- marrying the noble and gentle princess Eliza- beth, a sister to the celebrated Charles V., emperor of HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 201 Germany and Holland. Studious to please his young queen, the king sent to Holland for gardeners and a colony of Dutch to cultivate all sorts of fruits and other vegetables for her table, and assigned them the little island of Amager, close by Copenhagen, where they highly improved the horticulture, hitherto little known in the North. Notwithstanding his marriage, the king's unlawful connection with his concubine, Dyveka, con- tinued, until a sudden death took her off. Many be- lieved that she had been killed by poison slowly infused into her by the family of a rich nobleman, Torbcn Oxen, who had fallen in love with Dyveka, and would marry her. Torbcn confessed that he had solicited her favOr, but never obtained it. Immediately the king's counte- nance altered, and he was provoked to such a degree, that he resolved to put Torben Oxen to death without mercy. He was arrested and imprisoned. The affair was tried by the senate, where he was unanimously acquitted, the law having assigned no punishment for simple concupiscence. When the senate's decree was related to the king, he flew into a passion, saying, that if his friends had been as numerous in the senate as Torben's their judgment would have been different ; adding : " Even if he had a neck as thick as that of a bull, he shall lose it ; and when did I ever say a thing, make a promise, or utter a threat, that I did not ful- fill my word ? " He proceeded to assemble twelve peasants of the neighborhood before the gate of the 202 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. citadel, and ordered them to pass sentence on Torben. Dreading his majesty's resentment, and thinking they would be sacrificed, if they did not comply with his humor, they gave their verdict in the following terms : "We do not judge Torben, but his own words con- demn him ;" whereafter he was immediately beheaded. This despotic act irritated the nobility yet more with the king, who during his whole reign strove to restrain the extravagant power and influence of tho nobility and clergy, and to elevate the peasantry and the burgher class. It is here not out of place to re- mark, that many of his laws bear witness to a sound judgment, mainly aiming at removing and reforming the degeneracy of manners and morals among tho clergy, and at diminishing their exorbitant riches and power, which rendered them odious to the people and prevented them from being examples of the virtues they had to preach. Of the school affairs the king took a peculiar care. He increased the salary of the teachers, and commanded them to prove their qualifi- _ cation by submitting to a public examination. Con- sidering the great influence and power of the nobility and clergy a blight upon the social condition of the mass and an obstacle to the progress of society, he struggled, during his whole reign, against the encroach- ments of the aristocracy, until, at last, because of his despotism and cruelty, a general insurrection broke out^ HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 203 which retarded him in realizing his many salutary re. forms. But now an epoch commenced, the most important of any in the history of the North. The great Re- formation, which Martin Luther had begun in Saxony was e,arly introduced into the Scandinavian countries, and Clmstian II. received with joy this new religious system of liberty, which he considered conducive to pro- mote his plans. Endeavoring in vain to induce Luther to visit Copenhagen, he prevailed upon his uncle, a. d., Frederick the Wise, Elector of Saxony, to send 1^20. liim Martin Reinhardt, who for a short time preached the new doctrine ; but not being able to preach cor- rectly in Danish, and, therefore, often exciting the mirth of his hearers, he left Denmark ; whereafter Carlstadt, another disciple of Luther's, arrived in Copenhagen ; but he also returned soon to Germany without having performed anything worthy of notice. Nevertheless, Christian II., though in favor of the Re- formation, felt obliged to keep on good terms with the Pope, Leo X., who might perhaps be useful to him in regulating the Swedish concerns, and he permitted, therefore, the abominable Arcemboldtis, a seller of in- dulgences, to travel throughout his dominions to make sale of releases from the pains of purgatory, which this pious robber said every one might purchase for a small sum of money. The form of the absolution issued by Ajceniboldus was as follows: "I absolve thee from all 204 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. thy sins, how enormous soever, and remit thee all man- ner of punishment, which thou oughtest to suffer in purgatory, and at death the gates of paradise shall be opened to receive thee. In the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit ;" even adding, the same as Tetzel, the Dominican friar, in Germany: "As soon as the money clinks in the coffer the soul springs out from purgatory." The king, however, soon fell out with Arcemboldus, and dci)rived him of a great por- tion of the money he blasphemously had collected. The Swedes continued showing themselves unwilling to acknowledge Christian II., who was, however, fortu- nate enough to find a zealous partisan in Gustavus Trolle, Archbishop of Upsala, who carried on a corres- pondence with the king to extinguish the liberties of his native country. Steno Sture the younger encompassed now the archbishop's castle, Sleka, and the senate of Sweden deposed him from his dignities. The mighty prelate had immediate recourse to the Pope, Leo X., who granted him a bull, laying the kingdom of Swe- den under the sentence of excommunication. The affrighted Swedes returned to their allegiance, Gus- tavus Trolle was restored to his archiepiscopal functions, and Christian II. succeeded by the aid of the archbishop in establishing the supremacy of Sweden. Seven hostages were given Christian as a security for the loyalty of the Swedes, and amongst these was the young Gustavus Erikson Vasa, who was destined by Provi- HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 205 dence to be the deliverer of his country. Chris- a.d., tian ordered the fleet to get under sail, and ^^i^- steered strait to Denmark, where ho arrived safe with the hostages. The king perceiving young Gustavus Vasa's patriotic feelings and skill, and, therefore appre- hending him, confined him immediately in prison in the castle of Kalo, in Jutland, from which this noble youth at a later time found opportunity to escape, and to gain . a considerable number of adherents, and take the field against the generals of Christian. The king, whose intention it was now, at one blow, to bring the rebellious Steno Sture to subjection, equipped a powerful armament, and commanded his general, the brave OlJio Kntjnpen, to march a nume- rous army to Sweden, while the fleet was harassing the coasts. Steno Sture gave battle at Bogcsund, in a. d., Visi-Gothland, but fell into an ambush laid for i^^o. him, and received a wound of which he soon after died. Sweden was now left without a head, and the Senate fell into a violent dispute about a successor, while Christian was marching unopposed to Stockholm, which he blockaded on the sea side. After being long and brave- ly defended by the heroic Christine Gyhlenstar^ Steno Sture's widow, Stockholm had at last to yield to the Iving, who, by the archbishop, Gustavus Trolle, was oroclaimed, in the name of the states, king of Sweden, Denmarlv and Norway, and crowned with the u^ual ceremonies, the archbishop of Lund and the bishops of 206 - HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Roeskilde and Odcnsee glorifying the solemn act by their presence. Although he, on the day of his corona- tion, had proclaimed a general pardon of the offences of the Swedish people, he continued to thirst for vengeance, and resolved, if possible, to suffocate in blood the rebel- lious spirit in Sweden, and extirpate, at one stroke, all the Swedish nobility, in revenge for the troubles they had excited. In his meditated schemes the king got an adviser in Didrik S/ag-hak, doctor of the canon law, whom Arcemboldus had brought along with him to Den- mark, and who had attained a very great degree of tho king's favor and esteem. He was a man of a deep and subtle reach, and being skilled in kindling discontents, he insinuated himself into the king's mind by soothing flatteries, and persuaded him to use the papal bull as an 8th Nov. instrument of vengeance. The third day after A. D., the crowning, Christian II. invited the principal ^^"^' senators and nobles to a brilliant entertainment, in the royal palace of Stockholm, and bestowed the Order of the Elephant on a great number of the German and Danish nobility, but not on a single Swede. The gates of the capital were locked, the streets beset with guards, and every citizen, under pain of death, forbidden to leave his house. Amidst the most unbounded festivity, the archbishop, Gustavus Trolle, made his entrance into the great saloon of the palace, the Pope's bull in his hand, and in the name of the Holy Church, demanded satisfaction for the usa":e he had sustained. The sen* mSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. . 207 tence of excommunication was read aloud ; the arch- bishop concluded liis crafty oration with a pathetic request that justice might be granted and the criminals punished. The king now ordered his guards to seize the whole senate and nohility and imprison them, and a tribunal was erected to pass sentence. Jens Anderson Behlenak, bishop of Odensee, being the only Dane pre- sent, now interrogated, by virtue of his office, the rest of the assembly, whether they, who had opposed the Pope in deposing the archbishop, were heretics or not ? The answer being in the affirmative, the king considered it a sentence of death, and under the pretence of extir- pating heresy and impiety, he ordered ninety-four sena- tors and a great number of the nobility and the clergy to be beheaded on the market-place of Stockholm. Chris- tian made no distinction between friends and enemies, the better to convince the people that he acted less from motives of vengeance than obedience to the Holy See. Only to signify displeasure, or show compassion, cost the life. A citizen of Stockholm was drawn along and beheaded, because he shed tears over these dreadful scenes. Among those who were the victuns to this in- fernal revenge, was Erik Vasa, father to young Gusta- vus Vasa, and nephew to the former Swedish king, Charles Canutsun. On the whole, the fortunes and the lives of individuals were entirely at the mercy of the cruel king, who himself witnessed these horrors from a window in the palace. The whole city of Stockholm UUo . HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. was a scene of blood and heart-rending calamities. To hold out yet more distinctly the appearance of having exercised, not his own vengeance but that of the Church, Christian 11. ordered the noble-minded bishop, MaWiew of Strengnccs^ and bishop Hemming Gad, of Finland, to be beheaded ; while the subtle Didrik Slaghak, who had aided him in carrying out the Slaughter of Slock- holni (generally called so), was rewarded with the arch- bishopric of Lund. Thus having, as he thought, con- solidated his supremacy in Sweden, the king left Stock- holm for Denmark. In his passage from Sweden, instances of his cruelty arc to be met with. Gibbets were erected wheresoever he passed along, and the in- human tyrant ordered even the mother and sister of Gustavus Vasa, both of whom he had long confined in prison, together with five monks of the monastery of Nydal, to be sewed up in a great sack and thrown into the sea. The abbot found means to escape out of the hands of the ruffians employed to bind him. He ran towards the river, but .was pursued and murdered by the king's order, before he could save himself by swim- ming. At Jonkoping he caused two noblemen to be scourged to death, and the Swedish historian, Lager- bring, says, " Massacres and calamity marked the way wheresoever the Danish monarch passed along." Some Swedish writers even affirm that, not content with the barbarous revenge taken on the living, the king ordered the dead body of Stcno Sture to be dug up, and divest- >„ HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. . 209 ing himself of humanity, flew like a wild beast upon the corpse, which he tore and mangled with his teeth and nails. To complete the measure of his barbarity, ho ordered the widow of Steno Sture, Christine Gyldenstar, to be brought before him, and asked her whether she chose to be burned, flayed, or buried alive ? His savage intention was, however, altered by the strong interest made in behalf of that unfortunate lady. But the despotism and cruelty of a king is no uncom- mon prelude to a revolution, which now took place under Christian II., whose cruelty forever dissolved the bonds between Denmark and Sweden, and the Union of Calmar was irreparably broken by the Swedes, who recovered their ancient independence. Young Gustavus Erickson Yasa escaped from his prison in Denmark and from Christian's emissaries, who were continually at his heels, fled disguised to Flensburgh in Schleswig, where he hired himself to some merchants, under whose pro- tection he escaped out from the Danish territories, and arrived in Liibeck, where the regency gave him a ship to convey him to Sweden. He now went to the moun- tains of Dalecarlia, where he, for some time, concealed himself, in the disguise of a workman, in the mines. He found aid and protection from the valiant inhabi- tants of Dalecarlia, to whom he opened his project and discovered his name and rank, and with a band of these hardy peasants ho repulsed the Danes and took a. d., Upsala, After being elected, at the Diet of ^^^i. 210 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Vadstena, administrator of Sweden, and two years after, at the Diet of Strengnacs, king, by the unanimous A.D., suffrages of his fellow-citizens, Gustavus Vasa 1523. made his entry into Stockholm, and the words " Saviour and Deliverer," echoed to him from every quarter. Thus Sweden was now emancipated from Demnark, and the Union of Calmar annihilated. Norway re- mained connected with Denmark till 1814, when the allied powers, by the treaty of Kiel, gave it to Sweden, as an indemnity for Finland, which Russia had taken. Grustavus Vasa reigned in peace for a long space of years, and is the founder of the celebrated House of Vasa, which has given Sweden so many excellent kings, amongst whom was the great and famous Grustavus Adolphus, who made foreign nations sensible of the weight which Sweden might have in the affairs of Europe. The slaughter of Stockholm had produced a general astonishment throughout all Europe, and had, as even two bishops had been beheaded, exasperated the Pope to such a degree, that he sent a nuncio to Copenhagen, to examine into the death of the bishops who had been massacred at Stockholm. Christian II. ..treacher- ously threw the whole blame on his friend Didrik Slaghak, who was sentenced to be beheaded and then A.D, to be burnt; which sentence, in the king's justi- 1522 fication, was executed in the market-place of HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 211 Copenhagen; after which the imperious and arbitrary king appointed his personal attendant, John Veza, arch- bishop of Lund. Christian's outrageous and cruel proceedings had pro- duced, even in the minds of the Danes, the greatest disgust toward him, and rendered his name hateful. He trampled upon all law and government ; he endeav- ored, by menaces, to extort from his uncle, Frederick, his dukedom of Schleswig, and of the archbishopric of Lund he disposed at pleasure. The number of the disalTected increased, therefore, daily ; and the Danish nobility, exasperated at his oppressions, and not expect- ing any good from him, determined to risk all, rather than tolerate so intolerable a yoke. The nobility and clergy of all Jutland rose in one general revolt, and wrote a formal sentence of deposition, which they trans- mitted to the king in Vcilc, in Jutland. Mogens a. d., Blank, chief-justice of Jutland, was entrusted ^^23. with the dangerous commission of making him ac- quainted with the resolution. He dined with the king, and, after dinner, left the decree in a glove on the win- dow. It had not lain long in that place, before the king, observing a largo scroll of parchment, ordered it to be read, and no sooner perceived the contents than ho ordered search to be made for Mogeris Munk, but that nobleman had meanwhile removed himself out of the reach of danger. The king now repaired to Copen- hagen. Although, as yet, Copenhagen, Malmo, all 212 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Norway, ami the whole peasantry and burgher class were loyal to him, he felt discouraged, and behaved like a coward, as he had reigned like a tyrant. Attended by his queen, children, and Sigbrit, the mother of his concubine, he betook himself to Holland, where he, in vain, solicited assistance from his brother-in-law, the A. D., emperor Charles V. His uncle, Frederick, duke 1^23. of Schleswig and Holstein, was now offered the throne of Denmark and Norway, which he accepted without any hesitation. Upon his return from Holland, Christian H., however, collected an army to invade Holstein and oppose his uncle, but his troops forsook him, and his general, Henry Gjoe, after an obstinate A. D., defence of eight months, had to surrender Copen- 1524. hagen to Frederick I. Nevertheless, a great part of Denmark sided yet with Christian H., and one of his most faithful adherents was the noble and brave Soren Norby, a general of consummate ability and of indefatigable activity. In Skane he collected an army of twelve thousand men, who, however, were entirely A.D., cut to pieces by Frederick's general, John 1525. Ranzau, first at Lund, and then at Brunktoft- lund, near Landscrona, and Soren Norby was, at length, obliged to leave the country and flee to Russia, where he was imprisoned by the Czar Vasilius Iwanowitch. Being at length set at liberty, he entered into military service under Charles V., and fell at the siege of Florence. HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 213 Notwithstanding all these disadvantages, Christian IL hoped and projected to regain his dominions, and a. d., went now to Norway, where he was elected in i^^i- Opslo. But here his success was of short duration.. Bishop Canute G-yldenstar arrived in Norway with troops, and Christian had to submit. Christian II. went now, with a safe-conduct, to Copenhagen, to negotiate in person with his uncle, Frederick I., but anchoring in tlie harbor of Copenhagen, he was, in spite of the warrant of security given him by the bishop, a. d., taken prisoner and carried to Sonderburg, on the i^^^. island of Alsen, in the Baltic, where he was compelled to pine for seventeen years in a gloomy tower, with no other companion than a Norwegian dwarf. Frederick I and the nobility engaged themselves, reciprocally, never to release him. First when Christian III. had ascended the thi'one, more freedom was given him ; the a.d., castle of Callundborg, in Sjelland, was granted i^^^- to him, where he, under continual inspection, lived ten years, till the beginning of the reign of Frederick II. (1559). His body was brought to the church of St. Canute, in Odensee. He left behind him two daugh- ters : Dorothea, married to the elector of Saxony, and Christina, to the duke of Lothringen. The bad use Christian II. made of his many great qualities, of which a single one might have immDrtalized another j)rince, became his ruin, and ho left a most piteous 214 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. monument of the effects of cruelty and despotism, exerted over a free-spirited and warlike people. Immediately after the downfall of Clu-istian's royalty A. D., Frederick I. ascended the throne of Denmark 1523-33. and Norway. On mounting the throne he had to sign a charter containing several new articles, and he was to be declared an enemy of the kingdoms, and deprived of the throne, in case he manifestly violated his engagements. In this charter it was determined, that bishops and archbishops should be of noble descent, and that the king should patrocinate the Romish Church, punish all Lutheran heretics, solemnly promise to show a deadly enmity to the dethroned and impri- soned king, Christian II., and declare Denmark and Norway elective kingdoms. The legislative authority was to be in the Diet, which should consist of a certain number of deputies, chosen amongst the nobility and the clergy ; but the burgessescould not be invested with any public office, or in any way be on a footing of equality with the nobility. Finally, the king could not declare war or conclude peace without the consent of the nobility ; and if the king delayed his signature to laws or ordinances, sixteen noblemen should be em- powered to supply the want of it, and sign for him. Except Copenhagen and Malmo, which still adhered to the dethroned king, and for eight months gallantly bore up against the royal troops, until all hope of assist anco was gone, both Denmark and Norway proclaimed HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 215 Frederick I. king, with the usual formalities. Besides having an able and courageous general in John Ranzau, Frederick I. was energetically assisted by Liibeck, because he had restored to that city the commercial privileges of which Cliristian 11. had deprived it. Frede- rick I. of course could not see Grustavus Vasa raised to the tlirone of Sweden but with an eye of jealousy ; he eagerly wished, from motives of ambition and interest, to see the tluree kingdoms reunited, and with that view he wrote to some of the chief nobility of Sweden. But the answer he received was not agreeable to his wifehes, the Swedes being no longer in a disposition to give ear to such hopes. " The Union of Calmar," wrote they, " had more than once proved fatal to their liberties, which they now enjoyed in the greatest felicity, under a king possessed of every quality which could engage their affection." Frederick I., comprehending that there was no hope for him in this respect, made, at Malmo, a. d., a strict alliance with Gustavus Vasa against their ^^-^' common enemy. Christian II. Notwithstanding the efforts of the dethroned king to promote the Reformation had almost proved fruitless, yet there were not wanting those who deeply felt the necessity of embracing the new religious principles, which day by day were advancing in strength in Ger- many, and thence easily propagated to the Scandinavian countries by the young students who pursued their studies at Wittemberg, and other German Universities. 2H] HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. The people's mind had grown weary of the bondage of spiritual despotism which the Popes had established, and a doctrine adulterated and tricked out with false additions, was not more satisfactory to the religious want. The fear of God consisted in external ecclesias- tical actions, and remission of sins might be had for money from the seller of indulgences. The public wor- ship was conducted in Latin, and the people were not permitted to read the Bible in the vernacular tongue. The ministerial order did not enjoy any esteem or love, and the lower ranks of the clergy made themselves des- picable by their ignorance, drunkenness, and excesses in indulging in concubinage. The higher ranks of the clergy, enjoying at ease their rich revenues, were neglectful of their duties, which very often were dis- charged not by themselves but by their vicars. Many curateships were often conferred on one curate to enlarge the revenues, the bishops even causing the curateships to be vacant through a whole series of years, in order thereby to arrogate the incomes to themselves. The avarice and extortions of the bishops were excessive almost to a proverb ; their wealth was, therefore, often exorbitant, and their power and privileges enormous. All church property was exempt from taxation, while on the other hand the laity were loaded with excessive impositions. All clergymen were exempted from crimi- nal process in the courts of law, and delivered over to the ecclesiastical tribunal, so that the Church alone took HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 217 cognizance of the crime. Different orders of lazy monks, Augustinian^ Franciscan and Dominican friars, who already during the reign of "Waldemar the Con- queror had crept into the country, rambled about and made considerable profit from the sale of indulgences, performing their mean-spirited acts with little regard to discretion or decency, and describing the value of the indulgences in such a disgusting and blasphemous style of exaggeration, that even the ignorant began to suspect Ihc worth of the remission of sins di.spensed by them ; all of which gathered into a heap, prepared the minds of the people willingly to listen to the bold attacks of Lu- ther and the other great Reformers against all these outrageous and unchristian acts. Even the nobility were in favor of the Reformation, hoping thereby to re-obtain the great property that their ancestors had bestowed upon the Church ; and the kings could not but » wish the liberal principles of the Reformation intfoduced into their countries, which would not fail to lessen the exorbitant power and influence of the bishops. All these causes were adequate to the effects attributed to them, and the Lutheran doctrine and form of worship gained, therefore, very soon a complete triumph in the three Scandinavian kingdoms, and already in the year 1'j27 the magnanimous Gustavus Vasa obtained from an assembly of the state the declaration, that the Lutheran doctrines should bo the established religion of Sweden Frederick /., who previous to his ascending the throne 218 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. had secretly embraced tlic Protestant faith, concurred with G-ustavus Yasa in the design, and although want- ing his spirit and genius, he conducted the religious affairs of Denmaric and Norway with more prudence and sagacity than was to be expected. The clergy now lost the greater part of their possessions to the crown and the nobility, and the bishops (whose titles, however, were retained in all three Scandinavian king-^ doins, Sweden even keeping the title of archbishop,) fell almost into a complete dependence upon the govern- ment, their large revenues and ecclesiastical jurisdictions being considerably retrenched and curtailed. Next to Switzerland, the Scandinavian kingdoms were the first of the European countries that embraced Lutheranism; and in Denmark, Hans Tausen, whose parents were only poor peasants, became the most im- portant instrument in spreading the Protestant faith. While a monk in the cloister of Anivorskov, in Sjel-, land, he won the prior's favor to such a degree, that he allowed Tausen to go abroad at the expense of the cloister. Luther's renown brought him to "Wittemberg, where, on hearing his preaching, he became convinced of the truth of the doctrines Luther proclaimed. No sooner had the prior heard it, than he suddenly re- called him from Wittemberg, and committed him to the custody of the abbot of the cloister. The following year he was sent to Wiborg, in Jutland, where the prior of the cloister of the ITospitalors (the Knights of St. HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 219 John) promised to keep a strict eye upon him. He was, however, permitted to preach, and interested the citizens of Wiborg so much, that they not only gave him asylum in the city, but even protected him against several attempts of the bishop, George Friis, a.d., to lay hold on his person. Frederick /., being i^2G. secretly a convert to the doctrines of Luther, and by whose protection Herman Tast already had spread tho Reformation throughout the Duchies, (1522 - 1525,) interested himself for Hans Tausen, issuing a war- rant of security for him, and licensing him to preaclr the Gospel in Wiborg. At the same time George Sa- dolin, also a hearer of Luther in Wittemberg, appeared, a mighty champion of the Reformation ; and the new doc- trine soon found advocates and adherents in other cities, particularly in Malmo, \vhere two unlearned but highly gifted and eloquent men, Claus Mortenson Tonde- binder (cooper), and Hans Spandmayer (pail-maker), assisted by the learned Franz Wormordson, rose as un- daunted proclaimers of the Reformation, and inveterate enemies of the Pope's jurisdiction and of his sellers of indulgences. But the circumstance which, of all others, most conduced to the advancement and universal dis semination of the Lutheran Reformation, was the ex- cellent translation of the New Testament, which the ex-mayor of Malmo, John Michaelson, who had accom- panied Christian H. in his exile, published in Leipzio, and wliich by foreign merchants was brought to Deu- 220 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. mark, lliis translation opened the eyes of the people t9 the papal deviations from the evangelical truth, and gave security for the perpetuation of the Reformation in the North; and now it profited nothing that the bishops forbade the use of this dangerous book, as they termed it. A mean fellow, Paul EUason, a Carmelite from the cloister of Elsenore, who had embraced Lu- theranism, but soon again changed color, and was, therefore, called Paid Vendekaabe (turncoat), rambled about in the country and preached violently against the new doctrine ; but he performed as little by his denuncia- tory sermons as the bishops by their fulminating pas- toral letters, which they dispatched to their dioceses. The difficult position of the Catholic clergy increased also very much by the dispute about tithe, which the people decidedly declined paying ; and the controversies were increasing day by day, and internal disturbances would undoubtedly have broken out, had not both the king and the nobility feared the exiled Christian II., and, therefore, moderated themselves. It came, there- fore, to a sort of agreement, when Frederick I., after A. D., great opposition, effected the publication of a 1^27. famous edict, sanctioned at the general Diet of Odensee, by which every subject of Denmark and Nor- way was declared free to adhere either to the tenets of the Church of Rome or to the doctrines of Luther • that no person should be molested on account of his religion, and that the clergy shouid be permitted to ffl&TORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 221 marry; all of wliich contributed' considerably to pro- mote the Reformation, the adherents to wliich were daUy mcreasing, both in the country and in the towns. In consequence of this decree of the Diet, all abbeys and cloisters were deserted, and celibacy in particular dis- regarded. Lutheranism was publicly preached and em- braced. At last the city of Malmo erected the standard ' of Luther, prohibited mass, idols, and the other super- stitions of the Romish Church. Also a new and more literal translation of the New Testament and the Psalms of David into the vernacular tongue, published by a canonist, Christen Pedcrscn, likewise one of the guides of the exiled king, conduced to the advancement of this important matter. Hans Tausen, who now had es- tablished the Reformation in Wiborg, was by the a. d., king called to Copenhagen to preach the new 1^29. doctrine. Finding a better spirit than Reinhardt and Carlstadt eight years before had found, he soon gained the majority of the citizens of the capital over to the new doctrine, the Reformation thus having gained a firm footing in the three most important cities : Copenhagen, Wiborg, and Malmo. The bishops excited an alarm, but could obtain nothing more than that the affairs of religion should receive farther regulation at the next general Diet. But the Diet of Augsburg, at this time assembled in Germany to try the great cause of the Reformation, and expected to result in condemning the doctrines of the 222 HISTORY OF SCANJUINAVIA. Protestants., as they were termed since the year 1529, was, hy the Catholics in Denmark, considered a favor- able opportunity to oppress their opponents. No recon- ciliation, however, of the opposing opinions being ef- fected in Augsburg, the prelates prevailed, therefore, A. D., upon the king to convoke a Diet in Copenliagen, 1530. that the new doctrines might be debated, and, as the Catholics hoped, thoroughly condemned. But the Protestants displayed great power and firmness at the Diet. They gave in their Confession of Faith, con- sisting of forty-three articles, stirred up the people by ardent sermons, and above all, inveighed bitterly against the traffic in indulgences and the worship of images. The Catholics tried in vain to refute the Protestant Confession of Faith ; but their attempt occasioned a defence in writing from the Protestants, accompanied by a vehement complaint of the bad administration and gross immorality of the clergy. The bishops now reminded the king repeatedly of his promise to defend the Catholic doctrine, but without avail. The discus- sions were carried on in the Danish language ; but the Catholics, missing thereby the help they had expected from their pleader, Dr. Stagefyhr, whom they had called in from Grcrmany, required the use of the Latin language. But this the Protestants would not grant, as they thereby would lose the important assistance which they hitherto had had from the commonalty. At length the Diet dissolved without havincr accommodated tho HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 223 differing points ; the king declaring, that he would protect both parties in the free exercise of religion, but that neither party should be allowed to seek proselytes at the expense of the other. However trifling the result of this Diet of Copenhagen may seem to be, yet it was a clear gain for the Protest- ants, whose doctrines soon began to prevail in all the cities of the kingdom, and to show the Catholic bishoj)s that the end of the mighty power, which they long had wielded, was fast approaching. But this was not pas- sing without gi'cat tumults and violence. The monks particularly, exposed to great persecution, were often so teased and vexed that they left their cloisters. In Copenliagcn, the citizens, headed by the mayor a. d., of the city, Ambrosius Bookbinder, broke, on the i^so. 27th of December, into Our Lady's church, causing great devastation, and cutting to pieces all the images of the saints ; and the Catholic clergy, were, just now, less able to make sufficient resistance. Their chief, the archbishop Aage Sparre, was not acknowledged by the Pope ; Jens Andersen Beldenak, bishop of Odensco, who, as we have seen, had been present at the slaughter of Stockholm, was, at the Diet of Copenhagen, disgraced with a mark of infamy, for having used injurious lan- guage against the king ; George Frus, bishop of Wiborg, was, for a violation of his duty, excommunicated by the Pope ; Laga Time, bishop of Roeskilde, the most undaunted champion of Catliolicism, had expired a year 224 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. before the Diet of Copenhagen, and his successor, Joachim Ronnoiv, was consecrated, upon condition that he would not impede the spreading of the Reformation in his diocese. The Catholic affairs were thus conside- rably on the decline, and the Protestant faith com- menced to get a permanent footing in Denmark and April 13 Norway. It was three years after these impor- A. D., tant events, that Frederick I., who had openly ^^^^' avowed himself a Protestant, died at Grottorp, slose by the city of Schleswig, where he frequently re- sided and lies buried. He is not mentioned by histo- rians in language of eulogy, but in general considered deficient in moral force and clear judgment. Never- theless, it is not to be denied that he conducted the religious aflairs of his kingdom with much greater prudence than liis more talented predecessor. Christian II. ; but whether he was a sincere favorer of the Refor- mation, or not, is very questionable, the more as he seems to have temporized with both parties. At all events, his religious opinions were dim and benighted. He knew the words of Christ, Mattheiv ix. 15 : " The devil departs not out of a man but by prayer and fasting." Being prompt in compliance with them, but not finding it convenient or comfortable to fast himself, the king hired seven boys to fast in his place, believing thereby to have done justice to the words of the Saviour, The Roman Catholics detest, of course, his memory, to this day, for having contributed to effect a reformation HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 225 in religion, to the utter extinction of their tyrannical superstition and spiritual power. Frederick I. left beliind him two sons, Christian and Hans, and one daughter, married to the duke Ulrick, of Schwerin. Upon the death of Frederick I. an interregnum fol- lowed of three years, accompanied by a sanguinary war. At a general Diet assembled in Copenhagen in j^^^^ 24 order to deliberate on the election of a king, the a. d., nobility would select Christian, Frederick's eldest ^^^^' son, but the clergy, entertaining fear of him who had been a hearer of Luther in Wittemberg and was in favor of the Reformation, voted for his younger brother, Hans, whom they hoped to bring up in the Catholic faith. A third party were for recalling the imprisoned king, but this faction was yet small, and partly absorbed in the two others. Not being able to agree, the election of the king was postponed to the following year, in order that the senators of Norway might be assembled, and the same Icing seated on the throne of both kinir- doms. The Catholic party now beginning to recover their courage, passed several resolutions tending to stop the spreading of the Reformation. It was determined that no priest could be appointed in any diocese without the consent of the bishop, that the mass should be re- established, and the existing monasteries and ecclesias- tical institutions continue uninjured. Hans Tausen, the most dangerous opposer of the Catholic church, was charged with offensive language against the bishops, and 226 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. sentenced to leave the diocese of Sjelland, and nowhere in the kingdoms, either verbally or in writing, to inter- fere with religious affairs. The condemnation of the universally esteemed Hans Tausen occasioned a great riot in Copenhagen, the bishop Joachim Ronnow even running the hazard of being mobbed by the exasperated citizens. Tausen, however, left Copenhagen, but Ron- now had, for fear of his own life, to permit him to return. The burgher class and the peasantry, not having yet forgotten the imprisoned king, Christian II., who so valiantly had taken their part, began, while the nobility and the clergy were at variance concerning the election of the king, to think of restoring him to the crown ; the regency of Liibeck, which hitherto had opposed him, but was now displeased with some commercial liberties granted to the Dutch, also projected the restoration of the imprisoned king, and Denmark was in the most perilous and distracted condition. Liibeck was governed by two talented men, the mayor, George Wullenveber, and the admiral, Marc Meyer, who from an obscure birth had risen to the highest dignities in Liibcclc Both of them made an alliance v/ith Ambrosius Bookbinder, Mayor of Copenhagen, and with George Miinier, mayor of Malmo, declaring their object to be to replace Chris- tian II. upon the throne, and to introduce the Reforma- tion. They complained that Clu-istian II. was confined, contrary to the faith of a treaty and to the safe-conduct HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 227 granted him by Frederick's general, Canute Gyldenstar. Upon receiving intelligence of this design, the senate renewed the alliance with Gustavus Vasa, and conclu- ded a union between Denmark and the Duchies, in order to deter their enemies from attempting the restoration of the imprisoned king, but without effect. The regency of Liibeck and the popular party appointed Count Chris- topher of Oldenburg, a relative to Christian 11. , com- 7nander-in-chief, after whom the whole war is called Grevens Feide (the War of the Count). He was a nobleman of great courage, fond of glory, of a most enterprising disposition, and deeply interested in releas- mg the imprisoned king. He landed troops in Sjelland, and by assistance of the citizens made liimself master of Copenhagen and Malmo ; all Skane, Sjelland, Fjunen, and the adjacent islands yielded within a short time, and paid their homage to Christian H., who, on hearing what was passing in his favor, exulted for joy, crying : " May be the crown can be replaced upon my head ; then once more I shall teach the nobility how to obey." The most horrible outrages were committed on the noblemen, who were filled with astonishment at the arbitrary man- ner in wliich they were treated, and with fear of the imprisoned king's reassuming the reins of government. To put a stop, if possible, to these terrible scenes, the nobility and bishops of Jutland resolved to meet for the election of a sovereign. Holstein took the same resolu- • fcion, and they assembled in a small town, called Rye^ 228 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. June 4th ^y ^^® ^^*y °^ Skanderborg, where they elected A. D., the eldest son of Frederick I., Prince Christian, ^^^^- king, and committed to him the charge of the war, and transferred to him the whole military and executive power of the crown. He immediately laid hold of the offer, ascended the throne of Denmark arid Norway, and was crowned in Horsens, Jutland, by the name of Christian III. Troops were now levied with the utmost industry and alacrity, arms provided, and all military stores furnished from the royal magazines of Jutland. Then Clu-istian III. complained to Gus- tavus Vasa, his brother-in-law, of the irregular conduct of the Liibeckcrs, in order to exhort him to enter Skane with a force sufFicient to wrest that province out of the hands of the enemy, and re-annex it to Denmark. But these measures to affright the rebelg had not the effect for which they were intended, but cemented yet more the alliance between the regency of Liibeck and the popular party, which, alarmed by the preparations of the king, transferred their arms to Jutland, which now for a while became the theatre of a bloody war. Sldjjper Clement, an adherent of the imprisoned king and of Count Christopher of Oldenburg, went to Jut- .and, where he brought the peasantry together, took the city of Aalborg, and defeated the nobility and the royal troops. Christian III., informed of it, marched imme- diately an army into North Jutland, under the command of the celebrated general Jolm Ranzaio The royal HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 229 cause was supported by all the nobility, and by a great portion of men of landed property in Jutland, and by all the members of the clergy. The first military opera- tions were favorable to the king. Rantzau took pos- session of Aalborg, where a great carnage took place ; the peasants were forced to submit, and Clement, who escaped out of the battle, was afterwards taken prisoner and beheaded. His head was fixed on a stake in the market-place, and crowned in derision with a leaden crown, on account of his insolence in defending the imprisoned king. In Skane and Halland Christian III., was aided by the noble Gustavus Vasa, who of course did not wish the cause of the imprisoned king to suc- ceed at all. Gustavus Vasa gained a complete a. d., victory at Helsingborg, in Skane, over the Count 1^35. of Oldenburg and the forces of LUbcck, and MarL Meyer was taken prisoner. About the same time the brave and undaunted John Rantzau -brought the whole island of Fjunen under subjection, in the celebrated battle of Oxebjerg (Oxen* Hill), a. d., where an old clergyman, Hans Madson, a ^^3^- beautiful model of the most exalted and viituous patriotism, arrived half naked and barefooted from the hostile camp, disclosing to Rantzau the plans of the enemy, which contributed considerably to the happy issue of the battle. A great number of soldiers and officers wer* killed or taken prisoners, and among the latter the old archbishop of Upsala, Gustavus Trolle, 230 HISTORY OP SCANDINAVIA. who again had proceeded on the stage to operate in favor of the imprisoned king. Meanwhile the royal cause had also met with great success from the military abilities of the brave old ad- miral, Peter Skram, surnamed Danmarks Vovehals, (the Desperado of Denmark), who won a glorious vic- tory at the island of Bornholm over the Liibeck fleet, and cleared the Baltic, so that John Rantzau could pass over to Sjelland and lay siege to Copenhagen, where Ambrosius Bookbinder was yet defending the cause of the imprisoned king. Also the Southern part of Norway submitted to Christian III. ; and the archbishop of Drontheim, Olaf Engelbr edit son Lunge, who in the Northern part maintained the cause of Christian 11. , had to flee from the kingdom to Holland, where he died. Thus all the schemes of the popular party beginning to prove abortive, Albrecht of Mecklenburg, who was married to a niece of the imprisoned king, was ap- pointed lieutenant-colonel to assist the chief-commander, Count Christopher. But this, however, did not alter the circumstances, which day by day turned so much ii' their disadvantage, that they soon found it necessary to solicit terms of peace. Deputies now met at Hamburg, and ordained, that hostilities should cease between Den- mark and Liibeck, and that their ancient friendship should be renewed, upon condition that the island of Bornholm should be ceded to the regency of Liibeck HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 231 for the space of fifty years. Christian III. acceded readily to tliis peace. Only Copenliagen and Malmo were yet faithful to the cause of the imprisoned king. At length George Miinter surrendered Malmo after a long siege, but Copenliagen held out constantly a whole year, until the famine, which reached such a degree that the inhabitants were reduced to such straits that dogs, cats, rats and the most loathsome animals juiy 29, were used as food, compelled Ambrosius Book- ^- ^•' binder to surrender the capital to Christian III. i^^^- Albrecht of Mecklenburg and Count Christopher of Oldenburg were forced to throw themselves at the kmg's feet to obtain pardon. A few of the most stub- born ringleaders were beheaded, but the great body ol the revolters were conciliated by an act of amnesty. The intellectual excitement occasioned by the intro- duction of the Reformation, exercised a useful influence upon the improvement of the Scandinavian literature, which, as well as all progress of literature, was highly favored by the spirit of free inquiry fostered by the Re- forjnation. In the last centuries of the Middle Ages there was less scientific activity than before ; histo- rians, as Saxo Grrammaticus, Snorro Sturleson, and Andrew Suneson, appeared no more, and the father- land's history was only told in brief chronicles and dry annals, mostly written by monks in corrupt Latin. At the foreign universities — Paris, Bologna, Cologne, and Loven — where young men pursued their studies even 232 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. after the erection of the universities of Copenhagen and Upsala, only the canon law and scholastic philoso- phy were taught. But the Reformation, rightly called the great genius of all genuine liberty, emancipated the human mind from the thraldom which ages of spiritual despotism had imposed upon it, discarded the subtleties of the schools, and sent science and the arts forth into the wide world of humanity. Only a few ecclesiastics cultivated madicine. Henry Harpestreng canon in Roeskilde, composed in the thirteenth century a remarkable medical work in Danish, yet extant. Danish writings were also very rare, everything being recorded in Latia. King Olaf, Margarethe's son, highly disliking this putting aside the mother tongue, enjoined that public documents should be issued in the Danish language ; but, however, Latin continued to prevail. German merchants and mechanics settled in almost all cities of the country ; German noblemen immigrated in multitudes from Holstein and other German countries, and except king Hans and Christian II., all the kings of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries were Germans, not so much as able to speak Danish with their subjects. Under these circumstances, the Danish language was more and more depraved ; German words and phrases crept into it, and the original phrases and forms of ex- pression disappeared. But the Reformation, that great principle of Chi'istian liberty, which restored to every mother tongue its rights, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 233 and the progress of the art of printing, which now also had become known in Scandinavia, arrested the ap- proaching dissolution of tHe Danish language. The Bible was now translated into Danish, and Danish books were published. John Snell, a traveling printer, was the very first who in Denmark printed a Latin book, published in Odensee, in the year 1482. The very first printing office was established by Got/red of Ghemen in Copenhagen, where, in the year 1495, the first Danish book was printed ahd published, by the name of The Danish Rhyme Chronicle, i. e.. The Danish History put into Rhyme ; which, during the reign of Christian I., was composed by the Abbot of Soro, Nicolaus. But none has rendered himself more eminent in regenerating the language than Christen Petersen, above mentioned, who not only during his exile published a translation of the New Testament and of the Psalms of David, but oven upon his return to Denmark continued to enrich the literature with several literary works, all excellmg in a pure and elegant style. Peter Lolle, also, who collected the heroic songs of the Middle Ages and the old Danish sayings, has distinguished himself by the purity and splendor of his style. T1}0 morality of the Middle Ages could not but suffer by the degeneracy of religion and by the increasing corruption. The scandal of the crimes committed by many of the ecclesiastics, was increased by the facility with which such as committed them obtained pardon. 234 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. A bishop, for instance, might assassinate for a small sum of money. Any clergyman might violate his vows of chastity likewise for a little money ; and it is, on the whole, easier to conceive than to describe the gross immorality which such a system introduced into society at large. The kings often had the mortification to see all their laws overthrown by insurrections of the peas- ants, goaded to madness by the oppressions of their lords. Murders, and other dreadful crimes, therefore, occurred frequently, private vengeance often supplying the impotency of the laws. Scarcely any institutions existing for the instruction of the commonalty, the greatest number of the people were growing up in the deepest ignorance. Tln-ough all classes of society gross superstition was prevailing, especially appearing in belief in witchcraft and enchant- ment. Sorceresses were tried by an ecclesiastical tri- bunal, condemned and burnt. Christian II. forbade, indeed, that .superstitious cruelty; but, however, long after his time, it continued, and even as late as 1675, two sorceresses were burnt alive in KJoge, a few miles from Copenhagen. Intemperance and gluttony, and, among the higher classes of society, an excessive luxury in dress and equipage, were characteristics of the four- teenth and fifteenth centuries. Drunkenness was here, as in other northern countries, a prevailing vice, both among the higher and lower classes, among clergy and laity. Mead and strong beer were the usual drinks to HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 235 be taken, either for quenching thirst or for medicmal purposes ; mead hefng prepared in the country itself, beer imported from Germany. Beer was taken so ex- cessively, that a man daily consumed twelve pints, and to a nun in a nunnery five hundred and four gallons were annually allotted. .Brandy, in the north of Europe, a spirit obtained from grain, was only known as a medicine ; and coffee, tea and chocolate were unknown in Scandinavia before the seventeenth century. Vege- tables were, comparatively speaking, used very little, whereas fish and meat formed the principal food, strongly seasoned with spices. Luxury in entertain- ments was very much in use ; Christian II., therefore, enacted a law that a wedding-party must not last more than two days. The extravagance of the rich nobility in dress and ornaments exceeded all bounds. Immense amounts of money were squandered away on ornaments of gold and silver, gems, dresses embroidered with pearls, silk, velvet, damask, brocade variegated with gold, and furs of ermine and sable ; even the servants of the nobility being sometimes dressed gorgeously, and their horses, on festival occasions, covered with costly cloth and ornaments of gold and silver. The general dwel- lings in the towns were plain, usually built of timber- work, and thatched, wherefore destructive conflagrations frequently happened. Panes of glass were yet, in the fifteenth century, rarS and expensive; skin and horn being, therefore, used instead of glass. The opulent 236 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. noblemen erected castles, fortified with towers, ram- parts and moats, where they lived in princely magnifi- cence. But the Reformation, rightly called the principle of equahty, compelled the nobility to renounce a great many prerogatives wliich they had liitherto exercised over the poor and ignorant population, and to use a more temporizing policy. S THIRD PERIOD. fKOM THE ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF LUTHERANISM AS THE ESTAB^ LISHED RELIGION OE DENMARK UNTIL THE INTRODUCTION OF THE ABSOLUTE SOVEREIGNTY. 153G 1660. 153G— 1596. Cttristiaii III. — Diet of Copenhagen — Charter — Bugenhagen — The Reforma- tion introduced into Iceland — Intolerance — University and School Affairs — ^Alliance with Sweden — New Division of the Duchies — Frederick II. — Conquest of Ditmarsh — Three Crowns — The Northern Seven Years' War — Daniel Ranzau — Peace concluded in Stettin — Peter Oxen — Foundation of Kronborg — The Sound Dues — Liibeck — Hamburg — Science and Arts — Henrik. Ranzau — Tytho Brahe — Christian IV. — Queen-Dowager Sophia of Mecklenburg — Guardianship — Peasantry — Nobility. The war now being at an end and Copenhagen surrendered, the king, Christian III., came to an agree- ment with the senators about abrogating the power and authority the bishops hitherto possessed, thereby facilitating the introduction of the Reformation, and completing the religious revolution. The bishops of the whole kingdom, therefore, were imprisoned, but soon again set at liberty, after, by oath, having promised neither to act nor to speak against the new doctrine. OnW Joachim. Ronnnv, bishop of Roeskilde, proying 238 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA, very refractory, was confined in prison till his death. A. D., Thereafter, in a general assembly of the states 1536. in Copenhagen, at which all the nobility and deputies of the burgher class and peasantry met to- gether, the noble king procured the suppression of the Romish worship, and the abrogation of episcopacy and the episcopal hierarchy ; the titles, however, of the bishops being retained, which more easily reconciled the clergy to it. The castles, fortresses, and vast domains of the bishops were now reunited to the crown, and the rest of their revenues applied to the itiaintenance of Lutheran ministers, the purposes of general education, and charitable institutions. From Denmark the revolution extended to Norway, where the Reformation was introduced without any opposition ; but about the same time tliis kingdom, for having, as we have seen, supported the deposed Chris- tian II., was deprived of its independence, and reduced to a Danish province ; the king of Denmark, however, continuing to call himself king of Norway, but being no more crowned in Trondhjem, only in Copenhagen, the crowning there giving validity to both kingdoms. At that important general assembly, or Diet of Copenhagen, the aristocracy lost the vicious supremacy over the pre- rogatives of the crown and the rights of the people which they had established ; the senate was no more to be composed entirely of nobles ; national assemblies should be convoked, and the elections of the kings should HISTORY OP SCANDINAVIA. 239 not alone be confined to the aristocratic order. Never- theless the nohility continued to keep a good deal of that ascendency w^hich they had too long maintained ;. and the royal power, a long time after, was restricted by charters and capitulations, which the nobility pre- scribed to the kings on their accession to the throne, the burgher class and the peasantry being very little noticed. Before closing the Diet, where the papal hierarchy in Denmark and Norway was entirely overthrown, Chris- tian III. sealed and signed a charter, containing nearly the same clauses and articles as the earlier ; yet with the exception that the subjects were not permitted to rebel, even if the king might not rule in conformity with the charter. For the rest, the power of the crown was very much limited by this charter, containing very little to support the dignity of the king, but too much to gratify the nobility and secure to it the chief powers of the state ; the whole reign of Christian III., there- fore, being a continued struggle against the encroach- ments of the aristocracy, which had taken too deep root to be eradicated at one blow. The Lutheran or Evangelical doctrine which, according to the decree of the Diet of Copenhagen, had become the established religion in Denmark and Norway, was, as we have seen, introduced without considerable oppo- sition in both kingdoms ; only in Iceland, an island in the northern part of the Atlantic ocean, noted for its vol- canic mountain, Hckia, the Catholic party fell with the 240 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. sword in their hands ; John Areson, bishop of Holum, and Ogmund, bishop of Skalholt, who withstood the introduction of the Reformation into Iceland, falUng by the stroke of an executioner ; whereafter the new doc- trine got a firm footing, and Iceland fell into complete dependence upon the Danish government, promising never to carry resistance so far as to employ the sword against the king of Denmark. Popery had now been overthrown in Scandinavia, but the Protestantism erected in its stead was for a long time just as bigoted and intolerant as the Catholic creed had been in the worst of times, several severe laws being passed against other Protestant sects, which only in a few points dissented from the established church. There was a division between the Calvinists and Lutherans, and an unhappy animosity of one party against the other, which the Form of Concord, a confession of faith that was sub- scribed on the 28th of May, 1577, had not been able to compose ; and it was in vain that some exiled Calvinists, headed by a Polish nobleman, John a Lasco, who had been cruelly persecuted in England, took refuge in Den- mark, hoping to induce the else kind-hearted king. Christian III,, to show them protection and toleration. But all in vain ; and although only disagreeing about a few points concerning the Lord's Supper, and the doc- trine of predestination, they were mercilessly banished from Denmark, and, in the midst of the steriiest winter, forced, with infants and sick women, to emigrate to HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 241 Germany. Flatterers extolled the king as the extermi- nator of heresy, but sincere and true Christians held Christ's words before him : "Be ye merciful, as your father also is merciful." In order to regulate the ecclesiastical" affairs and com- pose a liturgy according to the doctrines of the Refor- mation, Christian III. induced Luther's friend, John Bug-etiJiag'en, theological professor at Wittemberg, to come to Copenhagen. He crowned and anointed a. d., the king, inaugurated the new Protestant bishops, i^^?. and made himself highly famous by composing a liturgy and ritual conformed to the Lutheran system of refor- mation. Regarding a strict observance of the Sabbath as a safeguard of public order and virtue, and deeply con- vinced that Grod, who is the Giver of all time, never has surrendered to ordinary use this His own reserved sea- son, but appointed it for collective prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings, and considering the Sabbath Day a season when labor may wipe off its grime, Bugenhagen prevailed upon the king to enact a Sabbath law adapted to the wants of the people, the king himself promising to enforce by his own example the observance of the Lord's Day. For the rest, the meek and pious Bugen- hagen advised against persecution of those who proved themselves good and quiet subjects, whatever were their opinions on controverted points of theology ; a warning, however, very little listened to in Scandinavia. The ecclesiastical affairs having now been regulated, 242 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. and the laws having given their countenance to the established mode of worship, the king abolished the cloisters of the mendicant monks, the Dominicans and Franciscans, applying the revenues of their large estates to the maintenance of literary men, Protestant minis- ters, and school affairs, and teaching those idle, rebel- lious, and licentious friars how to submit themselves to his decision with unconditional compliance. Also, the prebends granted to the cathedral churches of Lund, Roeskilde, Ribe, Aarhuus and Wiborg, were confiscated, and applied to literary purposes, especially to the advancement of the University of Copenhagen, which, during the civil disturbances, had sunk into nothing ; Christian III., therefore, in all reason, being considered A. D., the proper founder of the University, which now 1539. from this period slowly advanced for about two centuries, till it was brought to great perfection in the age of Christian VI. He appointed a greater number of professors than before, and applied the estates of the cathedral churches to pay the salaries of the professors, and to exempt meritorious and suitably qualified young students, whose circumstances required it, from charge for tuition. The efforts of Christian II. for improving the school affairs being broken off by his banishment, it was re- served to Christian III. to give the Latin schools a better regulation by proposing more proper school-books and a better method of instruction. But it was a pity HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 243 that in these schools, of which one was erected in each commercial town, the Latin language continued, almost exclusively, to be cultivated, the other branches being neglected altogether. In this manner the Latin lan- guage was strained to the highest pitch, and a classical Latin style became the distinguishing mark of profound scholarship : an opinion which, although somewhat modi-- fied, has been maintamed in the Scandinavian countries. Of erecting country schools, no mention was made in this period. But civilization and religious enlightenment received a mighty impulse in Denmark during the sixteenth century by that translation of the Bible, which a. d., Christian III. ordered, and which PaUadius, i^^®- theological professor at the University of Copenhagen, performed in a masterly manner ; it being thus the first Danish translation of the Bible, which, hitherto, had been a book unknown to the commonalty and the burgher class. Although Christian III. had not been involved in any war since the civil war had terminated, yet the peace of the kingdom had a long time been threatened by Duke Franz of Lothringen, and Frederick, Elector of Saxony, sons-in-law of the imprisoned king, both laying claim to the throne, and both having a powerful support in the emperor, Charles V., brother-in-law of Clu-istian II. To strengthen himself against these pretenders, Christian III. ontererl into an alliance with Francis L 244 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. of France, an enemy of the emperor, and witli Gustavus Vasa of Sweden, with whom he, of late, had had some discord concerning the possession of Gulland. These contests, however, were soon composed, a strict alliance A. D., was made between Denmark and Sweden, in 1541. Bromsebro, and the plans of the two pretenders did not conduce to the desired result. Tliis alliance, so promising for the strength and harmony of the North, and affording so just expectations of a permanent peace, soon lost its effect, the Danish king assuming three crowns in his coat of arms, thereby indicating his pretensions to all three kingdoms. The inveterate jealousy anew broke out, and although the peace of Bromsebro had put an end to the open contest between the two monarchs, the hereditary animosity between the royal houses of Denmark and Sweden was not extinguished, but, after a few decennaries, broke out in a destructive seven years' war, exhausting the re- sources of both kingdoms, and at last forcing Denmark to recognize the independence of Sweden by the treaty of Stettin, The emperor, Charles V., at length withdrawing from A. D., all fellowship with his brother-in-law. Christian 15**- II., made peace with Denmark, in Spire, where Christian III. had to promise to mitigate the rigid A- ^■' imprisonment of Christian II., in the gloomy 1549. tower in Sonderburg, where he already had pined av^ay for seventeen years. He was now brought to fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 245 Kallundborg, in Sjelland, where he ended his a. d. days after he had attained his seventy-eighth i^^^- year. Christian III, was a member of the League of SmaU cald, which the Protestant princes had formed for their mutual defence, in case any of them should be attacked for the Word of Gfod's sake ; but as the war of Smalcald broke out between Charles V. and the Protestant princes, the situation of the Danish king, who had lately made peace with the emperor, became very critical. He sent, therefore, no troops to Germany, but instead, a sum of money, which yet the royal embassador wisely witliheld, the war being ended in the battle of Muhlberg; a. d., where the elector of Saxony, John Frederick, an i^^'^- intimate friend of the Danish king, was taken prisonei after a brave defence. Cluistian III. purchased for the crown the two dioceses, Ocsel and Curland ; but to avoid offending the Russian Czar, Ivan Vasilievitck, declined accepting the large city of Reval, which voluntarily offered to submit to Denmark. That division of the duchies, Sehleswig*and Holstein, which had taken place during the reign of king Hans, was again annulled, at the accession of Frederick I., to the Danish crown ; but Christian III. undertook a new division between his brethren, although the old and expert general and statesman, John Ranzau, strongly advised against this imprudent step. Adolph, obtaining the Gottorp part, became founder of the house of 246 HISTORY OF scandinavia. Holstein-Gottorp, the dukes of which so often waged war with Denmark ; Hans the Elder got the Haderslev part, and the king himself the Sonderhurg part. To the fourth brother, Frederick, was only given the dioeese of Schleswig, and later, that of Hildesheim. Owing to these divisions and parties, the affairs in Schleswig- Holstein have often taken a disastrous turn for Den- mark, and occasioned sanguinary national wars, the kings often not knowing how to keep the rebellious dukes within due bounds ; and I grieve to say, that Christian III., in many other respects so invaluable a king, by that division of the ducliies between his brethren, has sown the seeds of that spirit of resistance and discord, which, though it did not break out in his time into acts of violence, afterwards proved fatal to his successors, and became the principal cause of the violent revolutionary storms and convulsions in the years 1848, '49 and '50. The commercial industry in Denmark was roused considerably in every quarter of the country during the reign of Christian III., and not only foreign trade, but domestic manufactures made a rapid progress, Copen- hagen, Aalborg, and Kjoge, hitherto having manifested very little of the spirit of commerce, began to bo remarkably distinguished for their trade and manufac- tures ; and the international trade between Denmark and Norway was considerably increasing, tlie favorable location of Denmark and Norway at the Baltic and tho fflSTORY OF SCANDIJVAVIA. 247 North sea, giving them every advantage in mercantile respects. The herring-fishery in the Lymfjord, and the salmon in Gruden river, at Randers, were sources of riches for Denmark, as iron, copper, lead and potashes v^ere for Norway. The Hanseatic League, which had begun to decline from the year 1428, and was now fast sinking into decay, transferred to Denmark and Norway a great part of their trade, and the declension of the Hanseatic Confederacy, the unwise attempt of which to enforce monopoly proved fatal to their privileges and their power, was the commencement of the splendor of Copenhagen, that for a long series of years rivaled the most eminent commercial cities of Europe, and speedily attained to a very high degree of wealth and elegance. A general commercial intercourse began between the North and other countries, and Denmark and Norway found London, Antwerp and Amsterdam the most convenient entrepots in transmitting their productions. Christian III. encouraged, also, domestic manufactures by many excellent laws, and it became of great conse- quence for the increase and growth of commercial affairs, that he caused good money to be coined, and made weights and measures uniform for both kingdoms. It may not be improper to conclude this sketch of the reign of Christian III. with a few observations on his character and private life. During his whole reign he proved intent on projects of real utility, and distin- guished himself by rectitude of mind and conduct, by 248 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. unfeigned piety to God and love to men, and by care- fulness for the prosperity and well-being of his king- dom ; he loved the arts and sciences, and promoted them ; his habits were economical, and his manners plain and faiTiiliar ; he was a decided hater of false- hood and low flatteries, which he on talcmg the Lord's Supper strikingly exemplified. The court chaplain ad- dressed the king while kneeling before the altar : " Most high and mighty Prince, most gracious King;" but Christian, rising, reprimanded him directly, saying, " I have knelt down here as a poor sinner ; here I am neither liigh nor mighty. Don't address me in such a manner ; call me here plainly Cliristian." He exhibited himself often to his people, conversed with them, and shared in their innocent tastes and amusements. His queen, Dorothea, exercised perhaps a greater influence over him than was desirable, the king's severity against the exiled Calvinists, who had taken refuge in Den- mark, being mainly ascribed to her. Being jealous ol the great consideration and honor conferred upon the A. D., eminent financier and statesman, Peter Oxen, 1559. g}ie prevailed also with the king to banish him. On new-year's day Christian HI. died in Copenhagen, after having borne the agonies of protracted sickness with Christian patience and resignation. He is buried in the Cathedral of Roeskilde, where a splendid vaulted mar- ble repository is erected to receive the earthly remains of the kings and queens of the house of Oldenburg. HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 249 The crown of Denmarlc and Norway was now con- ferred upon his son, who was elected and crowned by the name of Frederick II., after having subscribed to a charter not very different from that of his father. Having as crown-prince always been on the best terms with the Danish and Norwegian people, his accession gave great satisfaction. He was soon crowned, and commenced his reign by liberal promises, and showed a wise policy in weakening the powers of the nobihty and reuniting the great fiefs to the crown ; the nobility, however, understanding how to turn something to theii advantage. Anxious to relieve Denmark from the ignominy it had undergone in Ditmarsh at Henwiingsted under king Hans, and at the same time desirous to subdue that rebellious little republic, the king, in conjunction with his uncles, Hans and Adolph, made the most vigorous military preparations for washing out the ig- nominy and subjugating the unmanageable inhabitants. The warlike duke, Adolph, had already often tried to influence Christian HI. to make an expedition against Ditmarsh, but this peaceable king could not be induced to take any part in the contest ; after his death, Adolph proposed to make himself master of the re- public ; but Frederick IT. being seasonably informed of it, resolved to lead the undertaking himself, and go in front of his army. War was declared, of which the object and prize was the sovereignty of Ditmarsh. 250 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Though alarmed at the prospect of their destruction, the vaHant Ditmarshians would listen to neither reasons nor suggestions, but with desperate bravery defended A. D., their liberty against the superior royal army, ■ i^co. headed by the old John Ranzau. After a most heroic resistance at Heide, where women fought as well as men, they were forced to succumb to overwhelming numbers, and with white staffs in their hands to implore the king's mercy ; after which peace was soon concluded on terms advantageous to the king and the dukes, who now divided the country between themselves. The tal- ented historian. Professor Molbech, of Copenhagen, has eloquently described and particularized that heroic de- fence of the little people, who had determined either to conquer or to die ; and he has properly compared their heroism with that of the immortal three hundred, who at Thermopylae, under Leonidas, gloriously fell, op- posing the countless hosts of Xerxes. A marble column, as we know, was erected in honor of Leonidas and his brave Lacedaemonians, but no monument has pointed out to the traveler the spot where the heroic band of the Ditmarshians fell. About the same time as the war against Ditmarsh was ended, A. D., 1560, the noble-minded G-ustavus Erikson Vasa, of Sweden, died, sixty-four years of age, having established Sweden's prosperity by wise laws, and founded the hereditary succession of the crown, which afterwards was extended to females. His son, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA, 251 the passionate, cruel, and at last almost insane Erik XIV., ascended the throne, during whose reign a. d., the horrible Danish Seven Yearns War broke i5C3-7o. out. A dispute about the use of the tliree crowns in the Danish coat of arms was the main motive of the war ; to which may be added, that the Swedish king would usurp feudal rights over the dioceses of Oesel and Curland, which the Danish king, Frederick II., had re-- signed to his brother, Magnus, who in return renounced all claim to the duchies. Besides that, Erik XIV. had personally offended Magnus. The Seven Year's a. d., War now breaking out between Denmark and ^^es. Sweden, was waged both on land and sea. At sea the Danes were led by the great sea heroes, Peter Skram, Herluf Trolle, and Otto Rud ; but the first one being ninety years of age, soon resigned the staff of command. In a naval engagement at Oeland the Danes, indeed, cap- tured the Swedish admiral's ship, called the Matchless, having three benches of oars, an equipment of 1,800 ma- rines and 120 pieces of ordnance, but Herluf Trolle was soon after mortally wounded on the Pomeranian coast, and Otto Rud was made prisoner in a battle by Bornholm, and carried to Sweden, where the enraged and cruel king, Erik XIV., would have killed him with his sword, had not Otto Hud undauntedly addressed him, saying : " Be not wholly guided by your passionate temper, but remember, I pray your royal Majesty, what you owe to a warrior, who has discharged his duty to his 252 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. king and fatherland." Afterwards the Danish fleet was destroyed by a violent hurricane, not far from G-ulland. In consequence of all these misfortunes, the Swedes were, beyond doubt, superior to the Danes at sea; The land force performed nothing as long as it was conducted by the inefficient general. Count Gilnthcr of Schwarzburg ; the command was therefore given to Otto Krumpen, who, forty years before, during the reign of Christian II., had conquered Stockholm, but on account of old age he soon retired to private life, where- upon the chief command was entrusted to the brave and A. D., magnanimous Dmiiel Ranzau, who immortalized 1565. iiig name in the battle of Svarteraa, in Sweden, where he, with five thousand Danes, totally defeated the Swedish army, consisting of twenty-five thousand well disciplined soldiers. Notwithstanding this pro- digious inequality, Daniel Ranzau resolved to indulge the ardor of his few troops, but before commencing the battle he tried to inspire them with still more courage, by addressing them as follows : " Soldiers ! The enemy, whose cruel hands are reeking with the blood of your brethren, is impending over your heads. You must either battle as heroes or fight as poltroons. On the one hand is honor and a clear conscience ; on the other, in- famy and remorse. It concerns your king and your fatherland. Therefore, join together in the bravest defence, keep your eyes undauntedly fixed on the HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 253 enemy, and have a watch upon all his evolutions. In me you will find both the soldier and the general. I shall conduct myself in such a manner that I may be accountable for my conduct, here to my king, and m heaven to my Grod, Now, soldiers, forward ; let the ememy see the white of your eyes ; rush straightway on him. The Lord of Hosts will be with us !" The Danish soldiers, animated by these words, fought like lions, and gained a complete victory ; and the celebrated Swedish historian. Dr. G-ejer, says, that the Danish infantry wrought miracles. Within three hours four thousand Swedish bodies covered the battle-field. Having thus triumphed over that great superiority, Daniel Ranzau, together with Franzis Brockenhuus, another famous Danish commander, made ai^ inroad into Smaland, a province of Sweden ; and, having passed into the interior of the country, he defeated, after sanguinary engagements, two Swedish armies ; where- after both those generals ''undertook a most difficult retreat, in the heart of the winter, tln'ough regions filled with mountains, forests, and hollows ; a retreat often compared by historians with that of the Ten Thousand from Cunaxa to Colchis, on the Euxine, and thence along the Euxine to the Hellespont, about the year 400 B. C. Unfortunately for Denmark, both Daniel Ranzau and Francis Brockenhuus fell at the close of the war in the siege of Varberg, in the province of Hal- a. d.. land, in Sweden; but the successful issue of the i^eg. 254 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. war was chiefly owing to tlieir skillful tactics. Erik XIV., of Sweden, having reigned very imprudently and cruelly, and even having with his own hand murdered the young Niels Sture, a grandson of Steno Sture the Younger, before mentioned, and having caused all the nobles to tremble in anticipation of a similar fate, was placed in confinement by his brothers, John and Charles, and sentenced to suffer death. The only favor shown him was to choose the manner of it, and he chose A. D., to empty the cup of poison. On his confinement i^'^'^- John III. had ascended the Swedish throne in the year 1569. He wished to make peace with Den- mark, and after one year of negotiations the seven years' A. D., war ended in the peace of Stettin. Sweden had ^^'^^ ^o pay down to Denmark one hundred and fifty thousand rixdollars ; each kingdom should be entitled to use three crowns in its coat-of-arms, and the preten- sions which both kingdoms, since the Union of Calmar had been irreparably broken, had still mutually made to each other, should cease : Denmark recognizing the inde- pendence of Sweden, and Sweden, in return, disclaim- ing every pretension to Norway, Skane, Halland, Ble- king, and the island of Grulland. The happy issue of the war was owing, in a great measure, to the wisdom, firmness, and prudence of the skillful statesman, Peter Oxen, who had been recalled. from his exile, and now, by his judicious management of finances and taxes, procured means of defraying the HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 255 great charges of the war. He also made himself well known by introducing several fruit trees, as also the carp, the pike, and the craw-fish. The little sconce or fortification called Kronen, at Earsound, (the small Sound between Denmark and Swe- den), having proved insufficient to command the naviga- tion through the Sound, Frederic 11. built the strong fortress called Kronbor^, close by the city of Elsenore. The origin of the tax known as the Sound Dues of Ear- sound, goes back upwards of six hundred years, and is founded in that ascendency which the kings of J)enmark, from time out of mind, have exercised over the narrow and small sounds and belts streaming through their lands ; an ascendency which the principal maritime powers, through a series of treaties, have acknowledged, and the tolls levied by the Danish Government on all ships passing through the Sound, were considered an equitable compensation for the expenses which Denmark incurred in the erection and maintenance of light-houses, buoys, and landmarks, to protect the navigation of the different sounds ; and this compensation has been paid to Denmark by the several nations interested, according to a graduated scale, but always, however, considered a thorn in the side of the commercial nations of Europe. During the reign of king Hans it was decided, by a commercial treaty made with England, that the ships only in cases of utmost nccrssity conl.l pass through the Danish sounds and lelts, iivA sliould then pay tolls in 256 fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Nyborg, situated on the large belt. From the time of Christian II. the sound dues were paid down in pure eilver, wliile in earlier times goods were taken. The enhancing of the Sound Dues in the following age occasioned many complaints, and as Frederick 11. raised it considerably, the Liibeckers made a complaint to the Grerman emperor, which, however, resulted in its enhancement particularly for the Liibeckers, who had to submit, their political influence being now almost undone. But Hamburg commencing again to occupy an influential rank amongst the commercial towns, had already, during the reign of Christian III., arrogated a right, called the compulsive right, in pursuance of which Hamburg would compel the Holsteinish towns situated on the Elbe to carry their grain and other merchandises to this city. But Frederic II. forced Hamburg to give up that usurped right, and pay ten thousand rixdollars, and afterwards one hundred thousand rixdollars. Yet older than the sound dues at Elsenore is the Stade toll levied by tlie Hanoverian G-overnment on all ships passing up the river Elbe, Stade is a small town situ ated on the Elbe. It originally belonged to the king of Sweden, but was subsequently seized by Denmark and sold to the elector of Hanover (George I. of England) in 1715. In the time of Conrad IL, emperor of Germany (1040), permission was given to the archbishop of Ham- burg to establish a market. in Stade, and to levy a tax on all goods offered for sale there, with the understand- HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 257 ing that the revenue of the tax should be devoted to the use of the Roman Catholic Church in Hamhurg. But the toll thus established as a market tax for religious purposes, has been enforced by the successive owners of Stade down to the present day, and has been converted into a transit duty on all vessels bound for the iarge cities of Hamburg and Altona, which yields the king- dom of Hanover an enormous annual income, for which it returns no compensation of any sort. But Hanover's pretended right to exact a tax for the navigation of the Elbe, is not entitled even to the consideration extended to Denmark ; because Hanover does not contribute a single dollar towards keeping the river in a navigable condition, or maintaining light-houses and buoys, the free city of Hamburg having for centuries borne all such expenses. The fatal division of the two southern duchies of Denmark, was continued under Frederick H., he granting to his brother, Hans the Younger, who a. d., became the founder of the Sonderburg lineage, i^^*- the counties of Sonderburg, Nordburg, and Aro, a small island in the Baltic. Upon the death of this Hans the Younger, this house was divided even into four others : Sonderbiirg, Nordburg, Ploen and Glucksburg ; the first of which was afterwards divided into five new lines, all, however, now extinct, with the exception of the Sonderburg (Augustenburg), and the Glucksburg (Beck), the possessions of the extinct lineages sucoes- 258 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. sively being reunited to the crown. Nevertheless, Hans the Younger and his successors took no share in ruling the duchies, but were only considered proprietors of the allodial estates. The protracted disputes between the king and his uncles, concerning the enfeoffment A. ©., of Schleswig, were ended at an agreement in i^'^^- Odensee, after which the dukes, Adolph and Hans the Elder, took the oath of allegiance, thirty-six years after they had received their fiefs. Upon the death of Hans the Elder, his possessions were, after some variance, divided between the king himself and Adolph : A. D., Hans the Younger obtained nothing but, in com- 1580. pensation, some scattered possessions of the royal part of the duchies. It is easy to see of what vast detriment this division was to the solid interests of the Danish body. Frederick II. was, like his father, liberally disposed to encourage science and art, and, by his own example, to promote a fashionable relish for literary productions. He founded a cloister., also called the Community^ a massive building, where a hundred students received free house and board ; and in Soro, a town forty English mile§ from Copenhagen, he established an academy for thirty children of noble descent and for thirty descended from the burgher class. The Academy of Herlufsliolm, the environs of which are celebrated for their beauty, was founded by the great sea hero, Hcrluf Trollc, who liberally spent all his great riches HISTOKY OF SCANDINAVIA. 259 to establish this yet celebrated institution. At this time lived also several men eminent in the various departments of literature, sciences, and the arts ; as Henry Ranzau, Tycho Brake, Niels Hemmingson and Anders Sorenson Vedel, the latter of whom has deserved well by an excellent translation of the Latin original of Saxo Grammaticus. Henrik Ranzau, surnamed the Learned, a son of the celebrated com- mander, John Ranzau, rendered himself known, both by his extensive learning and immense riches, which he applied to promote and encourage science and the arts, *and to bring about undertakings of general usefulness. The great astronomer, Tycho Brahe, has gained the most unlimited reputation abroad, his name being known to the whole civilized world. In the thirteenth year of his age he entered the University of Copenhagen, and after there having passed his examination highly satisfactorily to his examiners, whose attention he at- tracted, particularly by his deep knowledge m the classics and mathematics, he visited several foreign Universities. Upon his return, the king, Frederic II., presented him with Hiven, a beautiful little rock-island, in the sound between Denmark and Sweden, where Tycho Brahe erected a castle named Uraniaburg, and an observatory called Stjerneburg (star-burg). He occu- pied these for twenty-one years in profound studies concerning the motions of the planets and the form of the heavens. This great man, whose genius far out- 200 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. shone all who had gone before him in the path of astronomy, so as not to leave to posterity the possibility of eclipsing his fame, discovered that the planets moved in a circular orbit round the sun ; and he discovered, likewise, the analogy between the distances of the several planets from the sun and their periodical revo- lutions, thus paving the way for the immortal Newton. He not only influenced his contemporaries by astro- nomical works, but instructed, also, many young men; and he enjoyed so high a reputation, that even foreign potentates visited him on his astronomical island, amongst others, James VI. of Scotland, who had come to Denmark to celebrate his marriage with princess Anna, daughter of Frederick II. The Scottish kijig requested Tycho Brahe to ask a favor of him, and Tycho begged two English dogs, which became the innocent cause of his ruin. The lord high chancellor, Christopher Walkendorph, visiting him, the dogs, lying at the door, barked at the chancellor, who kicked them. Tycho Brahe, in general easily provoked, was so exasperated, that he severely rebuked Walken- dorph, who, greatly offended by this harsh language, tried to disgrace him with the young king. Christian IV. At Walkendorph's request, the king sent Thomas Finche, professor of mathematics at the University of Copenhagen, to Hwen, to examine Brahe's astronomical instruments. The Professor, jealous of all the honor and esteem conferred upon Brahe, declared that they mSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 261 were too expensive and superfluous ; all which mortified the latter so much as to make him weary of his father- land, which he left in the month of April, 1597. He now repaired to Bohemia, where the emperor, Rudolph II., highly instructed in learning and science, cordially received him, and gave him a large yearly salary, and a palace called Benach, close by Prague, where he lived till his death, 1601. His cotemporary, the great as- tronomer, John Kepler, lodged in Brahe's house in Benach, both applying themselves to the deepest astro- nomical speculations. The emperor caused him to be buried with great pomp, in the principal church of Prague, called Church am Thcin, where a marble monument is erected, on which his image is engraven, as also his usual motto : " No?i videri, sed esse.^^ Dr. lessen delivered the funeral sermon, explaining in classical Latin, how his great genius had proceeded, step by step, from the simplest principles to the most sublime conclusions. The emperor, Rudolph XL, bought his astronomical instruments. Notwithstanding his high genius and deep erudition, he wanted very much of that which is consistent with real greatness of soul. He was, for instance, very superstitious, considering certain days of the year pregnant with misfortune; wherefore it has become a proverb in the Scandinavian countries, when an unhappy accident happens, " This day is a Tycho Brahe's day." Nie/s Hemminsrsofi. (Hemmingius), one, for his aga, 262 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. of the most learned and talented divines, renowned, both in his fatherland and foreign lands, met with the same bitter fate, with the same disappointments and neglect of merit, as Tycho Brahe. Suspected of being inclmed to adopt the Calvinistic meaning about the Lord's Supper in the sense of " This represents my body," and of not asserting, as Luther, the bodily presence of Christ in the Sacrament, and arraigned by August, elector of Saxony, and brother-in-law to the Danish king Frederic II., for this crime, the generous and learned Niels Hemmingson was suddenly, in the sixty-third year of his age, without proof and passing of any sentence, deposed from his professorship at the university, it being the reward with which Denmark, both now and afterwards, has often distinguished lite- rary genius. • Upon the whole, intolerance was a prominent feature of this period. The Form of Concord [Formula Con- cordia:), a book in which the Lutheran doctrines, to- gether with some new subtle additions, were explained, which James Andrea, professor at the University in Tiibingen, "Wirtemberg, tried to introduce into Denmark, was not only not introduced, but the king himself, with his own royal hand throwing a copy of that book into the fire, even commanded that clergymen, in whose houses it was found, should be deposed from the ministry, and booksellers attempting to sell it should suffer death without mercy. Already Christian III. had passed a law HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 263 forbidding any foreigner to settle in the country before he was examined in the Creed, and Frederick II. issued twenty-five articles, which every foreigner intending to settle in Denmarlc should affirm hy oath ; whosoever might decline doing so, had to leave the country within three days, and for apostacy capital punishment was to be inflicted. Frederick 11. was married to Soj)hia of Mecklenhuro-^ a daughter of Ulrich of Schwerin ; a wise, pious, and intelligent queen, by whom he became father of the famous king of Denmark, Christian V^* He died in Copenhagen, fifty-three years of age, his son a.d., Cliiistian yet being a minor, only ten years of i^^^- age. Upon the whole, Frederick II. ruled his kingdoms with justice, vigor, and vigilance. In his private life he was frugal without avarice, enterprising without teme- rity, and of an active and pious temper. The king drawing his last breath, and the court physician who came to feel his pulse remarking, " The beating of thf? pulse is weak," he answered, " Be it as it may, but we know the mercy of Grod shall not fail ;" and when he had said this he fell asleep. But it was his misfortune, that M'ith his many good qualities, and a large share of mental endowments, he wanted that toleration towards other religious denominations, which should have taught liim moderation ; and it was his misfortune, too, that in his latter days he indulged in the frequent use o* strong spirituous liquors, which abridged his life ano undermined his naturally healthy constitution. * And of the Princess Anr.ii, in Danish Anc, the Queen of James I. of England, and the mother of the much lamented Ohnrlcs I Stun it. See Live.H of Queens of E'ngUmd, by Asnet; Htrirkland. 2G4 UlSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Christiari IV. now mounted the throne, with the en- tire approbation and even affection of liis subjects ; but, being a minor, a guardianship was appointed, consisting of Niels Kaas, counsellor of state, Pete?' Munk, admi- ral, Christopher Walkendorph, superintendent of finance, and baron George Rosenkra?iz, lord high chancellor ; all ruling the kingdoms carefully, and taking the utmost interest in educating the young king, and inspiring him with good and firm principles. He was not only taught Latin, G-erman, French, Italian, and Spanish, but also mathematics, in which he made great proficiency. EaTly manifesting a great propensity to naval affairs, he exercised himself in them on Lake Skander- burg, in Jutland, where a ship was built for that pur- pose ; thu<: in his youthful years acquiring no little insight into the science of naval alTairs. He wa^ often charged, under his minority, to consider and make answer to embassies, and give audience to the foreign officers who came to Denmark ; and he often sat in council to profit by what passed. After having attained the legal age prescribed by the Danish law (eighteen), A. D., C//;•^s^^a;^ 7F. assumed the government ; the old, 1596. dignified counsellor of state, Niels Kaas, address- ing him in the following soul-moving words : " By vir- tue of my office, I hereby deliver to your Majesty the key to that vault, where the royal crown, the imperial globe, and the golden sceptre have been preserved since the death of your royal father of glorion<5 memory. Let HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 265 the crown never fall from your head, grasp the glohe with genius and circumspection, wield the sceptre with wisdom and justice, and impair no man's well won privileges. May our God, the King of kings, and the Lord of lords enlighten you, and fill you with wisdom to promote the welfare of your two kingdoms, and may you never forget the great account you have to make in the last day. May your ]\[ajesty be crowned abundantly with all the blessings of this life I" Christian IV. now commenced his reign, after liavmg sealed and subscribed a charter correspondmg altogether with that of his father, and has distinguished liimself among the sovereigns of the North by the superiority of liis talents, and the zeal that he showed in reforming the different branches of the administration. He is often compared by histo- rians with his cotemporary, the magnanimous Grustavus Adolphus, who raised Sweden to the summit of its great- ness, and whose very name has awakened in generous hearts the liveliest emotions of respect and admii-ation. Clu-istian IV. was a remarkable linguist, illustrious commander, and an indomitable, fearless soldier ; but whether he was, as G-ustavus Adolphus, an exemplary Christian, we are permitted to entertain some doubts ; and when, therefore, a Danish historian, Frederick Sne- dorph, says : " I boldly, in every respect, compare him with Gustavus Adolphus," we believe he asserts too much. After having assumed the government himself, he married the Prussian princess, Anna Catharina, 266 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. whereafter his mother, .the noble-minded queen-dowager Sophia, repaired to Nykjohing palace, on the island of Falster, with which the king, her son, had presented ner, and where she lived in the exercise of secret charity till her death, in 1631. II. 159G— IGGO. Christian IV. — Care and interest for Norway — Variance with Sweden — Calmar War — Peace at Knarod — lie encourages Science and the Arts — Commer- cial Affairs — Discoveries — Regulation of the Post Affairs — Manufactures- Buildings — Participation in the Thirty Years' War — Battle by Lutter, near the Barenberg — Peace of Liibcck — Dissatisfaction amongst the Peasantry and Burgher Class with the Aristocracy — Dispute with Hamburg — Sound Dues at Elsenore — War with Sweden — Inroad of the Swedish General, Torstenson — Battle at Colberg — Peace of Bromsebro — Frederick III. — Election of King — The Charter — Alliance with Holland — Corfitz Ulfeldt — Rupture with Sweden — Peace of Roeskildc — Renewal of the War — Siege of Copenhagen — Admiral Opdam — Battle at Nyborg — Peace of Copenhagen. After having taken his seat at the helm of govern- ment. Christian IV. commenced to act with great dili- gence and vigor, paying a particular attention to the many complaints that in Norway had heen put up against the oppressive treatment of the royal bailiffs, who, when found guilty, were punished and deposed. Upon the whole, there was a prepossession of mind about him in favor of this kingdom, which he during his reign visited hfty times. Under the title of Cap- a. d., tain, he sailed straight to Kola, in Russia, and ^^^^- HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 267 at Vdrdo ran the risk even of his life, his ship run- ning aground and losing the keel ; hut he succeeded in getting off, without receiving any injury. Sweden for some time having disagreed with Denmark concerning the northern hounds of Norway, Christian IV., for getting an exact knowledge about this important matter, sailed himself by North Cape and along the coast of Finn- mark, where the Norwegian, Swedish, and Russian borders are adjoining to each other. The misunder- standing increased, when Charles IX., a son of Gus- tavus Erikson Vasa, having received the Swedish crown, w^hich he had long been striving for, assumed the title, " King of the Norwegian Laplanders," and even levied taxes in Finnmark, and posted placards on the custom- house of Elsenore, forbidding the Danish vessels to trade in Lifland and Curland. The dignity of the Danish crown being hereby highly offended, a. d., Christian IV. declared war against Sweden, and i^^^ marched a powerful army against the strong fortress, Calmar, which after a terrible siege of three months had to surrender, although the old and brave Swedish king, Charles IX., spared no labor, and even hazarded his own person, in rescuing this principal Swedish place of arms. The taking of Calmar, which has given tliis war the name of the Calmar War, exasperated the old Charles IX. to such a degree, that he wrote a very unpolite letter to Christian IV., in which he even challenged the Danish king to fight a duel. In reply to 268 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. this letter, Christian told him, that it would be much better for liim, being now so far advanced in years, to sit like an old woman behind a warm stove, than to risk a blow with a vigorous man, even abusing him in calling him a crafty old knave. Shortly after, October 30th, 1611, died Charles IX., his son, the great Gus- tavus Adolphus now assuming the Swedish government on the 26th of December, 1611. Quitting now the council board for the scene of battle, Gustavus Adolphus stormed Christianopel, the principal depot of arms in Skane, and re-conquered Oeland. Nevertheless, the war continued successful for Denmark, Christian IV. taking by storm the Swedish fortresses, Guldhorg and Elfsborg, and demolishing the large city, Gothenhoi'g, which Charles IX. had erected ; also at sea the Danes had the preponderancy in this war. The king of Swe- den had now levied 1,400 Scottish soldiers, as auxiliary troops, who, headed by Colonel Sinclair, from Caithness- shire, Scotland, landed in Norway, devastating whereso- ever they went, and rushing forth like madmen. The Norwegian peasants, highly provoked at their plunder- ings and cruelties, took up whatsoever arms they could lay hold of, boldly encountering the Colonel and his ^ J) Scotsmen in GuldbrandsdaJen (the Guldbrand 1612. valley), in a mountainous pass called Kringelen, south of the mountain Dovrcfeld, where the Scottish chief and his 1,400 soldiers, save two, in the most horrible massacre were formally butchered. The one went home to Scotland to tell his countrymen of the desperate fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 269 bravery with which the people of the North had de- fended their national rights ; the other remained in Norway, where he founded a glass furnace. In memory of that heroic exploit, a monument has been erected with the following plain inscription : " Here was Colo- nel Sinclair shot on the 26th of August, 1612." A Norse ballad, composed by the Norwegian poet Storm, has immortalized this ill-fated Sinclair expedi- tion, and it still resounds up to this very day from the lips of the peasants throughout old Norway, of which a free English translation, from the pen of a poet whose name I have not been able to ascertain, well deserves to be quoted : "To Norway Sinclair stcercd.his course Across the salt sea-wave, But in Ki'ingelen's mountain-pass lie found an early grave. To fight for Swedish gold he sailed, He and his hireling band : Help, God ! and nerve the peasant's arm To wield the patriot brand. 'Neath the pale moon, the billowy surge Around the tall ship broke, When from the deep the mermaid rose, And thus to Sinclair spoke : — ' Speed back, speed back, thou Scottish yoaifa. My warning do not spui-n ; For if thou touchest Norway's strand, Thou never shalt return.' ' Vile wretch,' the angry chief replied, ' Thou ever bodest ill. If I but had thee in my power, Thy heart's blood I would spill.' ' Three days he sailed the stormy sea ; The fourth day saw him laud, 270 iiistohy of Scandinavia. With twice seven hundred stahvart men, Equipped with spear and brand. He flung his banner to the breeze, Laid many a hamlet low, And marked his route with blood and spoiu- The mercenary foe. The warriors of the land are far, They and their kingly lord ; But shall her peasant sons not rise, And draw the avenging sword ? On rock and hill the beacons blazed, ' Up, Norsemen !' was the cry ; And at the summons, mustering strong. They met, to do or die. In ambush close, 'mong Gulbrand's cliflfs, Five hundred rifles lay ; The vulture smelt the game afar, And hastened to his prey. The fated band are in the pass ; Up rose the peasants round, And poured on them a storm of fire, When Sinclair bit the ground. Woe to his hapless followers now ! By hundreds dropping fast, — They fell as thick as autumn leaves Before the polar blast. In slaughtered heaps their bodies lay By Lougen's darksome flood. While the ravens from a thousand hilla Gorged in the feast of blood. They lay unburied where they fell, 4. sad and ghastly show, Until the storm-king pity took, And shrouded them in snow. Oh ! many a maid and mother wept, And father's cheek grew pale, When from the two survivors' lij)3 Was hear.d the startling tale. A monument yet marks the spot. Which points to Sinclair's bier. And tells how fourteen hundred men Sunk in that pass of fear." HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 271 As commonly stated and generally believed, the num- ber of Sinclair's men was 1,400. However, this is most likely an exaggeration, as, from the best historic sources, the real number was only 900. The learned Scotsman Mr. Laing, so well versed in Northern antiquities, even thinks that the number did not exceed 150 men. Upon the intelligence of that frightful defeat, Gustavus a.d., Adolphus made peace with Denmark in Knccrod, '^^^'^■ in the province of Halland, on the following terms, so advantageous for Denmark : both kingdoms were per- mitted to use tliree crowds in their coat of arms ; the king of Sweden was not to call himself king of the Laplanders, nor to exact tribute in the Norwegian Finn- mark ; Sweden had to pay to Denmark one million of rix-dollars. But Christian IV. was not so successful in the Thirty Year's War, during which he undertook the defence of the Protestant party against the German emperor Ferdinand of Steiermark, who was a zealous Catholic ; and the Protestants of Bohemia, who had suffered under the government of his predecessor, Matthias, were appre- hensive of still greater restraint under Ferdinand. The religious dissensions continued daily to increase in ac- rimony and animosity, and at length the Catholic and Protestant leagues plunged Grermany into a civil war of thirty year's continuance (1618-1648), the horrors of which make the very flesh quiver. The Bohemians de- posed Ferdinand II., and chose Frederick V., of Pfalz, 272 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. the elector Palatine, son-in-law of the English king, James L, for their sovereign ; hut Frederick soon lost the hattle of White Hill, near Prague, 7th November, 1620, where the imperialists determined the fate of Pro- testantism in Bohemia, the emperor compelling Fred- erick to seek refuge in Holland, and banishing the ^Protestant clergy from the country. Thirty thousand families were driven out, and had to flee to the Pro- testant states of Saxony and Brandenburg,. The Pro- testant party now seeing its future shrouded in the darkest gloom of an impending tempest, and almost overpowered by the imperialists, formed a new Pro- testant union, of which Christian IV. was chosen the head, and the war burst forth with fresh violence. Eng- land, Holland and France also encouraged the gallant Danish king to defend the oppressed Protestants, promis- ing him support of money and troops. Relying on these promises, and actuated by compassion toward the un- A.D., happy Protestants, the Danish king was made 1*525. captain-general of Lower Saxony, and crossed the Elbe with an army of 25,000 men, joined by 7,000 Saxons ; but, after some successes, the king fell head- long with his horse from the high ramparts of the fortress, Hameln, in Hanover, which accident for a time disabled him from leading his army, and shortly after he A. D., was defeated by the imperial general, Tilly, near 1626. Lutter-am-Barenberg, (August 26, 1626,) with the loss of 4,000 men, the imperial general being far HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 273 superior to his Protestant adversaries. Nevertheless it deserves to be remarked, that the Danish army fought with the most undaunted bravery, the king himself setting forth a glorious example. By the two imperial commanders, Tilly and Wallenstein, the Danes were in the following year driven from Germany, and the imperial troops, consisting of 100,000 men, overflowed the whole of Holstein, Schleswig and Jutland, so that Cliristian IV., threatened with the loss of his own a. d., dominions, was forced to purchase peace in Lti- 1*^29. beck by renouncing all right to interfere in the affairs of Germany, and on the condition of abandoning his German allies, especially the Duke of Mecklenburg. Furthermore, Christian had to resign his pretensions to the dioceses of Bremen, Verden, and Schwerin, which he had acquired for his sons, Frederick and Ulrik. Thus ended the Danish period of the thirty years' war, which undoubtedly would have been more successful for the brave Danish king had he been assisted by his allies according to their promise ; but the Duke of Liineburg treacherously fell off, and Charles /., of Eng- land, who in 1625 had ascended the British throne, was almost immediately involved in a contest with his parliament, which diverted his attention from foreign affairs. But to Gnstavus Adolphus, king of Sweden, perhaps the greatest and noblest warrior the world has seen, often called the Lion of the North and the buU wark of the Prated ant faith — to him it was reserved to 274 ' HISTORY OP SCANDINAVIA. be the deliverer of the Protestants. He taught the haughty emperor, whose general, "Wallenstein, in deri- sion called him the Snow-King, that the snow does not easily thaw in the North, defeating his mighty armies m almost every engagement, until at Liitzen, a small town of the present Prussian Saxony, on the 16th of November, 1632, he was shot through the left arm, body and head, and wounded in four other places before he died. But even in death he conquered, and for about sixteen years after, his spirit led his country's hosts to victory, until the emperor, tired of an unsuccessful war, concluded the remarkable peace of Westphalia, in the year 1648, the religious dissensions being finally put an end to. The three religions, the Catholic, the Lutheran, and the Reformed, were equally established. Although the terms of peace v/ere not severe for Den- mark, yet this war of four years' continuance, made with great efforts and enormous expenses, had desolated the Danish countries and destroyed some of the most opu- lent and flourishing towns. Industry was at a stand, agriculture neglected, commerce and manufactures to- tally annihilated. Hamburg had arrogated to itself a right called Jus restringencU ; that is, that all the inhabi- tants along the Elbe should carry their merchandises to Hamburg and there sell them for such a price as the Hamburg merchants thought proper to prescribe. To this despotic act the vigilant and active king Christian sought to put a stop by erecting the fortress Glilckstadi, HISTORY OK SCANDINAVIA. 275 wliere he levied toll on all the vessels which trafficked with Hamburg, which now, after its fleet was a.d., defeated on the Elbe, had to submit, and even ^^^^ pay down an indemnity of two hundred and eighty thousand rix-dollars. Denmark, at length, gradually recovering from her wounds and misfortunes, became again a powerful and wealthy nation, so much the more as Christian IV., for remedying the evils of the war and the scarcity of money, through several years had raised the sound dues at Elsenore. But Holland and Sweden, highly displeased with this, watched eagerly 'for a proper opportunity to deprive Denmark of the Eastern Sound provinces, and a most formidable combination seemed now ready to overwhelm Christian lY., under wliich a monarch of less spirit and ability than himself must certainly have succumbed at once. Axel Oxenstjern^ chancellor of the kingdom of Sweden, and during the minority of queen Christina, daughter of Gustavus Adolphus, commissioned governor of the Swedish realm, a statesman whom posterity considers a man second to none, resolved to weaken the power of Denmark by a sudden invasion, commanding the famous Swedish general, Lennert Torstemon, to leave Germany, and, without any declaration of hostilities, to carry the torch of war, into the very heart of Denmark. Christian IV. had, indeed, long dreaded Sweden's hostile intentions, but the careless senate and nobility, having placed too many restrictions on his power, would not grant him the 276 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. necessary pecuniary means to put the kingdom into »a due posture of defence, Torstenson, therefore, meeting with no ohstacles, burst with the rapidity of lightning into Holstein, Sohleswig and Jutland, another division of the Swedish army making an inroad into the Danish provinces in Sweden, Skane, Halland and Bleking; and had these two mighty armies jointly come over to the Danish islands, which, however, the insecure state of the ice and the activity of the Danish fleet prevented, it had been all over with Denmark. But all the towns and castles in the two duchies of Holstein and Schles- wig, except GlUckstadt, had to surrender to the advancing Swedes ; and Rendsburg, on the Eider, one of the strongest Danish fortresses, opened its gates to the enemy, and in the month of January, 1644, Torstenson stood on the Middlefartssound, a point of the island of Funen. Under all those perilous cir- cumstances the old king, Christian, did not relax in any of his royal duties, but evinced the most indefatigable activity, making everywhere in the provinces the most needful defensive preparations, and despite his advanced age, now almost seventy years old, going on board his fleet to command in^ person, and keeping a strict eye upon the movements of the enemy. But everything seemed to look very gloomy for Denmark. On the other side of the Kattegat, in the Swedish peninsula, Gnstaims Horn, field-marshal of Sweden, and general Lars Kagge, with an army of fourteen thousand liorso HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 277 and foot, had made an irruption into Skane, in the beginning of the year 1644. Horn oecupied Hclsing- borg, situated on the sound, across from Elsenore, and after having defeated the Danish troops who ventured into the field, he took Lamlscrona, a seaport in Skane, whence he advanced to the siege of Malmo, a very- strong fortress, defended on the landside with walls, ditches and hastions, and on the seaside by a strong castle, whither the brave old Danish king, with numerous forces, had repaired, which enabled the garrison to defy the utmost efforts of the Swedes. But in the mean- time a fleet arrived from Holland to assist the Swedes, obliging the Danes to raise the blockade of Gothenburg, which king Christian had commenced ; but the Danish, fleet encountering it off the coast of Jutland, prevented it from transporting Swedish troops into the island of Fiincn, and compelled the Hollanders to take refuge under the island of Si/ll, on the west coast of Schleswig, where they were cannonaded by the gallant Danish king. Meanwhile the Swedish fleet, numbering forty men-of-war, put to sea, under the command of Admiral Claus Flemming; a tried naval officer, and having arrived on the coast of Holstein, near the island of Fcmern, met the Danish fleet, numbering thirty a. d., men-of-v,'ar. On the 6th of July a terrible i^^^- engagement took place, king Christian, despite his old age, commanding in person. The king himself, stand- ing at the foot of the mast of his admiral ship, and 278 mSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. encouraging his mariners to persevere manfully to the end, was dangerously wounded, losmg an eye and two teeth, a splinter from the ship having killed twelve men immediately around him. The king, however, con- tinued to command until the enemy was put to flight. This glorious victory has given rise to the magnificent Danish war-song, composed by the Danish poet, Ewald, of which the following is a translation, made by Prof. Longfellow : KONG CHRISTIAN STOD VED HOIEN MAST. {King Christian stood by the High Mast.) King Christian stood by the high mast, 'Mid smoke and spray ; His fierce artillery flashed so fast Tliat Swedish wrecks were round hiin cast, And lost each hostile stern and mast 'Mid smoke and spray. Fly, Swedes, fly! No hope to win Wliere Christian dauntless mingles in The fray! Niels Juul beheld the tempest grow. " The day is right !" Aloft he bade the red flag glow, And shot for shot he dealt the foe. They shout, whilst fiercest perils grow, "The day is right!" Fly, Swedes, in safest refuge hide ; What arm shall stand 'gainst Christian's prid« In fight? O North Sea ! Vessel's thunders light Thy murky sky I HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 270 His foemen shrunk with strange affright. For death and terror round him fight; Sad Gothland hears the bolts that light Thy murky sky ! He gleams, proud Denmark's shaft of war. The foe must own his brightest star : They fly ! Thou road for Danes to power and praiee, Dark heaving wave ! Receive thy friend, by valor's rays Led through thy wild and boisterous ways ! Guide the bold youth to power and praise, Dark heaving wave ; And free, through storm and tempest, throtgli Dangers and glory, waft him to His grave ! It affords me much pleasure to quote this excellent translation, in wliich the Danish original has not lost more of its power than is the case with every transla- tion. But, as previously stated, everything seemed to look dark lor Denmark, and the victory gained by Femern was only a momentary blaze. After being defeated, the Swedish high admiral, Flemming. repaired to Christiansprus, now called Fredericksort., to repair damages, where he, in the bay of Kiel, "was immediately blockaded by the Danish fleet, whence the Swedes could not escape on account of the adverse wind. King Christian opened a fierce cannonade upon the Swedish ' fleet in the harbor, in which bloody engagement the valiant Swedish admiral, Flemming, fell, turning over the command, before he expired, into the hands of Charles Gustavus Wrangel, who had acquitted himself in the most satisfactory manner in the battle of Liitzen, 280 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 1632, where his master, the great and noble Grustavus Adolphus, breathed out his ilkistrious Ufe. It being, of course, of the greatest consequence to keep the Swe iish fleet enclosed in the bay of Kiel, to prevent it from uni- ting with the Hollandish fleet, commanded by Martin Thysen, Christian IV. entrusted this important matter tr the charge of admiral Peter Gait, and had he acted with due vigilance, the Swedish fleet would have been irretrievably lost. But an unpardonable negligence of Gait, for which Idng Christian immediately ordered tho admiral, although seventy-two years of age, to be be- headed, united the Swedish naval forces with the Dutch squadron. The combined fleet, consisting of sixty-four men-of-war in all, met that of Denmark, numbering seventeen ships-of-war, between the islands of Femern and Laaland, on the 13th of October, 1644, and obtained over it so complete a victory that only two men-of-war escaped, and the heroic Danish admiral, Prosmund, fell, after having given the most extraordinary proofs of dauntless spirit. The combined fleet then sailed for Kieler harbor to refit, after which the Hollanders returned homo. At length the emperor, Ferdinand III., envious and jealous of the progress of the Swedes in Denmark, ordered his general, Matthias Gallas, to collect all his available forces in Bohemia, and move towards Holstein. He entered Kiel, and obtained some few other unimpor- tant advantages, but the Swedish general, Torstenson, oflered him battle, which he did not dare to accept ; HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 281 and Grallas, says a German historian, made his way out of Holstein, having actually been of more detriment than benefit to the Danes, whom he had been sent to assist. The misery of Denmark increasing day by day, and the Swedish general, Wr angel, in the spring of 1645, as soon as the season would permit, taking the island of Bornholm, and disputing successfully the sovereignty of the Danish seas, while Torstenson, on the land, kept most of the Danish islands blockaded, the gallant Danish mottarch. Christian IV., was compelled to make^^^ ^^^^ a disadvantageous peace at Bromsebro, on the a. d., following terms : Sweden should be exempted ^^^^' from paying Sound Dues ; Denmark should forevei renounce her claims to Herjedalen and Jemteland, (two provinces in the Swedish district, Northland, Nor- landia), also to the two islands in the Baltic, Oeland and Gidland. In the same year the Danish king was also compelled to adjust a pacification with Holland in Christianopel, where the Sound Dues for the Dutch merchantmen were considerably abated. When the sanguinary and expensive war;s, mainly arising out of the thirty years' war, terminated, the Danish and Norwegian kmgdoms were so enfeebled and harassed, that they, during the last three years of the reign of Christian IV., sunk into inactive repose. Such a complete change in all commercial transactions had taken place, that credit was shaken, trade injured, manufactures checked, the public treasury exhausted, 282 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. and thousands reduced to beggary. Several energetic measures for remedying the evils of the war, and bring- mg the countries into a better condition, were taken by the active old king; but meeting with opposition and obstinacy on the part of the senate and the nobility, which had been invested with undue power and influ- ence, they all sunk into nothing. The nobility were displeased with the king for bestowing the highest offices alone on his sons-in-law, who were married to daughters of his concubine, Christine Munck, with whom the king, upon the death of his queen, Anna Catharina, had contracted a morganatic marriage. Thus, for instance, Count Penlz was governor of Holstein, Hannibal Sehestedt governor of Norway, and Corfitz Ulfeldt, married to the king's dearest daughter, Eleonora Christina, was lord high chancellor, exer- cising an all-powerful influence upon state affairs. Although the nobility might have some reason for com- plaining of the favor shown to the king's bastards, yet it is not to be denied, that the sad condition of the kingdoms was owing rather to the many restrictions which the nobility had placed on his power, than to any want of talent in the king himself; the nobility continu- ally trying to restrict the royal authority, to secure the chief powers of the state to the aristocracy, and destroy even the best plans of the king. The noblemen had brought their influence even to that point that neither the clergy nor the burgher class and peasantry could HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 283 write any application to the king' unless signed by a nobleman. George Dyhvad, theological professor at the University of Copenhagen, published a work about this unjust tyrarmy, but the nobility convinced the king that Dybvad's modus operandi was not in accord- ance with the spirit of the times, and that it was repug- nant to their privileges, and the king, had to depose liim from his office. Christopher Dijbvad, not intuni- dated by his father's fate, spoke of the nobility in the bitterest terms, and composed a work in which he con- demned the prerogatives of the nobility as destructive to the kingdom ; but he was imprisoned for life. Even the best efforts of the king for the improvement of his country were opposed by the nobility. He tried to improve the circumstances of the peasantry, but met with so much opposition, that he was forced to give it up ; and his anger was often wound up to such a pitch as to exercise despotic authority against some noblemen. Thus, for instance, baron Christopher Kosenkrantz was beheaded for having committed only a trifling fraud. Besides all these disagreeable terms on which he was with the nobility, and which often darkened his days, he had, in his old age, the heart-rending grief a.d., to lose his eldest son, crown-prince Christian^ i^^'^- his long elected successor to the throne. "We have next to examine the king's conspicuous abilities in leading the internal affairs of his kingdom. In peace he was as unceasingly -active as in war and 284 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. military preparations. Having enjoyed, himself, a care- ful education, and being well versed in languages, both the ancient and modern, he had a high appreciation of learnmg, and was, therefore, a judicious and munificent patron of science and literature. He appointed more professors at the University of Copenhagen than before, furnished the University with new incomes taken from the ecclesiastical estates, which were vacant from the time of the Reformation, enlarged the University library, and built a spacious building called Regcntsen [domus regia), for indigent students. The Royal Observatory of Copenhagen, called the round tower, was built at the king's expense, and a botanic garden and an anatomical theatre were founded. In order to give the young noblemen that education at home which they fre- quently sought at foreign Universities, Christian IV. erected in the town of Sard an Academy [Academia Sorana), exclusively for noblemen, commanding that for the future no nobleman should go abroad before reaching the nineteenth year of his age. Among the learned men who lived during the reign of Christian IV., we ought not to forget to name Ole Worm, distin- guished both as physician and antiquarian ; Caspar Bartholin, a famous anatomist, has become progenitor of a whole generation of learned men ; Tycho Brake, above mentioned, acquired an immortal renown by his astronomical researches and discoveries. Longoman- tanus, a disciple of Tycho Brahe, gained reputation as a raSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 285 great mathematician. Hans Paulson Resen and Broch' man, bishops in Denmark, have signalized themselves by deep theological learning, of whom the first trans- lated the Bible out of the original tongues ; the learned Icelandic clergyman, Arngrim Jonson, commenced fun- damentally to explain the remarkable Icelandic Edda, composed by Snorro Shirleson, A. D. 1218, and con- taining the system of the Scandinavian mythology, and specimens of the poetry of the ancient Northern Skalds. Of consequence for the history of the fatherland was the Chronicle of Denmark, composed and published by Arild Hvitfeld, a short time lord high chancellor of the kingdom. Also royal historiographers were appointed ; but it is remarkable that it was incumbent on them, as a duty, to write in Latin, and several of them, as Mcnrsius and Pontanus, were foreigners. The mother tongue as yet enjoyed very little esteem, nearly all books being written in Latin. Christian IV. being also a promoter of fine arts, prevailed upon Charles van Mandern, the famous Dutch painter, to visit Denmark, to whom the church of Soro owes its greatest beauty, He left many scholars of great reputation, who distin- guished themselves by a graceful and correct design, and several, that, in one single department, may be found to surpass even Charles van Mandern. The active king also invited foreign enterprising merchants and mechanics to Denmark, and established salt and saltpetre manufactories, paper mills, sugar houses, pow- 280 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. der mills, and several copper works in Norway. Under A. D., him, also, were the important silver mines near 1623. Kong&herg in Norway discovered. In his reign, also, the Danes • first directed their attention to the Asiatic trade, and founded an East India Company, and tried to procure possessions in the East Indies, the king dispatching, for that purpose, the Admiral Ove Gjedde, to the island of Ceylon, situated in the Indian ocean. This attempt, however, proving abor- tive, the admiral formed a commercial establishment at Tranquchar, on the coast of Coromandel, which was ceded to the company by the rajah of Tanjore. The king also attempting all means possible for renewing the navigation to Greenland, which already in the tenth century was discovered and peopled by Norwegians from Iceland, the navigation to it, however, being inter- rupted by the frightful disease called the Black Plague, under Waldemar IV., dispatched the captain, Jens Miink, to Greenland, where he established the Company of Greenland, which carried on a profitable whalo fishery in those regions. That Denmark's own inhabitants might profit by the Icelandic trade, which the gi'cedy Hanse towns and the English had almost exclusively appropriated. Chris- tian IV. founded the Icelandic Com.pany. Also, many public buildings, cities, and fortresses were founded by this wise monarch : as the Merchants'' Exchange, the Church of the Trinity, the Church for Seamcti, the HISTORV OF SCANDINAVIA. 287 Palace of Rosenborg, and the splendid palace of Frede^ ricksborg, sixteen English miles from Copenhagen, which his father, Frederick II., had commenced. He founded, in Norway, Christiama, the present capital of Norway, Chnstiansand, and Kongsberg ; and the fol- lowing fortresses : Gluckstadt, on the Elbe, Christians- pr'ds, now called Fredericksort, at the bay of Kiel, Chris- tianopel, in Bleking, and Ch?'istianstad, in Skane ; for the greater number of which the king himself made the plans. He established a school for the art of navigation, and raised a standing army, consisting of five thousand foot, steadily trained in military exercises. The king himself, very skillful in the art of sliip-building, modeled many of his men-of-war, wliich were considered the most beautiful and the best in Europe ; and the Danish navy was in an excellent condition, and the strongest bulwark of both kingdoms. He also distinguished him- self by his zeal for the propagation of the Cluistian religion, and notwithstanding his limited means, he succeeded in diffusing the Christian princinles through a considerable portion of the East Indies ; and if the Danish East India Company had not been injured by the pertinacious jealousy of the Dutch, who excluded them from the most profitable branches of trade, he would have been able to do much more. It may not be without interest to learn that Christian IV. was a warm advocate of colonial enterprise, and considering America a gold mine, the idea of planting a colony in the new 288 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. world held a conspicuous place in the mind of the Danish monarch ; and the State of New Jersey was first settled by the Danes, about the year 1624, making their abode in the town of Bergen ; but as Peter Stuyvesant, the Dutch Grovernor of New- York, conquered New Jersey in 1655, most of the Danes left the country. The great Gustavus Adolphus, of Sweden, conceived the same idea, and a Swedish colony was planted in 162? in the State of Delaware ; but the Dutch disputing the possession of it with them, the Swedes, after the Dutch conquest, 1655, returned to Sweden. He was a great hater of superstition and deceitful dealing, and the years 1572-1648 were signalized in the annals of Denmark by vehement and severe trials for witchcraft. This fanatic and shameful delusion went on increasing until, in the city of Ribe, in Jutland, not less than twelve women were burned alive. After a memorable reign of sixty years, and after having him- self governed his kingdoms tlirough half a century, A. D., Chrk[;ian IV. died on the 28th of February, 1648, 1648. aged seventy-one years, an object of the love and affection of his subjects, and of the honor and regard of the whole of Europe, the policy of which ho often had powerfully influenced. Frederick III. After an interregnum of three months Christian IV.'s second son succeeded his father to the throne of both kingdoms, by the name of Frederick III. ; durino^ which interval the state affairs were controlled raSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 289 by Corfitz Ulfeldt, lord high chancellor, Christian Se- /tested, lord high treasurer, Ove GJedde, lord high admi- ral, and Anders Bilde, commander-in-cliief ; and having first sealed and subscrihed a very severe charter, restrict- ing the royal authority much more than before, and increasing the power of the nobility, which charter has mainly been ascribed to Ulfeldt, Frederick III. ascended the throne. The events of the last time having shown how dangerous the enmity of Holland was, the king wisely sought to persuade that realm to join his party ; the more since Sweden, because of her triumphs in the thirty year's war, and last successful war with Den- mark, almost became the arbiter of the European destiny, and v/as elevated to a pinnacle of glory and power which proved dangerous to Denmark's peace and security. The learned and intelligent Corfitz Ulfeldt, therefore, was sent to Holland to negotiate an alliance of mutual defence against every enemy. The alliance made, a Treaty of Redemption was concluded, accord- ing to which Holland, instead of Sound Dues yearly, had to pay one hundred and fifty thousand florins. Corfitz Ulfeldt, towards the close of the reign of Christian lY., having often given the king reason to be displeased with him, and lost very much of his affection, occupied a position yet more dangerous and slippery during Frede- rick HI. The great pow^ his high office gave him, his immense riches and high coimections, struck with fear and jealousy both the king and his proud queen, Sophia 290 fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Amalia, a princess of Brunswick Liineburg, who all the time was cherishing a personal aversion and dislike to Illfeldt's lady, Eleonora Christina, the virtuous, handsome, and ingenuous daughter of Christian IV. A. D., Upon his return from his embassy, with the rc- i^^'^- suit of which the king on the whole was dis. pleased, an action at law was entered against liim, as he had, during his administration of the finances, been suspected of embezzlement and peculation ; both of which, together with other humiliations, induced him to leave the court entirely, and retire to private life. About the same time a lascivious girl, Dina Winhofer, being in an unbecoming mtimacy with Colonel Walter, in- formed the king, that Ulfeldt and his lady had prepared a subtle draught for his Majesty. This, however, being proved false, Dina, on the 11th of July, 1651, was pub- licly beheaded, and Walter banished ; but Corfitz Ulfeldt continued to be suspected and dislilced, wherefore he, with his wife and four sons, suddenly left Denmark for Holland. King Frederick, highly exasperated at his leaving without permission, deposed him from his digni- ties and deprived him of his estates of Hirchholm. Cor- fitz Ulfeldt, however, not tliinking himself safe in Hol- land, fled for shelter to Sweden, where queen Christina j fondly attached to learned and talented men, receiveo him and his family with every circumstance of honor. But here he became guilty of treason, not ulone provo- king the Swedish king, Charles Gustavxs X., Christina's HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 291 successor, to war against Denmark, but even aiding him in making inroads into the Danish dominions. Charles Gustavus X., a nephew of the great Grustavus Adolphus, who, at the abdication of Christina, a. d., seized the reins of government of Sweden, pos- i*^^^- scssed all the qualities and talents requisite to follow in the footsteps of his uncle, his reign being one succession of hardy enterprises and remarkable exploits. He indulged the martial spirit of his people by declaring war against Poland ; where Jolm Casimir, descended through Sigismund, liis father, from the race of Vasa, revived liis pretensions to the throne of Sweden, pro- testing against the nomination of Charles X. Poland was then invaded by Charles ; the progress of the Swedes was rapid ; they obtained two brilUant victories in the field, captured Cracoiv, the former capital of Poland, and compelled the terrified John Casimir to fly into Silesia. Thereafter the king entered Prussia, where he compelled Frederick William, elector of Brandenburg, to acknowledge himself the vassal of Sweden. Meanwhile, John Casimir having returned to Poland, the people rushed to arms, and the country was on the point of being reconquered from the Swedes, when Charles X. led back an army to the assistance of his troops, and fought a terrible battle near Warsaw^ 1656, which, after having lasted three days, was ulti- mately decided in favor of the Swedes, and Poland had again to submit. His great success in Poland had 292 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. already excited the apprehensions of the emperor cf Austria, of Holland, and Brandenburg, and rekindled the jealousy of Denmark, which, desirous of profiting by the complicated embarrassments of Sweden, and hoping now easily to regain the lost provinces, declared a. d., war against Sweden, although her defensive i^^'^- affairs were in the most miserable condition. But Charles Gustavus, who had fought in Germany under the illustrious Torstenson, soon convinced the Danish king, Frederick III., that he was able to chastise his temerity. Concluding an armistice with Poland, he repaired to Pomerania, and then into the duchy of Bremen, which the Danish army had conquered. Thence he' marched with 12,000 men into Jutland, where the Danish commander-in-chief, Anders Bildc, defended the fortress of Fredericia, which, however, was taken by the Swedish general, Herman Wrangel, who was now made Lord High Admiral of Sweden. Charles Gustavus X., with astonishing rapidity, made himself undisputed master of Holstein, Schleswig, and Jutland, the treacherous Ulfeldt, who was minutely acquainted with the interior parts of the country, assisting him with his advice and actual help. But Charles X. could not yet pass over to the small islands, as his fleet, numbering fifty-nine men-of-war, in a horrible engage- ment with the Danish navy close by the island of Falster, was so cut up and crippled as to be obliged to make port to refit, this disadvantage being about HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 293 tho only one he had in this war, wliilo the prospects of the Danish king had become dark as midnight. After being defeated at the island of Falster, a.d., Charles Gustavus, in the month of January, 1*558. drew up his victorious forces on the shore of the Little Belt, which was completely bridged with ice. The extremely rigorous cold, twenty-four degrees of Reaumur, which had thus fettered the strait, still con- tinuing, and giving no signs of relaxing in severity, Charles, having tested the strength of the ice, and measured its thickness, weighed the matter carefully for a short time in his mind, and determined to pass over it with his army. With the king at their head, the Swedish troops, numbering 20,000 men, advanced, in separate columns, accompanied by all their horses, baggage, trains and artillery, combating, even upon the ice, (where two divisions of liis dragoons were sub- merged and drowned,) the detachments of the Danish troops, which bravely endeavored to arrest their advance, and at last, victorious over the enemy and the ele- ments, Charles G-ustavus entered the- island of Fyen (Funen). At the eastern coast of Fyen, separated from the island of Sjelland (Zealand) by the Great Belt, the, Swedes discovered this water, sixteen English miles wide, likewise entirely frozen. Charles at once de- termined to attempt the passage, taking, nevertheless, such precautions as prudence demanded. In place of crossing directly from Fyen to Sjelland, where the cur- 294 fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. rents are too rapid to aftbrd sure passage, on the ice, he marched his army by a circuitous route between the islands of Langeland, Falster and Laaland, where the well fortified city of Nakskov, imprudently listening to the crafty and subtle demonstrations of the treach- erous Ulfeidt, unresistingly surrendered to the Swe- dish king, whose cards were almost all trumps in this war. Only the Danish Admiral Bredahl distinguished himself by heroically and successfully defending the Danish fleet, which was ice-bound in the gulf of Ny- borg-. At length, arrived in the island of Sjolland, the Swedes, to whom the ice and the deep snow presented no obstacles, advanced upon Copenhagen, a prey to the greatest terror, and unprepared for the event of a siege. In fact, so general was the consternation, that, within ten days after the landing of the Swedish army in Sjelland, Frederick III. sent commissioners to the city of Wbrding-borg- to negotiate with Charles Gustavus, whose conditions, however, were too severe to be agreed to by the Danish commissioners. But Charles Grus- tavus, tenax propomti^ advanced further towards Co- penhagen, and Frederick III. had to offer humiliating proposals of peace, signed by the commissioners at the small village of Hole Tostrup, eight English miles from Copenhagen, and afterwards affirmed and signed by the king himself in the definite treaty subsequently con- A. D., eluded at B-oeskilde, on the 26th of February, 1658. 1658. So Immiliatiner were the conditions for raSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 295 Denmark, and so glorious for Sweden, that one of the Danish envoys exclaimed, as he affixed his signature, like the usually cruel Roman emperor, Nero, when a warrant for the execution of a criminal was brought to be signed : " Would to Heaven that I had never learned to write." Said peace of Roeskilde was concluded on the following terms : Denmark should give over to Sweden Skane, Halland, Blcking, Bahus, Trondhjem, in Norway, and the island of Bornholm, in the Baltic ; as also deliver twelve men-of-war and two thousand horsemen, and, finally, replace the treacherous Corfitz Ulfeldt in his dignities. Shortly after both mon- archs met together, for the first time, with great pomp and ceremony, at a splendid entertainment in the royal palace of Fredericksborg, amusing themselves by friendly conversation, as though living in the best harmony. The base and contemptible Corfitz Ulfeldt was now re- placed in his dignities, his estate, Hirchholm, restored to him, and his lady, Eleonora Christina, was granted the title of Countess of Schleswig-Holstein. But to return to Charles Gustavus. Repenting that he had omitted the convenient opportunity of subduing all Denmark and Norway, and pleading that the two thousand horsemen had not been delivered duly equip- ped, he broke the peace a few months after, landed with his army in Korsor, and advanced upon Copenhagen. But this insincere peace, which proved to be only a suspension of arms, stirred up a new spirit among the 296 HISTORY OF dCANDINAVIA. Danish people, now uniting the most enterprising and heroic spirit with the greatest prudence and moderation, and clearly comprehending, that it had come to sad extremities, and that the existence of Denmark and Norway, as independent states, was at stake. In Copenhagen every one prepared himself for the most determined defence ; no one spared himself ; even the young students of the University took up arms, the king's own example being the most effectual encourage- ment to the promotion of a courageous defence. Several citizens advised the king to leave the capital, but he answered : " Even if the worst comes to the worst, I will not leave, but die in my nest." Charles Gru«tavus X. commenced to lay siege to Co- penhagen, and also sent a body of hardy Swedish soldiers to take possession of the important fortress, Kronborg ; it being of the more consequence, as a strong Dutch fleet was expected to relieve the besieged city of Copenhagen. Wrangel was sent to besiege the fortress of Kronborg, which he took from Colonel Beenfeldt in less than three weeks' siege, acquiring thereby enormous booty of can- nons and powder, which enabled the Swedes to carry on the' siege of the Danish capital with yet more energy; Charles Gustavus being so confident of winning the horrible game, as to write to king Frederick III. that his life and liberty lay at the mercy of the Swedes, and that he (Frederick) might easily comprehend that Den- mark was undone, and like a patient past recovery. HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 297 But king Frederick did not despair ; the citizens and students of Copenhagen made several sudden and suc- cessful sallies on the enemy ; and three patriots, the engineer Steetiioinkel, the bailiff Hans Rostg-aard, and the clergyman Henry Gerner, hazarded their lives for reconquering Kronborg, which, however, fell short of success, their patriotic design being too early discovered. Steenwinkel was decapitated by the enraged Charles Gustavus, Hans Rostgaard escaped by flight, but the magnanimous minister of the gospel, Henry Gerner, was put on the rack, and asked questions about the plans and operations of the Danish army, which he, nevertheless, obstinately declined revealing. Under command of the generals Schack and Gylden- love, the chief captain of the city, Thureson and the king himself, the citizens of Copenhagen continued to defend the city in the most heroic manner, but began soon to suffer from want of provisions. Meanwhile the Dutch fleet arrived, under Admiral Opdam, to the assistance of the Danes, carrying brave soldiers and plenty of victuals. On the 24th of October the a. d , fleet came booming through the narrow sound, ^^ss. under a terrible shower of cannon balls from Kronborg, whence the Swedish general, AVrangel, tried to prevent the passage of Opdam and his fleet, but in vain. After having totally defeated Wrangel, Opdam arrived safe in Copenhagen, where the most boundless rejoicing took place. Te Deums were sung in all the churches, and fresh spirit and courage quickened every soul. 298 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. The siege having lasted half a year without any is.iue, Charles Gustavus now resolved to take the capital by a general storm and a violent onset, making the most desperate preparations, and promising his troops, if victorious, the plunder of Copenhagen for three days. He ordered his soldiers to ^ut on white shirts, that 'he besieged might not distinguish them on the snow-covered ground, and bade them not to spare even the child in A. D., the mother's womb. The night between the 10th 1^^^ and 11th of February was appointed for that wholesale slaughter, which he had in view. But the result disappointed his expectations. The undaunted Frederick III. being informed of the plans of the Swedes by the patriotic horentz Tuxen, receiver of taxes in Hirchholm, made the most skillful preparations, and his military talents had here, undeniably, the noblest field for their exertion, as his antagonist, Charles Gustavus, was deservedly ranked among the greatest commanders in Europe. In that frightful night king Frederick III. was present himself wheresoever the danger was greatest, and the talent he displayed in bringing the siege of Copenhagen to a happy issue has immortalized his memory, as well as that of its brave citizens. Even the queen, the proud Sophia Amalia, arrayed in a mili- tary dress, was all the night on horseback, encouraging both the soldiers and citizens to shed the last drop of their blood for king and fatherland. Maddened by the thirst for victory, the Swedish sol- HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 299 diers fought with a bravery almost unheard of; the massacre was dreadful, and the Swedish historian, La- gerbring, says, that Charles G-ustavus kept up so con- stant a discharge of artillery, that had each hundredth ball hit the mark, not a single Dane would have been left. The Danes, excited to frenzy by the agonies their eyes beheld and the lamentations their ears drank in, fought with the most desperate bravery, and after a heroic resistance forced Charles Gustavus to raise the siege of Copenhagen. For the important services the citizens of Copenhagen had rendered, Frederick III, conferred upon them great prerogatives and privileges, equal to those of the nobility. Few enterprises were ever more deeply weighed than that of Charles G-ustavus, few preceded by more im- mense preparations, ' and few, perhaps, ever attended with a more unfortunate issue. And here it may not be out of place to use the words of the Spanish writer, Bentivoglio : "So often the Divine Providence, in the wisdom of his impenetrable decrees, has determined the fate of an enterprise quite contrary to the presumptuous expectations of human foresight." Also, in other places did the Swedes suffer great losses. The inhabitants of the island of Bornholm drove out the Swedish garrison, and threw off the Swedish yoke. Likewise, from the diocese of Trondhj'em, Norway, the Swedes were turned out, and the citizens of Frederikshald, Norway, bravely defended their town against three different attacks of 300 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. the Swedes. Nakskow, on the island of Laaland, which in the former war so rashly had surrendered, now compensated for it by a heroic and obstinate defence of thirteen weeks ; even the small island Moen, South of Sjelland, made a valiant resistance. Finally, the con- federated troops arrived to the assistance of Denmark ; the elector Frederick Wilhclm, of Brandenburg, at the head of thirty thousand men, clearing almost the whole peninsula of Jutland from enemies. Undaunted by all these misfortunes, Charles Grusta- vus, although finding himself surrounded with mighty enemies, formed a new plan for the destruction of his hated rival, Frederick III. Marcliing a considerable body of soldiers to the island of Fyen (Funen), where, close by the city of Nyborg, a Danish army of ten thousand men was encamped, Charles ordered his gene- ral. Count Stcenbuck, to attack the Danes in thoii intrenchments. A battle was now inevitable, and both armies prepared for the contest with equal courage. The battle was brief, but fierce, and after a dreadful combat of about four hours' duration, the Swedish army was irretrievably ruined ; four thousand of their best troops were left dead on the field, three thousand were taken prisoners, and about two thousand of the fugitives were soon after forced to surrender on the coast, from want of boats to cross the Great Bolt. Only General Steenbuck escaped by flight. Wlien intelligence of this defeat was conveyed to Charles Gustavus, who tarried HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 301 in Korsor in Sjelland, he laconically exclaimed : " Since the devil has taken away the sheep, he might as well also have taken the huck." Charles Gustavus now repaired to G-othenbuig, from whence he made an irruption into Norway, but without avail, only to iearn the downfall of all his expectations. Shortly after, he died, in the year 1660, full of grief thit Ins visionary designs had proved unsuccessful ; whereafter negotia- tions for peace were commenced with Sweden, a. d., and a treaty was concluded in Copenhagen on i^co. the 27th of May, on terms, which, though severe, wero more favorable than Frederick III., under the circum- stances, could reasonably have hoped. Sweden retained JSahus, as also the three fertile provinces, Skane, Hal- land and Bleking; which Denmark never has got again; only Trondhjem in Norway, and the island of Bornholm were restored to Denmark, the execution of this treaty being guaranteed by Holland, England and France. Thus the bloody war with Sweden terminated, just as Denmark was upon the very brinlc of her ruin. FOURTH PERIOD. FROM THE INTRODUCTION OF THE ABSOLUTE SOVEREIGNTT JJK- TIL THE YEAR 1852. IGGO— 18G3. 1660—1766. Frederick III. — The Diet of Copenhagen — The Charter annihilated and Abso lute Sovereignty introduced — Kay Lykke — Corfitz Ulfeldt — Eleonora Christina — Dispute with Christian Albrccht of Gottorp — Christian V. — Acquisition of Oldenburg and Delmenhorst — War with Sweden and France — Niels Juel — Peace of Lund and Fontaineblcau — GrifFenfeldt — Ole Komer — Jhe Peasantry — Oluf Rosenkranz — Masius and Bagger — Frederick IV. — War with the Duke of Gottorp — Peace of Travendal — Eleven Years' War with Sweden — Tordenskjold — Peace of Fredericsborg — ^Hostile Terms with Russia — Hans Egede — Science and the Arts — Christian VI. — The Peasantry — Ecclesiastical Affairs — School Affairs — Science and the Arts — The Navy — Co\mt Danneskjold Samso — Frederick V. — Hostile Terms with Russia — Peter III. — Manufactures — Commercial and Financial Affairs — The Peasantry — Science and the Arts. The sanguinary struggle ended, a period followed, scarcely to te called a peace, although there was a ces- sation from open hostilities. Both kingdoms, Denmark and Norway, were in a sadly depressed condition ; the scene, that was everywhere presented, was a wide waste of ruin ; the countries -"'^^re sunk in debt, and the 302 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 303 soldiers had not received their wages, the commercial affairs were decaying, and the agriculture, of course, neglected. The nobility, enjoying all privileges and prerogatives, would, as usual, he exempted from taxes, although best capable of paying them, and the popular frenzy was inflamed to the highest pitch. To pacify the minds and to find out means to remedy the misera- ble condition of his kingdoms. King Frederick III. convoked a Diet at Copenhagen on the 8th of a. d., Septembei;, being called the Revolution of Den- i^^o. mark. During the sitting of the Diet the tyranny and unbecoming haughtiness of the aristocracy arose to such a height, that the clergy, the burgher class, and the peasantry, headed by Hannibal Sehested, the only no- bleman siding with the king, the senator, Henrik BJelke, the honest mayor of Copenhagen, Nanson, the learned bishop Svane, and pastor Willadson of Slagelse, voted for the surrender of sovereignty to the king, and jan. lo, Frederick IIL, at the close of the Diet, almost a. D., without any effort of his owti, was thus invested i^^i. with absolute power, Denmark being now as absolute a monarchy as any other in the world. But it deserves here to be remarked, that the Danish sovereigns have generally exercised their extensive power with great moderation. Nevertheless, this excessive power of the crown, produced, at length, in the year 1849, the liberty of the people, gave rise to a spirit of union, and opened their eyes to the natural rif^hts of mankind. 304 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. The sovereignty thus surrendered to the king, a new and solemn contract between the king and the people, called Law for the King, and composed by the talented secretary, Peter Schumacher, under the following king Nov. 14, ennobled by the name of Griffenfeldt, was sub- A. D., scribed to by Frederick III., and declared an 16G5. inviolable law for both kingdoms, the principal articles of which law were : 1. The king of Denmark and Norway shall indis- pensably profess the articles of the Lutheran creed, known by the name of the Confession of Augsburg {Confessio Augustana). 2. The king must neither divide the kingdoms nor separate any province from them, but shall preserve their integrity. 3. The king shall reside in Copenhagen, Denmark. 4. The king is of age at thirteen years old,. to contro! all affairs. 5. The throne is hereditary, both in the male and female line, but it being never vacant in the eye of the law, the queen-dowager shall, if the king before his death should not have regulated the guardianship, from the very moment of his death, in conjunction with seven counselors of state, assume the reins of government as long as the young king is in his minority, and take care of his education. 6. The most unlimited power of the government; both in ecclesiastical and secular matters, shall be HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 305 lodged in the person of the king, who is above the reach of all courts of law, and not personally responsi- ble to any judicature but the bar of God for his acts and conduct in the administration of government. It need not be explained how greatly this investment of the king with absolute sovereignty curbed the no- bility, whose shameful ignorance, meanness and rebel- lious spirit had rendered them useless and contemptible both to the king and the nation. The praiseworthy men, above mentioned, who had mainly raised the king to an absolute sovereignty, obtain- ed the most palpable evidences of his gratitude : Svane being given the title of archbishop and extensive real estates ; and Nanson, Hannibal Sehestedt, and Willad- son likewise presented with donations and high offices, in reward of their important services. New measures for improving the administration of the state affairs were now taken. The whole frame of government was altered altogether, many affairs, which before had be- longed to» the senate, being divided amongst various colleges [collegia), in which, by authority of the king's writ, the burgher class as well as the nobility could be invested with offices. Said colleges were : the college of state, intrusted with the administration of foreign affairs and with the care of maintaining the new con- stitution and the interests of the royal house ; the sacred college, invested with power to confer the ecclesiastical offices on qualified persons ; the college of justice, to 306 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. which pertained the judicial power and the regulation of the police ; the college of treasury^ to administer the finances and the levying of taxes ; the college of ivar, to which the army was subject ; and the admiralty college, having the naval affairs under its direction. But whatsoever the colleges had decided upon, was, for getting legal strength and force, first to he laid before the king himself, and have his signature affixed to it. The legislative power belonged to the king alone, that is, the power of making laws, of abrogating them, or of changing them. Besides these colleges, the supreme court was in- stituted, which became the highest tribunal, its presi- dent bemg the king himself. Frederick III. now em- ployed all his efforts for mtroducing a more economical system, and remedying the prevailing scarcity of money, the proud nobility, hitherto exempt from taxes, being de- clared tributary as well as the peasantry, which consid- erably contributed to settle the confused financial affairs. There remains to be mentioned, that the code of posi- tive law needed a transformation according to the ma- terial alteration the government had undergone, for the performance of which the king appointed a committee, which reviewed the earlier laws and elaborated a new code or collection of laws ; which important work was finished in the space of eight years by Rasmus Windings professor of law, and Peter Lasson, justiciary of the supreme court, the code itself, however, first being pub- lished during the reisn of Christian Y-. HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 307 We must now take a brief retrospect of the affairs of the treacherous Corfitz Ulfeldt, one of the most ex- traordinary men that ever appeared on the stage of hu- man life. After the peace was concluded in the year 1660, Ulfeldt had made himself suspected even in Swe- den of being a clandestine adherent of Denmark. His property, therefore, being confiscated in Sweden, he fled • with wife and cliildren to Copenhagen, just at the time the sovereignty was to be surrendered to the king. Being here at liberty for a short time, ho and his wife, through the instrumentality of his sworn enemy, Hannibal Sehestedt, were suddenly imprisoned in the castle of Rosenborg, on the 3d of March, 1660, from whence they soon after were brought to the castle ot Ilammershus, on the island of Bornholm, and locked up in a dark, subterranean prison, where Henry Fuchs, the lieutenant of the castle, for a time of fifteen months, treated them with such inhumanity and severity that Ulfeldt had to make a very submissive request to the king himself for a mitigation of their severe treatment. Count Frederick Ranzau was now sent to Bornhohn to inquire into the matter. Ulfeldt and his wife were set at liberty on condition that he would solemnly promise never to undertake anything detrimental to the sovereign power of the king, and never, without permission, to leave the country. They arrived now again in Copen- hagen, whence they, on the 27th of December, 1661, went to the island of Fyen, to their beautiful manor 308 mSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. EUensborg. Some time after, Ulfeldt, upon request, obtained permission ^o go to Spaa, a celebrated watering- place in Belgium, but instead of it, lie went with his wife and four sons to Amsterdam, where his lady, the magnanimous and faithful Christina Eleonora, left him for England, in order to claim a large amount of money with which Ulfeldt had supplied Charles II. On taking leave of her, 7th July, 1662, his parting words were as follows : " You have been united with me in love, you have suffered with me in patience, you have shared my hardships with manly perseverance, you have assisted me with kind advices in difficult cases, you have tried to lead my heart unto Him by whom kings reign and princes decree justice ; you have loved me even in the utmost miseries. I am now parting with you, but whatsoever might happen, do not forget to adhere to Him who is the ruler of adversities and the strengthener of love." They never more met each other on this side the grave. After she left, Ulfeldt, whose heart was full of hatred against the Danish king, engaged himself in treacherous negotiations with Holland, France, and Brandenburg, aiming at overthrowing the new constitution of Den- mark. But the elector of Brandenburg, Frederick Wilhehn, a personal and intimate friend of Frederick III., informed, without delay, the Danish court of Ulfeldt's high treason, who instantly was sentenced to suffer death ; but it being unpossible to get hold of him, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 309 he was decapitated in effigy, his sentence of condemna- tion being written on the scaffold, his house in Copen- hagen pulled do^\Ti, and a monument of infamy erected on the void place. No sooner was Ulfeldt informed of the sentence of death pronounced against him in Denmark, than he left Amsterdam and fled, crossing the Rhine to Brisac, where he died, aged sixty years, his conscience a. d., being burdened with the memory of crimes of i^^- the deepest dye. His corpse was brought to a cloister near Neiiburg, in Bavaria, whence his sons brought it, interring it secretly under a tree. He was a man of the greatest talents, a great linguist, an accomplished noble- man, and a sagacious diplomate ; but he was headstrong in his passions, imprudent, treacherous, and capricious,' and his romantic spirit often led him into the most extravagant excesses. Ulfeldt's wife, the noble-minded Eleonora Christina, a splendid example of conjugal love, was by the English government delivered up to Denmark, and sent on board of a ship to Copenhagen, where the queen, Sophia Amalia, ordered her maid of honor to strip Eleonora of her clothes, after which she was imprisoned for twenty-three years in Bhietmver, and all the time treated with every circumstance of severity. This action is the greatest stain upon the memory of the queen, who ought to have respected the unhappy lady for that which was her only offence — a noble faithfulness in sharinir the fatp of her husband. 310 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Immediately after the death of the queen, the suc- ceeding king released Eleonora from imprisonment, in 1685, presenting her with the palace of Maribo, on the island of Laaland, and with an annual allowance of fifteen hundred rixdollars. Here she lived for thir- teen years in literary occupations and pious contempla- tions, until she died on the 16th of May, 1698, aged seventy-seven years. Her biography, composed by herself, she finishes with the following words: "Per- secutions followed my husband of blessed memory ; I followed hirrt, and afflictions, therefore, followed me : mats la tristcsse donne occasion a la patience. Death will be acceptable to me ; nevertheless I do not wish for it, but agree with the Latin proverb : Rebus in adversis facile est contemnere mortem : Fortius ille facit qui miser esse potest." She is buried in Maribo cemetery, the words sho herself had wished being engraved on the tombstone : " Unless Thy law had been my delight, I should have perished in mine affliction. Ps. cxix. 93." Although the absolute power, as above mentioned, was generally exercised by Frederick HI. and his suc- cessors with great moderation, he seems, nevertheless, especially immediately after having obtained this power, to have held the highest notions of his sove- reignty, and to have exerted his authority with rigor. A rich and esteemed nobleman, Kat/ Lykke, had in a HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA, 311 private letter mentioned the queen in offensive terms. Though humbly imploring mercy and forgiveness for his temerity and inconsiderateness, he was sentenced to suffer death; hut having seasonably escaped by flight the capital punishment, he was executed in effigy, his large estates being confiscated in behalf of the crown. Gunde Rosenkrmiz, an accomplished and honest nobleman and senator, having often deserved well of his country, was without mercy banished, only for being at variance with the king's favorite, Hetiry Gabel; and for the unexampled severity shown against the innocent countess, Bleonora Christina Ulfeldt, the king is highly to be blamed. For the rest, Frederick III took energetic care for the welfare of his kingdoms, commencing rapidly, during his reign, to emerge from the weakness and enervation into which they had been plunged by the Swedish invasion and subsequent wars. He reformed the laws, and encouraged commerce by establishing trade with Guinea, on the western coast of Africa, and with the West Indies. The king* himself, being a man of letters, patronized science and the arts, and estab- lished the royal library, one of the greatest in Europe, now containing four hundred thousand volumes, and the university library was considerably enlarged. The fleet, almost entirely disabled in the last war, was excellently fitted up by a Norwegian, Cort Adler^ who in Venetian service againsf the Turks, had immortalized 312 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. himself by the most undaunted courage in many naval engagements. But a most heavy burden on the country was the standing army, which was now aug- mented to twenty-four thousand men, kept in constant pay ; and the king, who, with all his superiority of genius and extensive knowledge, firmly believed in the possibility of the transmutation of metals into gold, wasted not a little of the national revenue in vain on costly alchemical experiments, conducted by Burrhi, an Italian professor of that imaginary science, with which so many of even the superior minds were in that age infatuated. Frederick III. inherited Oldenburg and Dclmenhorst and bought Sonderborg, Nordborg, and the island of Aro, in the Baltic. In the latter part of his reign hostilities were about to break out with Charles TI. of England, as an English admiral had attacked a Dutch commercial fleet, which had fled for refuge to a harbor in Norway ; A. D., the conclusion, however, of a peace at Breda^ 16G7. in Holland, dissipating the alarm. But soon a serious misunderstanding arose between Frederick and Christian Albrecht, duke of Grottorp. The new relation into which the dukes of Gottorp, because of the sove- reignty surrendered to the king, had come to Denmark, occasioned frequent collisions ; and Christian Albrecht having made an alliance with Charles XI. of Sweden, was more prone to strife than to submission. The HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 313 dispute, however, was settled by the Recess of a. d., Glucksiadt, the friendship being confirmed by a ^<*^'''- marriage between the duke and the daughter of the king, Fredericka Amalia. Frederick III. died after a remarkable reign a. d., of twenty-two years. Upon the whole, having '^^'^^■ distinguished himself by firm principles, manliness,, prudence, and judiciousness, he nevertheless often showed, as above mentioned, a blamable severity, mainly, perhaps, to be ascribed to the undue influence his queen, the haughty Sophie Amalia, exercised upon him. He is also to be blamed for having surrounded himself too much with German favorites, and neglected the mother tongue to such a degree, that the crown prince for a long while did not understand Danish. Neither was it slightly to his discredit that he nearly all the time lived in prohibited sexual commerce with different concubines. Christian V. succeeded to the Danish crown a. d, on the death of his father. He commenced his i^'^O- reign by adopting a policy entirely contrary to that system of equality, which had begun to take place during the reign of Frederick HI., the new king being unfavorable, as it will appear, to the people's liberties, but in favor of the higher orders of the state, which now again would have everything at their disposal. The nobility, having been made tributary from compulsion, during the reign of Frederick HI, was now, by Chris- 314 HISTOkY OF SCANDINAVIA. tian v., exempted from paying taxes, and not alono restored to their ancient rights and privileges, but several new prerogatives were conferred upon counts and barons, the lower orders of the state being consid- ered only as a part of the property belonging to the real estates. Amongst these prerogatives were : Right of patronage (Jus voca?idi), consisting in freedom to confer a vacalit pastorate on their estates upon any candidate for orders the nobleman might please to select — a right very often misapplied in the most shameful and conscienceless manner, the noble- man frequently offering a pastorate to a young candidate upon condition that he should marry a woman de- bauched by the lewd nobleman himself ; right of juris- diction, that is, an exclusive privilege of appointing any judge on their estates they might wish — a right, likewise, often misused ; exemption from paying tithes of their manors to the clergy ; and power of life and death over their peasants, that is, it was left to the disposition of the nobleman to order a peasant to be scourged and beheaded. All these shameful privileges granted to these dregs of society were, in fact, the very cause of the subsequent freedom of the Danish nation, which at length, roused out of sleep, shook off the unjust yoke to which they, for centuries, had been subjected. Christian V. established also a distinction of ranks and honor, which ho considered an essential benefit fo mSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. ol5 the state, as furnishing a reward for public services and captivating to the ambition of individuals, who thereby might be prompted to distinguish themselves in service of their country ; but although undeniably thereby was given an incitement to many to exert themselves lauda- bly, it nevertheless imposed a great burden on the com- munity, a new order thereby being established, invested with new privileges and immunities, not to mention the impure emulation and vanity it produced. He also instituted two new orders of knighthood : the orders of Dannebrog- and of the Elephant, with the latter of which only kings, princes, dukes and noblemen were decorated. Upon the whole, the gay humor of the French, and that spirit of levity and luxury which was prevailing at the court of Louis XIV., was never more conspicuous in Denmark than during the reign of Christian Y., who himself loved the lusts of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the pride of life, but cared not very nmch for matters relative to salvation. The good terms on which Denmark, by the Recess of Grliickstadt, had come to Christian Albrecht, duke of Gottorp, commenced now again to be subverted by disputes concerning Oldenburg and Delmenhorst, which the last count, Antho7i Glhither, by liis will before his death, had divided between the king of Denmark and the duke of Grottorp ; but Joachim Ernst, duke of Ploen, in Holstein, believing himself more entitled, laid claims to the said earldoms, and appealed to the empe- 816 HISTORY OF SCA.NDINAVIA. ror's bench. For averting the danger, which was threatening, the wise diplomate, Griffenfeldt, whom Louis XIV. called the world's greatest statesman, nego- tiated with the duke of Ploen and prevailed upon him to resign his claims, by which means Christian Y. decidedly became the master of both earldoms; which exasperated Christian Albrecht to such a degree as to prepare himself to strike a decisive blow against Den- mark. But Christian Y., by virtue of his au- a.d., thority as sovereign king, cited him to meet in i^'^^- Rendsburg, where he was compelled to make an agree- ment, according to which he had to give up his troops and fortresses to the king, as also to pass his word for refraining from all hostilities. At the same time the arbitrary designs of Louis XIY. had excited universal dissatisfaction, and alliances were formed to resist his designs and successes, which alarmed all Europe. A triple alliance was formed be- tween England, Holland and Sweden, to compel Louis to make peace with Spain, and the union of these powers being too formidable to be opposed, a treaty was signed. But other projects soon occupied the monarch of France, whose designs against the dominions of Spain had been checked by means of the triple alliance. He meditated now the conquest of Holland, and took every measure necessary for so great an enterprise. England and Sweden entered into his views, while the German em- peror, Leopold 7., and the Elector of Brandenburg, fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 317 Frederick Wilhelm, took up arms to protect Holland and rescue it from destruction. Griffenfeldt advised the Danish king, Christian V., to maintain a wise neu- trality, and keep up good terms with Sweden, which had joined the mighty France. But from an ardent desire of reconquering the lost provinces in Sweden, Christian V., disposed to war himself, and instigated by the Elector of Brandenburg, declared war against France and Charles XI. of a. d., Sweden, whose troops lately had been defeated i^'^^- at Fehrbellin in Brandenburg, Denmark thus again being involved in a horrible war. The Danish king, not daunted by the power of his enemies, opened the theatre of the war in Germany, although Griffenfeldt advised the king rather to inVade Skane, the inhabitants of which were yet in favor of Denmark. After many toilsome tasks, the strong fortress, Wismar, was taken, especially by Grriffenfeldt's constancy, and Bremen and Werden were also conquered by the Danish and Bran- denburg troops. Next year the war commenced in Skane, and Christian V. launched his fleet, now excel- lently equipped and fitted out, into the Baltic, and during the continuance of tliis war, the Danish navy rode triumphant, and gained a decided superiority over the Swedish fleet. The great Danish admiral Niels Jiiel, in whom every endowment of nature necessary to form a consummate warrior seems to have been cen- tered, conquered the important island, Gulland, and 318 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. A D., co-operating with the Dutch admu'al, Tromp, ho 1676. totally defeated, in a most desperate engagement, the whole Swedish fleet at the island of Oeland, whereby the king was enabled to carry his army to Skane, whCTe in the beginning, he went on with brilliant success, conquering the greatest part of Skane and Bleking, and several strong fortresses. But fortune soon turned her back upon him. The Swedish king, Charles XL, endowed with military talent, as were almost all the kings of the illustrious house of Vasa, and with an intrepid and enterprising mind, arose now like a phenix from its ashes, and defended himself with great ability and success. A Danish army was A. D., defeated by Charles, at Halnistad, and in the ^^'^^- next year two battles were fought near Lund and Landscrona, where both kings commanded in per- A. D., son. The battles were brief, but, for their dura- i^'^'^- tion, the most sanguinary on record ; the victory, towards the last, remained doubtful, v/hen suddenly, Charles XI., amusing the Danish left wing by a feigned attack, poured his infantry, in masses, on the centre ; they encountered the bravest resistance, but the Swedish king, bringing up the cavalry just as the Danish lines began to waver, broke through them with a headlong charge, and in a few moments the Danish srmy was a helpless mass of confusion. The result of this brilliant victory was the immediate conquest of the lost fortresses, except Christ ianstadf HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA, 310 which for a long time was defended with great heroism by the Danish general, Vo7i Osten; who, nevertheless, as his assistant, General Ahrensdorff, neglected his duty altogether, had to surrender that strong fortress to the Swedish king, and every thing now seemed short of success for Denmark. The wise and intelligent Griffen- feldt stood no more by the king's side ; he had been removed partly by his own crimes, partly by secret intrigues of his enemies, the king now trusting only in his inefficient German favorites, Hahn, Ahlefeldt, and Ahrensdorff, who assisted him in his immoral dissipa- tions and irregular course of life. Notwithstanding all looking very dark for Denmark, Christian V. attempted to retrieve his losses in a new campaign, and sent his half brother, Ulrik Frederick Guldenluve, a natural son of Frederick III., to Norway, which had been attacked by the Swedes. Giildenlove acquitted himself bravely and with success, soon after conquered Jemteland, inad^his way through Bahus and Halland, and took by storm the strong rocky fortress, Carlstecn, situated by the Cattegat, while at the same time the brave General LovenJiJelm entirely defeated a superior Swedish army at Uddcvalle, in the province of Bahus. • The rays of the sun seemed again to smile on Denmark, her navy continuing to ride triumphant wheresoever she came in engagement. The celebrated Niels Jucl gained a new victory over the Swedes at Kolberp: Rhed, close by the island of Femern, and a 320 fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. A.D., month after, he immortaUzed his name by en- 16'^7. tirely destroying the Swedish fleet in the bay of Kjoge, by Sjelland. The latter, numbering forty-six men-of-war, attacked the Danish fleet, moored in a formidable position in the bay, but, after a desperate contest, every Swedish ship that had a share in the engagement was taken or destroyed, the Swedes being humbled considerably by this loss. A. D., In the meantime, conferences taking place at 1678. Nimvegen, and peace with France being made, Denmark also had to consent to peace with Sweden, in A. D., Lund, and the same year with France, at Fon- i^'^'^- tainebleau. On account of the interference of France, who would not permit her ally, Sweden, to suffer any loss, Denmark got notliing for all her great victories at sea, but had even to promise to replace the rebellious Cliristian Albreeht of Gottorp in his former rights. The good footing between the two neighboring kingdoms now seemed to bS' firmly established, Charles V. marrying Ulrikka Eleonora, a sister of the Danish king. After the restoration of peace, the king of Sweden tried to make himself as absolute as the kings of Den- mark, but he died prematurely, leaving his crown to his son, Charles XII., who has deservedly been styled the Alexander of the North, and who rivalec^ the fame . of the most celebrated conquerors of antiquity. "VVe shall now dwell a little on the fortunes and fate of the chief minister of Christian V., the great Peter HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 321 Gi'iffenfeldt, whose Christian name was Schumacker. His father was a wine merchant in Copenhagen. His education commenced in the house of bishop Brock- man, where king Frederick HI. saw him, bestowed his favor upon him, and, perceiving him to be a young man possessed of a very considerable share of learning, and of uncommon acuteness of understanding, per- mitted him, at royal expense, to visit foreign universi- ties. Upon his return he was ennobled by Clu-istian V., decorated with the order of the Elephant, and made lord high chancellor. Even the Gferman emperor, Leo- pold I., conferred upon him the title of landgrave. But there are never wanting those who are envious and jealous. His success procured him powerful ene- mies, who tried to get rid of him, and cast an aspersion upon his honor in the eyes of the king, who was weak and of a changeable mind. Griildenlove, half-brother of the king, bore an inveterate hatred against Griffenfeldt, because the latter had tried to cotmteract the detri- mental influence G-iildenlove exercised on the king's morality. Another dangerous enemy was John Adolpli, duke of Ploen, whose daughter he had refused to marry ; Ahlefeldt, Hahn, Kniith, and other Grerman favorites, also tried to undermine Griffenfeldt, in hope of profiting by his declension from greatness ; and the king himself appears not to have seen through the ungenerous policy of these crafty knaves, who were possessed of neither abilities nor virtue. Griffenfeldt was suddenly impris- 322 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. A.D., oned, charged with leze majesty and simony, i^'''*^- and also with using abusive language against the king himself, the following words being found in his diary : " To-day the king has spoken as a child in the council of state ;" a circumstance which contributed in no slight degree to heighten the king's animosity against Griffenfeldt. He was sentenced to suffer death, and his property to be confiscated ; a sentence, however, which three members of the Supreme Court deemed so iniquitous that they refused to subscribe to it. But only the minority of the court being in his favor, the king said, " Justice will take its course," and signed the warrant for the execution of the great statesman. A high scaffold was erected, but just as the executioner was about to strike the mortal blow, voices were heard on the staircase, crying " Pardon, in the name of his Majesty !" GrifTenfeldt, on hearing that the sentence of death was commuted to imprisonment for life, cried, " This mercy is more cruel than the capital punish- ment." Then he was brought to the citadel of Copen- hagen, where he was imprisoned for four years, whence he was sent to a prison on the island of Munkhotm, in Drontheim Fjord, Norway, where he was kept for eighteen years, (1679-1G98), and treated there all the time with the utmost degree of barbarous cruelty. He was set at liberty only a few months before his death, and died in Jutland, on Steensballe, a beautiful manor belonging to his son-in-law, baron Krag, with whom he HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 323 passed the last days of his wretched and toilsome life. From his early youth he distinguished himself by remark- able talents ; he spoke almost all modern languages, and even in his fourteenth year he wrote Latin with Cicero- nian perfection ; as a statesman he has never been surpassed. Louis XIV., of France, looked upon him as a genius of the highest order, and ho undeniably wielded the diplomatic sceptre with a discrimination which no doubt saved Denmark and Norway from being involved in one common ruin. After his fall, the want of his rare talents was often deeply felt, the king him- self saying, " G-rifFenfeldt alone better understood the welfare of my states than all my other counsellors to- gether." His administration was vigorous and useful, but his haughtiness and imprudence gave great ofTenco to the Danish nobles, and was mainly the cause of the conspiracy being formed against him, of wliich Giilden- love, above mentioned, was the principal instigator ; and it is not to be denied that he wanted that prudence which should have taught him rather to yield to the necessity of the times, than, by obstinately maintaining his power, to risk an entire deprivation of it. According to the pacification of Lund, Chris- a. d., tian Albrecht v/as as we have seen to be replaced i*^'^^- in his former rights, but new disputes arising. Christian Y. marched his army into Schleswig, when, by the interference of other realms, the treaty of Altona a.d.. was brought about ; agreeably to which the ^'^sg 324 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. rudely treated duke was allowed to return to his duke- dom from Hamburg, where for several years he had lived a retired life. Upon his death his son a. D., Frederick, married to Hedevig Sophia, a sister i*^^^- to Sweden's warlike king, Charles XII., succeeded to the rule of the duchy, and relying upon his affinity to the king of Sweden, he picked a new quarrel with Den- mark, which shortly after the death of Cliristian Y. created a most dangerous war. Like many of his predecessors, Clu'istian V. had earnest controversies with Hamburg, which were com- posed, however, by an agreement of Pinneberg, Ham- burg obliging herself to pay Denmark two hundred and twenty thousand rixdollars. The mighty Hanse Con- federacy now gradually declined, and this league, once so extensive as to preserve a monopoly of the Baltic trade, was now forced to share it with the merchants of England, Holland, Sweden, and Denmark, and included, in the seventeenth century, only the cities of Hamburg, Liibeck, and Bremen. In many branches of the internal administration of Denmark and Norway, important improvements were made during the reign of Christian V. ' The new code, published in 1683, by name of Christian F.'s Danish Laio, has been before mentioned. The celebrated mathematician, Ole Romer, acquired great fame throughout Europe, by his ingenious astronomical in- struments, and by discovering the swiftness of the HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 325 emanation of light from the sun, from whence the most important conclusions have been deduced. He also composed a new terrier, which became the basis of a more exact taxation of the lands of private persons. The navy and admiralty were excellently administered by Span and Janus Juel, a brother of the great admiral, and at the close of the Swedish war the Danish fleet numbered forty-eight men-of-war, duly equipped and fitted out. The able statesman, Sigfried Pless, regulated skill- fully the financial affairs, which had fallen into great disorder during the war with Sweden. Nevertheless, at the death of Christian V., Denmark had run into a debt of one million of rixdollars, mainly to be ascribed to the king's military enterprises, which had been attended with a prodigious waste of treasure. To improve trade and manufactures, a College of Commerce was estab- lished, the East India Company was renewed, and commercial houses erected for Iceland, the Faroe isles, and Grreenland. The trade with the West Indies was enlarged by acquiring the two islands of St. Thomas and St. John ; and, on the whole, the Danish commerce was vigorously promoted in the latter part of the reign of Christian V., while most other maritime powers of Europe were entangled in wars. Fairs, or great mar- kets, were held at stated times, to which traders resorted from different quarters, and interchanged their several products or manufactures. This trade, however, being 326 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. A. D , exposed to much trouble from the privateers of 1^^^- the belligerent nations, Denmark made an alli- ance with Sweden, for the mutual protection of their commerce. For defence the old fortresses were refitted and some new ones founded ; amongst others, the for- tress of Chrisiianso, near the island of Bornholm. The police and the fire-companies were better regulated, and Copenhagen was beautified by laying out new streets and by the erection of the splendid palaces, Charlotten- horg and Amalienborg. Uniform measures and weights were fully introduced, the common roads measured, and the means of conveyance bettered. But the peasantry and agriculture, during the reign of Christian V., were in a most lamentable condition, the country not producing sufficient to satisfy her own necessities. The peasants were compelled to serve without wages, whenever the noblemen thought it proper to send for them, their own work often thereby being neglected. The overweening self-confidence and pride of the nobles disdained any co-operation with the lower orders ; the nobles filled the highest offices in the state ; they appointed judges in their domains for the cogni- zance of certain civil causes, and exercised an unlimited criminal jurisdiction over their peasants, on whom they occasionally inflicted even capital punishment. The nobility were also exempt from taxation, except in case of war, nor could they be imprisoned, though their estates -might be sequestered for debt. The peasants HISTORY OF SCA^DINAVIA. 327 were in perfect bondage to their masters, who, when displeased with them, could, without any judicial inquiry, fetter them, and send them for one year to the house of correction. The whole was a system of oppres- sion, and exerted a fatal influence on the character of society in general, the great mass of the population, under the thraldom of this system, sinking into the . deepest ignorance. Nevertheless, wliile inhumanity and oppression held undisputed sway, the sentiment of independence, and the feelings of personal consequence and dignity, were fermenting in the mass of the people, and at length let in those fu'st rays of light, which dispelled barbarism, and introduced that liberty of wliich the Danish nation, since the year 1849, can rightfully boast. Science and the arts were not patronized by Christian v., who himself had no relish at all for them, whereas some private men protected literature and took care of its cultivators. Ole Borch erected a spacious building, called the Collegium Mediceum, appropriated to the use of sixteen indigent students, and George Ehlers, a like edifice, called Collegium Ehlertii, both of them be- queathing rich legacies to the students. But the liberty of the press was under the severest control, censors being appointed and empowered to examine all manuscripts before they were printed, and to see that they did not contain anything offensive to the king's absolute power, every expression containing the least opposition to the 328 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. sovereignty being looked suspiciously upon, and at times severely punished. A learned nobleman, Oluf Rosen- kranz, published a small book entitled, " Defence of the Danigji Nobility," which historical work caused a law suit against him, and by the supreme court he was sentenced to be deposed from his office, to recant, and his fief to be confiscated, all of which was executed except the forfeiture of the fief, which was commuted for a penalty of twenty thousand rixdollars. A like instance did appear in a literary controversy between Masitis, court-chaplain of Copenhagen, and the great philosopher, Thomasius, _ of Halle, Germany : Masius having explained, that the king's absolute power origi- nated immediately from God, while Thomasius insisted that it was originally yielded to the king by the people. This work of Thomasius was publicly burnt by the exe- cutioner. In reference to religious matters a mean intolerance prevailed. The celebrated edict of Nantes, 1598, had, as we know, been issued by Henry IV., of France, giving the Huguenots (Protestants) liberty of conscience, and had been confirmed by Louis XIII., under certain restrictions with regard to public worship. But Louis XIV., by a display of ferocious bigotry, revoked the edict, and nearly four hundred thousand of the Hugue- nots abandoned their country, some of whom solicited the Danish king, Christian V., for permission to settle in Denmark. The Huguenots being of the Reformed HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 329 Church, were, however, by the bigoted interposition of Bishop Bagger, and the court chaplain, Masius, not granted their request, but had to remove into other lands, Denmark thus losing many subjects of wealth, commer- cial intelligence, and manufacturing industry. Never- theless, some time after, the queen, Charlotte Amalia, belonging herself to the Reformed Church, interceded for them with the king, and procured them permis- sion to settle m Copenhagen, and a Reformed a. D., church was erected, the queen herself paying two '^'^^^■ clergymen, a Frenchman and a Gferman, a yearly salary, and at her death bequeathing a considerable sum of money to the congregation. But not many availed themselves of this permission, and those who arrived in Copenhagen were oppressed in different ways. Christian V. was married to Charlotte Amalia, a daughter of liandegravc Wilhelm IV., of Hesse Cassel, an intelli- gent, pious, and virtuous queen, exercising, however, only a little influence upon the king, who lived in open concubinage with a lascivious girl, Sophia Amalia Moth, whom he exalted to be Countess of Samso, and by whom he begot several spurious children. After a.d., a reign of twenty-nine years, Christian V. died, i^^^- leaving his kingdom greatly indebted, and a court highly corrupted in morals. The German language got a greater ascendency over the mother tongue than ever before ; German was the court language, and Germans filled the highest offices in the state. 330 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. After the death of Christian V., the sceptre passed to A. D., the hands of his son, Frederick IV., who, not- 1699. withstanding the rudeness and imperfection of his education, very soon exhibited proofs of that genius, frugaUty, and assiduity hy which he became one of Denmark's most able and excellent kings. The first object of his attention was hew to manage the rebel- lious duke, Frederick of Gottorp, who, relying on his affinity to Charles XII., of Sweden, defied Denmark in every way, made alliance with Hanover, erected fortifi- cations, and carried Swedish troops into the country. To compel the duke to submit, Frederick IV. entered into a secret alliance against Sweden with Peter the Great, of Russia, and Augustiis, elector of Saxony, who had succeeded John Sobiesky on the throne oi Poland, marched an army to the duchy of Schleswig, and commenced to lay siege to the fortress of Ton- ningen, and it was not doubted, that the duke and Sweden both would fall victims to so formidable an alliance. But the progress of the Danes was slower than they expected, the duke being supported by Swedish and Hanoverian troops, and, in the midst of his career, the Datiish king was arrested in his opera- tions by intelligence of the dangers which menaced his own capital, which was just now on the point of being taken. The young king of Sweden, Charles XII., only eighteen years of age, soon unveiling his admirable military talents, and undaunted by the power of the lUSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 331 league, resolved to carry the war into the dominions of Denmark, and landed immediately upon the island of Sjelland, on which Copenhagen is situated, while liis fleet, strengthened by a Dutch and English squadron of ships, which William III., king of England and stadtholder of Holland had sent, Lombard ed Copenha- gen. Frederick IV., cut off from his dominions hy the ' Swedish cruisers, and alarmed by the imminent danger of his navy and beautiful capital, thought himself happy to save his kingdom by indemnifying the a. d., Duke of Gottorp, and purchasing a peace at I'^^o. Travendal, highly honorable to the Swedes, and left his Russian and Polish alUes, who had not duly assisted him, to continue the contest with Charles XII., the young Alexander of the North, who for a long time did not permit them to enjoy a moment of ease or re- laxation. The terms of peace were : Denmark should acknowledge the Duke's sovereignty in his dukedom, and his right to erect fortresses, keep troops, and make alliances with foreign powers, and pay him two hundred and sixty thousand rixdollars, to defray the charges of the war. But two years after the peace of Travendal, duke Frederick of Gottorp, who fought for his a. d., brother-in-law, Charles XII., fell in the battle 1702. of Clissaiv, in Poland, and the duchess-dowager gov- erned the dukedom in the minority of her son, Charles Frederick, when events soon now came to pass, un- expectedly deciding the long contests between the dukes 332 HISTORY OK SCANDINAVIA. of Gottorp and the kings of Denmark. After having humbled Denmark, and ah-eady, at the age of eighteen, rendered his name the terror of the North, and the ad- miration of Europe, Charles XII. resolved to turn his arms against the Russians, whom the heroic king of Sweden totally defeated at Narva, after a contest of three hours' duration, all the artillery, baggage, and ammunition of the Russians becoming the prey of the Swedes. Having wintered at Narva, Charles XII. marched against the Polas and Saxons, and formed the project of dethroning king Augustus, and placing another upon the throne. His designs were seconded by the misera- ble state of Poland, and by the dissatisfaction of the Poles with their king, Augustus, from the undisguised preference wliicli he showed for his Saxon subjects ; and to add to this, the primate of Poland, Radzrewisky, secretly meditated a revolution, and entered immediately into the views of the king of Sweden, who, without difficulty, made himself master of Warsaw, in July, 1702. Augustus, convinced that he could only protect his crown by the sword, led liis army to meet the Swedes at Clissaw, above mentioned, where he, how- ever, was forced to fly, after having made in vain the most heroic efforts to rally his troops. A second triumph at Pultusk gave such encourage- ment to the enemies of Augustus, that in the year 1704 the throne of Poland was declared vacant, which Charlea HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 333 XII. now gave to Stanislatis Leczinski, a young noble- man of Posnania ; and when the Poles hesitated a little- on account of his youth, Charles XII. said : " If I am not mistaken, he is as old as I am." Then the king of Sweden turned his arms against Peter the Great of Russia, who was making some ineffectual efforts to re- vive the party of Augustus, and at the head of forty-five thousand men he entered Lithuania, and carried every- thing before him, defeating an army of twenty thousand Russians, strongly intrenched. Intoxicated by success, he rejected the Czar's offers of peace, bluntly declaring that he would negotiate with the Czar in his capital of Moscow. When Peter the Great was informed of tliis haughty answer, he coolly replied : " My brother Charles affects to play the part of Alexander, but I hope he will not find in me a Darius." Peter prevented the advance of the Swedes, on the du*ect line, by breaking up the roads and wasting the country, and Charles XII., after crossing the Dnieper, and en- during great privations in the midst of a hostile and almost desolate country, and in the midst of one of the severest winters ever known in Europe, found it im- practicable to continue his march to Moscow. Nevertheless, undaunted by these obstacles, he adopted the extraordinary resolution of passing into the Ukraine, and laying siege to Pultoiva, a fortified city on the frontier. Leaving some thousand men to guard the works, Charles ordered his soldiers to march and mxcet 334 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA A. D., the Russians, who were advancing to raise tha 1709. siege. On the 8th of July, a desperate contest took place, but after a dreadful combat of two hours the Swedish army was irretrievably ruined, and Charles XII., who thus in one day had lost the fruits of nearly nine years of successful warfare, had to escape as a helpless fugitive with three hundred horsemen to Ben- der, a Turkish town in Bessarabia, abandoning all his treasures to his rival, Peter the Great, whom he now had taught how to conquer liim. Under these circumstances, Denmark thought it a proper opportunity to regain the lost provinces of Skane, Halland, and Bleking, and king Frederic IV., after a short interview with Augustus in Dresden, entered into a league with Poland, Saxony, and Russia against Swe- den. The Danish monarch invaded Skane, but his troops were in the beginning of the following year de- feated by the Swedish army, principally consisting of young boys, commanded by the brave General Steen- huck. This victory again quickening the Swedes, was A. D., won close by Helsing-boi'g-, over against Else- 1710. nore, and transported Charles XII. to such a degree, that when intelligence of it was conveyed to him in his exile he exclaimed, "My brave Swedes! should God permit me to join you once more, we will beat them all !" Then the war was carried over to Ger- many, where the Danes conquered the two counties, Bremen and Werden, together with other Swedish pos- fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 335 sessions, while the fortresses, Stettin and ^^tralsund, in Swedish Pomerania, were hesieged in vain ; and next year the Swedes, under Greneral Stecnbuck, gained a brilliant victory over the united forces of the a.d., Danes and Saxons, at Gadebusch, in the duchy ^'^i^. of Mecldenburg. Not able, however, to master the troops of the allied powers, Steenbuck had to retire to the fortress of Tonning; in Schleswig, but on the way thither he sullied his fame by burning the defenceless city of Altona, an outrage which excited the indigna- tion not only of the king of Denmark, but of all Eu- rope. Although the government of Gottorp had engaged itself to maintain a strong neutrahty, Steenbuck, never- theless, was received into Tonning. In retaliation, Frederick IV. immediately took possession of the Got- torp part of the duchy of Schleswig. The burning of Altona, however, wis the last service that the cruel general could perform for his exiled master ; unable to prevent the junction of the Russians with the Danes and Saxons, he retreated before superior numbers, and the brave king Frederick lY., of Denmark, pur- a.d., sued his advantages so vigorously, that Steen- '^'''^^^ buck, at Tonningen, was forced to yield himself a prisoner of war to the Danish king in person, who car- ried him to Copenhagen, where he died in captivity in the citadel. The Danish fleet, commanded by the illustrious lie- 336 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. roes, Gabel, Sehested, Raben, and Tordenskjold, rode triumphantly throughout nearly the whole of this war. Gabel annihilated a Swedish fleet in Femern Sound, and Sehested and Raben discomfited, off the island of Riigen, another Swedish fleet, which had to retire to the harbor of Carlscrona to refit. The commander, Ilvitfeldi, has left behind him a never-dying rem-em- brance in the mind of the Danish nation by heroically sacrificing his life in the desperate battle in the bay of Kjoge. Dannebrog, the admiral ship, on which he was, A. D., had taken fire. Hvitfeldt could have saved his i''!^- life, but in fear of thereby setting the whole Danish fleet on fire, he resolved heroically to sustain the whole fury of the assault, till he, with three hun- dred men, was blown up. The young Norwegian, Peter Vessel, so distinguished himself by heroic ex- ploits, that he from a low ofl!ice rose to the dignity of an admiral, and was ennobled by the name of Toi'- denskjold (thundershield). On receiving this honor, he exclaimed: " Tordenskjold ! A beautiful name, your Majesty ; and I promise to thunder so in the ears of the Swedes, that your Majesty shall not have to say that you have given me that name in vain." The Swedish monarch continued to linger in Turkey until the end of 1714 ; but when he then learned that the Swedish senate intended to make his sister regent in his absence, and to make peace with Russia and Denmark, his indignation induced him to return horp.e. HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 337 He traversed Grermany incognito, and toward the close of the year reached Stralsund, the capital of Swedish Pomerania, which was hesieged by the united armies of the Prussians, Danes, and Saxons. After an obsti- nate defence, in wliich Charles XII. displayed all his ac. customed bravery, Stralsund was compelled to capitulate after a siege of tw5 months, while at the same time the Danish and Russian fleets swept the Baltic and threat- ened Stockholm. A firmer alliance was now concluded between Den- mark, Saxony, and Russia, which also soon after was joined by Prussia and Hanover, the elector of which had ascended the throne of England under the name of George I. Stralsund having surrendered, Charles escaped in a small boat to his native shores, and now prepared himself to pass over the ice and make an irruption into Sjelland, from which he, however, was prevented by an unexpected thaw. All Europe be- lieved Charles XII. undone, when, to the inexpressible astonishment of every one, it was announced that he, whose anger with Denmark was now wound up to the highest pitch, had declared war against Denmark, and invaded Norway. But his army was soon driven back, greatly diminished in numbers. Anna Colbjornsen, a clergyman's wife, a patriotic, fearless woman, led astray by cunning pretences the Swedish colonel, Lowen, so that he desisted from his plans to destroy the silver mines of Kongsberg. 'iS8 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Charles XII. now laid siege to the city of Fredericks' A. D., hald, a maritime town of Norway, near the Skag- 1716. gerack, defended by the strong fortress of Frede- rtcksteen, hut the two hrothers, John and Peter Colbjorn- sen, prevailed on the inhahitants to fire the city, to prevent the Swedes from having any hold there. A bloody battle ensued ; Charles gallTsd the Danes and Norwegians with a continual fire ; the slaughter was equal on both sides, till at last, however, the Danes claimed the victory. Crowds of hungry wolves, issuing in the midst of the severe winter from the Norwegian forests, howled over the dying remains of the Swedish soldiers. Charles XII. was driven to seek a temporary refuge for his army in the country. In the meantime, the vigilant Danish admiral. Tor- denksjold, with a daring hardly ever heard of, running a Danish fleet into the harbor of Dynekiel, and, after a desperate contest of a few hours, destroying the Swedish men-of-war and store-ships, Charles XII. was compelled, for this time, to leave Norway. But no way yet intimi- dated by his misfortunes, and still determined upon taking Denmark, he commanded his mariners to seize every Danish vessel, even if the king of Denmark him- self might be on board. Frederick IV. now launched into the Baltic a mighty fleet, commanded by Torden- skjold, who acquired great fame for his courage and strategic skill in conquering Marstrand, and the strong rocky fortress, CarJsfern, although meeting with the raSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 339 most terrible fire from the Swedish batteries. While Charles XII. had been taken up with his attempts at conquering Norway, Frederick IV. and Peter the Great of Russfa prepared themselves to march an army to Sweden, Peter himself arriving in Copenhagen with a fleet, and disembarkmg a powerful Russian army on the shores of Sjelland, seemingly in assistance of the Danes. But soon learning that the cunning Czar, who, under the mask of friendship, requested the keys to the four gates of Copenhagen, intended to seize upon the Danish capital and the fortress of Kronborg, the neces- sary preparations were made to oppose this treacherous plan, Peter the Great being suddenly compelled tQ leave Sjelland. Then secret negotiations commenced between Ptussda and Sweden, conducted by the Swedish prime minister. Baron de Gortz^ a native of Franconia, a man of an artful, active, and comprehensive genius, v/liose plan was to unite the king of Sweden and the Russian Czar in strict amity, \vho then not only would dictate laws to Europe, but wrest the kingdom of Nor- way from Denmark, and force the Danish king to renounce the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein to the Duke of Gottorp. The Czar readily joined in the scheme, and a dark storm was gathering for Denmark, when the sudden death of Charles XIL rendered abor- tive a plan that might have thrown Denmark, and perhaps all Europe, into a state of political combustion. Charles XIL, in the prosecution of his views against 340 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Norway, a second time invested the castle of Fredericks hald, in the very depth of winter, but while engaged in viewing the works, and in conversation with his engi- neer, in the midst of a tremendous fire from th6 enemy, A. D., he was struck dead by a ball from the Danish I'^is- batteries. His sister, Ulrikka Eleonora, suc- ceeded to the throne, and raised to it her husband, Frederick of Hesse Cassel, who first had to swear, that he never would attempt the re-establishment of absolute power, which was now fully abolished in Sweden, and a new form of government modeled. The Swedish senafe showed little grief for the loss of this warlike king, who had only involved Sweden in miseries and wars. Upon the intelligence of the death of Gustavus Adolphus at Liitzen, 1632, the inhabitants of Stockholm shed tears ; upon that of Charles XII. they jubilated. Some have believed, that he was not struck by a cannon ball from the Danish artillery, but was shot by a traitor, a Swedish Colonel Seeker, which, however, has never been proved. Be it as it may, the kingdom of Sweden gained by his death. On the first news of the king's death, his favorite min- ister. Baron GSrtz, was arrested, brought to trial for having projected a dangerous war when the Swedish nation was exhausted and ruined, and was publicly be- headed in Stockholm. The death of Charles XII. was a great relief to Denmark, and when Tordenskjold, the very first who conveyed the intelligence of it, entered HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 341 the king's audience chamber, saying, " Charles XII. is dead, and there is not one Swede in the whole of Nor- way," Frederick IV. embraced him joyfully, and hung a gold chain round his neck. The new government of Sweden now looked with an ardent desire for peace with Denmark, which was established by the treaty of Fredericksborg, the a. d., terms of which were, that Sweden should pay I'^^o. Denmark six hundred thousand rixdollars to defray the charges of the war, and acknowledge the sale of Bremen and Verden, wliich, with their dependencies, George I., king of England and elector of Hanover, had purchased from Denmark for eight hundred thousand rixdollars ; Sweden should renounce her exemption from paying Sound Dues, which she had enjoyed since the peace of Bromsebro, 1645; and finally Sweden pledged herself not to assist any more the Duke of Gottorp ; France and England securing to Denmark the permanent possession of the duchy of Schleswig. So happy an issue for Den- mark had this eleven years' war, though no accession of territory was gained. The appearance of an English fleet in the Baltic, coming to aid Sweden, finally disposed Czar Peter to pacific measures, and he consented to grant peace in Nystad, a town of Finland, 1721, on condition of being permitted to retain Esthonia, Livonia, Ingria, part of Finland, and dominion over the Gulf of Finland, a high- way for his commerce to the Baltic ocean. 342 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. The war thus heing ended between Denmark and Sweden, a profound peace ensued. Denmark, however, had soon after to empty a bitter cup. The patriotic, brave, and magnanimous Tordenskjold, who had raised his fatherland by many victories to a great height of naval glory and greatness, and was almost adored by the king and the people, asked permission to go abroad. In Hamburg he met with a Swedish colonel, Stahl, a mean-spirited scoundrel, who tried to impose upon a young rich Danish nobleman, by name of Lehn, who accompanied Tordenskjold. Exasperated at such con- duct, and exchanging high words with Stahl, who called the admiral a vulgar sailor, Tordenskjold gave him a sound beating, and knocked him down in the kennel, after which he left Hamburg for Hanover. A few weeks after, he unfortunately met here again with Stahl, who, bringing the old quarrel again upon the carpet, challenged Tordenskjold to answer for his offence by a duel with rapiers, in using which Stahl was a great master. Tordenskjold of course, answering the chal- lenge in the affirmative, appeared the next morning at the appointed place, close by Hildesheim. The two first thrusts he parried, but then Stahl ran his sword under Tordenskj old's right arm, pulling it back in tierce. Tordenskjold, perceiving his death inevitable, calmly disposed himself to moot it with decency, and covering his wound with his handkerchief, resigned Mmself to his fate. As he expired from the loss of blood, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 343 he exclaimed : " God be merciful to me for the ^^^ 20 sake of my Redeemer." On hearing this sad a. d., event, king Frederic lY. shed tears, and ordered the corpse to he brought to Copenhagen and buried in the mariner's church, where Tordenskjold now rests in the same vault with Otto Rud, Niels Juel, Cort Adeler, Raben, Sehested and Gabel, who all so often had led the blood-red Danish flag from victory to victory on the Baltic ocean, the dark heavmg wave. By the peace of Fredericksborg, the duchy of Scliles- wig was once more reunited to the kingdom ; but for the many centuries through which the counts of Hol- stein and the German-minded dukes of Gottorp had swayed the sceptre, the Danish nationality had had a difhcult fight to wage. In the southern part of Schles- wig the German language at length prevailed, while in the northern part the inhabitants were attached to their native tongue, and to the manners and habits inherited from their forefathers, although the dukes of Gottorp, by appointing German clergymen and introducing Ger- man schoolmasters and German legal procedure, sought to naturalize the German language, even in this part of the dukedom. Notwithstanding Schleswig was now reunited to the kingdom and for all subsequent time governed by the Danish lyings, that unnatural state of language, how- ever, continued for more than one century, and first in modern times energetic resrulations have been issued to 344 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. protect the Danish nationality in the northern part of Schleswig. But the reunion of Schleswig to the king- dom put Denmark, throughout a long series -jf years, to very much trouble arid heavy expenses. The duke of Grottorp, Charles Frederick^ making now the city of Kiel his residence, would neither subscribe to the resig- nation of Schleswig, nor come to any amicable agree- ment, and became a very dangerous enemy by marrying the Russian princess Anna, a daughter of Peter the Grreat. Frederick IV. had continually to keep fleets ready in the Baltic to secure Denmark against Russia, as Peter the Great, and his successor, the empress Catharma I., threatened to establish by force the claims of the duke. Certainly amicable terms were afterwards contracted with the court of St. Petersburg, but in course of time the strife was renewed in such a manner as to be very dangerous for Denmark. Frederick IV, A. D., gained an accession of territory for the kingdom 1725. "by laying hold on the fertile county of Ranzau, as the latter count had been killed, and his younger brother, on being brought to trial, found an accomplice in this crime. Durmg his whole reign, Frederick IV. was actuated by sincere and earnest motives to introduce useful insti- tutions and remedy old mistakes. He deserved well of the Danish peasantry, by abrogating their slavish de- pendence on their masters. He enacted a law, that aU peasants born after his accession to the throne should be HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 345 free ; opncerning the others it was determined that they, on reasonable terms, could buy theif freedom ; the tenan*^ should be permitted to keep their farms for life, and neither could they involuntarily be deprived of them, nor be forced, as before, to accept of desolate and barren 'farms; and on the whole this law contained very considerable mitigations of those feudal rights claimed by the noblemen over their peasants, which either were the most burdensome in their own nature, or had been made so by an abusive extension. Already during the first war wliich Fredericlc IV. waged, his attention had been directed to several defi- ciencies in the military affairs, which he immediately tried to remedy ; and after the treaty of peace (1700), he employed the interval of tranquillity in raising a militia of eighteen thousand men, in equipping a respec- table fleet, and upon the whole, in paying close atten- tion to the posture of defence. Besides tliis militia, there was kept a considerable army of levied soldiers ; the cavalry was augmented by twelve regiments, each consisting of eight companies. He established two cadet schools m Copenhagen, to educate young men both for the fleet and the army ; schools never organized before, and the want of which had been deeply felt. In order to protect the capital and the navy against the renewal of the dangers to which they had been exposed, when, in the year 1700, a Swedish, Dutch, and Enghsh fleet bombarded Copenhagen, he erected two sea- 346 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA., batteries, Tre Kroner (three crowns), and Provestenen (touchstone). The navy was put in a good posture, and the number of marines was considerably increased. To augment the revenues of the kingdom, Frederick IV. had suppHed Austria, England, and Holland, with twenty thousand men, \vho acquitted themselves with great courage in the war of the Spanish succession. Under the illustrious heroes, prince Eugene, of Savoy, and the duke of Marlborough, commander-in-chief of the forces of England, the Danish soldiers had shared the glory of the battles of Hochstedt, Ramillies, Oudenarde, and Malplaquet ; and the Duke of Marlborough, upon whom now the emperor of Austria had conferred the dignity of a prince of the empire, wrote to king Frederick IV., that for the gaining of the victory in those celebrated battles ho was mainly indebted to the lion-hearted bravery of the Danes, who likewise, under the great Eugene, fought gallantly in Hungary against the Turks. Frederick IV. made many improvements in the regu- lation of the different colleges, and caused justice to be duly and quickly administered, and the laws carried into execution. He was very active himself, and sought to acquire a knowledge of all matters of conse- quence. To the administration of the finances he paid a strict attention, and kept the pecuniary affairs in an exemplary order. As economical as the king was in spending the public means, as particular was he in conferrins2: titles and badsfes of honor. At his death the mSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 347 kingdom had incurred a debt of three millions of rix- dollars ; which, however, when it is considered, that Frederick IV. waged expensive wars, and even after the peace, for many years, had to keep a standing army and fleet against Russia, and that many disasters visited the country, is only a trifle, and not to be laid to his charge. An enerny more fatal than the swords of the Swedes, a frightful pestilence, raged from 1710 to 1712, in Co- penliagen and on the island of Sjelland, with the most destructive effect, and took oft' great numbers ; the North sea breaking tlu-ough the dykes in the marshlands on the western coast of Schleswig, destroyed property to the amount of one million of rix-doUars, and a. d., Copenhagen was visited by a destructive fne, I'^^s. continuing for several days and consuming nearly two- thirds of the city ; on which occasion science and the arts suffered a great loss, as a great deal of the large University library, with its many rare manuscripts, was destroyed. Notwithstanding all these heavy losses, and his many great expenses, the king found, however, by his econ- omy, means to erect the splendid palaces of Fredensborg and Frederiksbej'g, as also the spacious exchequer. Commerce and manufactures were vigorously promoted by Frederick IV. The trade with Greenland was re- newed, and the East India Company, for a great while ruined altogether, was, at the close of his reign, again put in motion. The post-office department, having for 348 HISTORY OF SCANDINA\^A. a long time been entrusted to private men, was again administered at royal expense, the surplus being applied to pension civil and military officers, or their indigent widows. Previous, however, to giving an account of the private life and character of this excellent king, we must take a short connected view of the stand- ing of school affairs and literature during his reign The public instruction had, hitherto, almost entirely been neglected in Denmark, the commonalty growing up in the grossest mental darkness. But Frederick IV. merited highly the grateful thanks of the peasantry by erecting two hundred and forty brick school buildings. and assigning money to keep them in repair and pay the teachers. Amongst other charitable institutions, ought to be mentioned the founding of Vaisenhuset (the Orphanotrophy), for the education of orphan cliildrcn, with which hospital an excellent school is connected. In Grreenland, Christianity was spread by the noble and pious Hans Egede, who left his pastorate in Nor- way, and went to Greenland with his wife, Gertrude Rask, a Christian heroine, " whose adorning did not consist in putting on of apparel, but in the hidden man of the heart, and in the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit, which is, in the sight of God, of great price." From 1721 to 1736, Hans Egede, enduring inexpres- sible privations, opened his mouth boldly, to make known the mystery of the Gospel amongst the heathenish and savage Greenlanders. His faithful wife, who had HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 349 shared his hardships, died in Greenland; soon after which he went down to Denmark, where, on the fifth of No- vember, 1758, he departed from life, aged seventy-three years, to receive the crown of righteousness, which the Lord shall give unto all them that have loved his glorious appearing. Pursuant to his proposal a Green- landish seminary was established in Copenhagen, to educate missionaries, Egede himself teaching the Green- landish language. His son, Paul Egede, continued for six years, with Christian fidelity, his father's missionary work in Greenland, to the great good and profit of many souls ; and when he left them, his parting words were : " Preserve with meekness the ingrafted word, and grieve not the Holy Spirit of God, whereby you are sealed unto the day of redemption." Upon his arrival in Copenhagen, in 1742, Paul Egede was appointed minister of the Church of Vartov (the church of charity), where he, renouncing the vanities of all worldly pomp showed himself an able minister of the New Testament; not of the letter, but of the spirit, whose praise is not of men, but of God. Besides discharging his pastoral duties, he translated the New Testament into the diffi- cult language of the Greenlanders, and published other works of consequence for the Greenlandish mission. For advancing learning and the arts, nothing of con- sequence was done during the reign of Frederick IV., as the king himself had not enjoyed any scientific educa- tion. Nevertheless there lived during his reign several 350 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. men of letters : Peter Hansen Resen^ who has distm- guished himself by standard works on the Northern 'listory and antiquities ; Thomas Bartholin deserves particular regard for Ihe universality of his genius, which embraced a wide circle of history, philosophy, and physic; Niels Steno, who, after having embraced the Catholic faith, passed the remainder of his days in foreign countries, acquired fame as an anatomist ; the Icelander, Torfozus, who successfully applied the Ice- landic sources to throw light on the history of the North, and preserved alive the embers of that literary spirit which already early had been stirring on that distant island, evinced a zeal for the cultivation of letters, which does him the highest honor ; the Icelander, Arne Mag-nusson, deserved well of men of letters by col- lecting a great number of Icelandic manuscripts, and bequeathing the greatest part of his means to publish- ing them. Thomas King-o, bishop of Fjunen, acquired "^he fame of being an unsurpassed hymnologist, his hymn book being in use for a long time. Shortly aftei the death of his first queen, Louise, the king took in marriage Anna Sophia, a daughter of the deceased lord high chancellor. Count Conrad Reventlow. This marriage caused great disagreement in the royal family, particularly provoking the crown prince. Chris- tian, because the king had cohabited with Anna Sophie, even while queen Louise was living. Frederick IV., before his death, saw his kingdoms in HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 351 the possession of every happiness w^hich could flow from economy, frugality, lahoriousness, and from the salutary laws and institutions which ho had established, when he died, aged iifty-nine years, after a glorious reign a. d., of thirty-one years. Whether we view him in I'^^o. his public or private character, he deserves to be esteemed as one of the most useful of the Danish kings. He united an enterprising spirit with the greatest pru- dence and moderation, the utmost vigor of authority with the most exemplary justice, and brought his king- doms to a pitch of eminence and wealth which, till then, they had never attained. War was not his ruling pas- sion, but he was able to meet it with firmness and valor. Nought but the memory of soldier-like bravery survives Charles XII., but Frederick IV. has left behind the memory of a life of restless activity, perpetually labor- ing for the improvement and prosperity of his countries ; and while Charles left behmd him notliing but ruins, Frederick IV. left two kingdoms in a flourishing con- dition, and with a well regulated administration. But his admirable institutions were but partially and feebly enforced under his son and successor. Christian VI., Denmark and Norway relapsing again into a.d., confusion and pauperism. No sooner had he '^'^^^ obtained the sovereignty than he treated with great severity the queen-dowager, his stepmother, Anna So- phia, above mentioned, rightly accounted a stain on the royal family, removing her from the court to Clausholm^ 352 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. a lonely manor in Jutland, and immediately dismissed a great number of the higher officers of state, who had enjoyed his father's confidence, entrusting the public affairs to the ministers of state, Baron Ivar Rosenkranz, the Counts Louis Pless, Charles Pless, Schulin, and John Louis Hoist ein, all of whom exercised a strong influence upon the government. In the beginning, it was likely that the peasantry would flourish during the reign of this king, for he instantly abrogated the militia, above named, which on account of the feudal bondage therewith connected, had been greatly burdensome to the peasantry and permitted every countryman to settle wheresoever he might desire. By this change the peasantry got complete personal freedom, as well as the other orders ; but, unfortunately, after a few months, he enacted a new law, forbidding, upon severe punishment, the country lads to abandon their native county, unless permitted by the noblemen concerned ; and after a couple of years the militia was re-established, the time of military service being pro- longed from six to eight, and thereafter to twelve years ; and when a countryman, after his term of service had expired, would not receive whatsoever farm the noble- man might think proper to give him, he had to submit to military service for ten years more. The enrollment was extended to the fortieth year of age, and from his ninth year the country lad was bound to remain in his native county ; thus again the liberal and salutary HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 353 regulations of king Frederick IV. being annihilated, and the peasantry anew sinking under the domineering spirit of the aristocracy. Several other regulations affected detrimentally the peasantry and the agriculture. Many nohlemen, for instance, were permitted to break up the farms and unite the ground to their manors, the peasantry, of course, thereby decreasing, and the bond-service in- creasing. Such were the stipulations in favor of the higher orders of the state, which the king promoted to all offices of honor and emolument, and to which, from the very beginning of his reign, his partiality was abun- dantly conspicuous, while the peasantry was in the lowest stage of degradation. Upon the whole, the government, under Christian VI., seems to have been extremely aristocratic. It was also of very detrimental consequences, that the king passed a law by which the merchants were restrained from im- porting grain into Denmark, the prices of corn thereby rising, and the progress in agriculture, of course, decreasing, as the greater certainty thereby produced for making a market, did not make it a matter of greater moment for the husbandmen to prepare the ground sufficiently for a rich crop, and could not fail to excite somewhat of a spirit of ease and inactivity. But let us now observe some particulars of the reli- gious life, perhaps worthy of more note than any other circumstances durinsc the reicrn of Christian VI., since 354 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. it will be found to have received a very great influence during the period under consideration. There are periods in which the human mind seems more than usually to turn strongly to religion and spiritual con- cerns, and to feel that the Heavenly Majesty must be worshiped in spirit and truth, and the flesh crucified, with the affections and lusts thereof, and such a period in Denmark was the reign of Christian VL In opposition to the unsubstantial trusting to the letter which had long prevailed, and to the exorbitant weight laid on the ecclesiastical formulas and symbols, all of which kill, while only the spirit gives life, there appeared in Denmark, as well as a little earlier in Ger- many, a revival, in general called the pietistic disposi- tion of mind, which endeavored to remove that luke- warmness and stagnation, which undeniably in a great measure had long prevailed in the Lutheran churches. Great variances arose in the Church between the differ- ent parties, and separatistical conventicles were formed in many places. The king himself, being of a stern, religious mind, was highly in favor of the revival, which he regarded as a recovery from death to life, and tried in different ways to promote the religious spirit ; but the means he used were almost altogether external, and not to the purpose at all, failing therefore entirely of the effect intended. The court chaplain, BluJime, and \h.Q queen, Sophie Magdaletia, exercised a great influence upon the foolish ordinances issued in reference to eccle- siastical matters HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 355 Going to church every Sahbath was peremptorily commanded by law, the withdrawal from which heint^ in the cities punished by fines, and in the country by pillorying the peasants outside the church door. Dan- cing, masquerades, comedy, Cluristmas games, and like amusements, were forbidden, as liindering the attain- ment of spu'itual and heavenly grace, and the alienation from selfishness and the world ; the church discipline was vindicated by public penance and rebukes from the pulpits. These ordinances very likely arose from the king's own unfeignedly religious mind ; nevertheless, the happy mean was not found, and even his best advocates will find no apology for applying such compulsion in religious affairs, and cannot regard it as a commendable method of propagating the mild and pure religion of Christ, who will not have involuntary professors ; and it was a mat- ter of course, that instead of a real and pure fear of God, there appeared everywhere a feigned devoutness and a false piety, the people, to please the king, making use of the most melting ■ religious terms of this valley of misery, of the heavenly Jerusalem, and the celestial Canaan, and so forth, to profit substantially by his grace ; paying tithe, as Christ says, of mint, and anise, and cummin, but omitting the weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy, and faith. But, in spite of the many mistakes above mentioned, it is not to be denied that Christian VL, in many other 356 fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. respects, exercised a highly beneficial influence upon the spread of true Christianity, by introducing the Act A. D., of Confirmation, by which the young, after hav- 1736. ing attained to mature years, should confirm and ratify themselves the solemn promises made by others at their baptism ; and by appointing a Board of In- spectors, which had to superintend the clergymen's and schoolmasters' administration of their offices, and to keep a watchful eye over their preaching the doctrines of the Church purely and genuinely, as also to ascertain that the books which were to be published were not of immoral or impure contents. The king also patronized higlily the public instruc- tion, by enacting a law, that public schools for the pea- santry should be erected round about in the country, and by issuing useful rules for the method of teacliing ; a law, however, often meeting with great opposition, on account of the great expenses therewith connected ; and although the king here ought to have made use of his absolute power to establish this important institution, the opposition, nevertheless, gained the victory, in many places no schools being erected. The reign of Christian VI. may be considered as the epoch of the revival of literature in Denmark from that lethargy in which it had continued under Christian Y. and Frederick IV., both of whom were not very much interested in literary affairs, and whose incessant wars diverted their attention from them. The University, fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 357 which had suffered by the fire, (1728,) and was in a declining state, was restored ; more professors were appointed, and given better salaries than before ; the examinations were made more strict, and a new consti- tution was drawn up in writing, and published. An examination in law was for the first time instituted ; and the science of law being considered the most impor- tant, next to that of theology, recovered a new life from the learned Andreas Hoyer, a man extensively versed in the European jurisprudence. The legal procedure was highly improved by a new regulation of the supreme court, and particular attention was given to the study of medicine, and its connection with the sciences of botany and human physiology ; at the same time the subserviency of the studies to the practical uses of life being an object not to be neglected. The Latin schools, of which there was one in each city, were diminished, some of them being changed into common schools, and the Academy of Soro [Academia Sorana), which was founded by Christian IV. exclu- sively for young noblemen, but since the year 1665 had been out of use, was recalled to life and inaugu- a. d., rated a year after the death of Christian YI. ^''^'^■ To promote the fine arts the king erected the Royal Academy for painting and drawing, the Venetian and Flemish manner of tempering the colors with oil instead of water, being introduced, an invention which unde- niaoiy gave to painting a greater durability, as well as a warmth more approaching to nature. le 358 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. During the reign of this king two learned societiea were formed, the Literary Society of Copenhagen, and the Society of the Danish Language and History, from both of which excellent treatises have been and still are published. Among literary men of this period deserve to be mentioned Andreas Iloyer, above named, distinguished both as jurisconsult and historian, and remarkable for his great judgment and perspicuity ; JErik Pontoppi- dan, chancellor of the University, has composed, His- tory of the Danish Church, History of Norway, Origines Hafnienses, and an Explanation of Luther's Catechism, all works classical in point of style, and to be depended on in point of facts ; John Gram, royal Historiographer, possessed not alone of great philological erudition, but also of rare knowledge in the history of the North, on which he has composed many critical dissertations, all written with great judgment and impartiality ; Andreas Sa7nsing, for fifty years a faithful minister of the Gos- pel, has left behind him an excellent Latin translation of some of the best Danish hymns, of which I may be llowed to cite a proof: " Tua, Jesu, mors cruenta et profunda wilnera, Grata menti dant fomenta contra qusevia tristia, Si quid mali cogito, tua jubet passio, Semper Tui recordari, et peeeata dctestari." . But all these authors wrote mostly either in German or Latin, thus exercising, properly speaking, no influ HTSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA- 359 cnco upon the Scandinavian literature. We have; therefore, so much the more to pay attention to Louis Holberg, born in the city of Bergen, Norway, 168-1, who has made a great epoch in the historical and dramatic literature of the Scandinavian countries, and not alone deserves, but will keep a lasting memorial. In the year 1718 he was appointed, first. Professor of Metaphysics, then Professor Eloquentise, and at length, Professor Historiarum ct Geographiae. During his pro- fessorship (1718-1747) he has influenced the Danish nation as hardly any one, either before or after him, partly by his historical, partly by his dramatical writ- ings, being both original and the results of deep study. Plis Description of Denmark and Norway, his History of Norway, his History of the Church Universal, and his History of the Jews, are fruits of his indefatigable study and cultivated judgment, and of a purity and flexibility of language remarkable for the time in which he lived. His heroi-comic poems, Peter Paars and Niels Klim (the last WTitten in Latin), in which he strikingly and wittily ridicules all that foolish pedantry, pertness, and vanity that prevailed amongst the higher classes of his time, and in which he sometimes soars to a pitch of the sublime equal to the finest flights of Homer and Virgil, whose kind of style he in a mas- terly manner has imitated, have the most captivating charms to all who arc possessed of the smallest degi-ee ut genuine taste, and have, by an uncommon degree » 300 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. of candor, humor, and impartiality, preserved their value long after their immediate interest has ceased. But the merit of the dramatic pieces of Louis Hol- berg is still much higher. Having taken the French comedian, Moliere, as his pattern, he ridi'cules, unde- niably sometimes in too low a language, the fashionable women, who were overrun with a pedantic affectation of learning, and that arrogant and supercilious de- meanor of the nobility, which demanded respect from the consideration of birth or fortune, without the pos- session of a single laudable or valuable quality. He certainly possessed that invention, which is the very first quality of a dramatic poet ; he is never deficient in the expression of passion, and in his most laughable scenes we have to admire the art of the poet, and to participate in the delineation of his characters, every person of which is very often a liighly-finished picture. Upon the whole, in most of his pieces we cannot but discern the marks of a great and comprehensive genius, an inexhaustible fund of imagination, the most aston- ishing ebullition of ridiculous representations, and an infinite knowledge of human nature ; and when pic- turing the pedantry of the ladies, the pathetic style of ordinary writers, and the absurd pride of the ignorant nobility, he calls often to our memory, the words of Horace : " Parturiunt monies^ nascitur ridiculus mus^ In his youth he had visited four times the Universi- ties of Oxford, Leyden, Paris, and Flo^rence ; he spoke HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 3G1 fluently nearly all modern languages, not to mention that he, as every distinguished Scandinavian scholar, wrote and spoke Latin with the highest degree of cor- rectness and voluhility. After having been exalted to the rank of a baron, he repaired, because of physical infirmity, to his manor, Terslose, on the island of Sjelland, where he died, unmarried, on the 27th of January, 1754, bequeathing his large real estates and extensive library to the Academy of Soro. His last words were : "I have always endeavored to be a useful citizen to my fatherland ; now I am feeble and weak, and my only desire is to depart and be with Christ." Christian VI. took a praiseworthy* care of diffusing a spirit of commercial industry, and the prodigious in- crease of the commerce of Denmark is mainly to be ascribed to his reign. The trade of the East India Com- pany was extended to China, and vigorously carrjed on ; and that of the "West India Company was considerably enlarged by buying the island of St. Croix of Louis XV. of France. A bank was founded in Copenhagen, exercising through a series of years a favorable influence upon trade and industry, and facilitating in a high de- gree the currency. The king put himself to great expenses in improving domestic manufactures. But although many manufacturers of cloth and silk were encouraged by the king's liberality, these efforts, how- ever, leii snort of success ; their manufactures not being so cheap and good as to compete with the productions 362 , fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. of foreign countries. Various expedients were thought of to ohviate that rivalry, but for a long time without avail. Much money was also spent on foreign pro- jectors, who, too willingly, were supported by the gov- ernment, and became a very great drain to the wealth of the kingdoms. The navy has hardly ever been better administered than under Christian VI., by the talented Frederick Danneskjuld, Count of Samso. In the latter part of the reign of Frederick IV. the navy had been neglected, consisting, when Danneskjold undertook the management, only of seven men-of-war and two frigates, but numbering, when he left, thirty men-of-war and sixteen frigates. A drp dock was established, many new storehouses were erected, and important break- waters reared to shelter the navy. Notwithstanding these expensive undertakings, the abilities of the good financier, Danneslcjold, husbanded so well the amount of money he had to dispose of, that, on his leaving the administration, one million rixdollars was saved, Dan- neskjold, a man of great address and extensive know- ledge, who had gained upon the favor of the king, also influenced other branches of the state concerns, and had the principal share in setting on foot the Bank of Co- penhagen, above mentioned, and in granting protections to trade and industry ; though he deserves highly to be blamed for his conduct toward two deserving naval officers, Behstrup and Frederick Liitken, with whom he had become at variance, and who. through his interfe- rence, suffered severe and irisquitablc treatment. HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 363 Although Denmark and Norway, during the reign of Christian VI., continued to enjoy the blessings of tran- quillity, and their commerce grew with their navy, and Danneskjold labored with indefatigable industry in the finances the king, however, was in perpetual want of money, the kingdoms, at his death, being in debt for two and a half millions of rixdoUars ; about the same as during his predecessor, who had not reigned under so favorable conditions, but was involved in expensive wars. The reason was the king's boundless desire of raising new buildings and costly palaces, mainly to be ascribed to his ostentatious queen, Sophie Magdalena The palace of Copenhagen, which Frederick IV. with great expense had enlarged and repaired, was, pulled down, a new one, called the palace of Christiansbiirg, being erected, and fitted up with such an excessive magnificence, that it rivaled the most splendid of Eu- rope, and cost the kingdom the enormous sum of three millions of dollars. Furthermore, were built the palaces of Fredericksruhe, Sophienbei-g, Eremitag-e, and, twelve English miles from Copenhagen, the pompous palace of Hirschholm, erected on so miry a ground as soon after to be pulled down. Large amounts of money were also squandered away on relatives of the queen and othei foreigners, who crowded into the country, and upon whom donations, pensions, and high offices were pro- fusely bestowed. The Grerman language prevailed again very much at the Danish court ; Christian VI. himself 364 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. spoke and wrote only Gorman ; nevertlieless he was interested in the Danish literature, and took care to diffuse the Danish language in the northern part of Schleswig, while the queen professedly despised Danish. Christian VI. had several difficulties with his neigh- bors. From his father he inherited a dispute with Ham- burg, respecting an alteration made in the currency, and with Hanover a dispute arose as to the possession of the coun^ of Sleinhorsi, in the duchy of Lauenburg, both of which, however, were composed. With Charles Frederick, the late duke of Gottorp, the king was con- tinually on an unpeaceable footing, and although an A. D., alliance was made between Denmark, Russia, i'^32. ^ and Austria, which secured to Denmark the pos- session of the Gottorp part of Schleswig, and put an end to the dispute for a season, and Charles Frederick was offered a compensation of one million of rixdollars, he, nevertheless, ohstinately rejected every proposal for an amicable agreement. Under his son and successor, Charles Peter Ulrick, these dissenting terms were about to turn highly dangerous for Denmark, as Eliza- beth, the daughter of Peter the Great, was raised to the Russian throne, and now secured the inheritance of the A.D., imperial purple to her nephew, the above named i'^^3- Charles Peter Ulrik, and to the Swedish crown, for her favorite, Adolphus Frederick, a prince of the younger line of the house of Gottorp, and through tlie Swedish king, Charles IX. 's daughter, Catharina, a HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 365 descendant from the warlike house of Vasa. The elec- tion of Adolphus Frederick to fill the throne of Sweden after the death of king Frederick of Hesse, came within a hair of occasioning a dangerous war between Denmark and Sweden, where a considerable part of the Swedish nobility, clergy, and peasantry, wished to secure the succession to the Swedish throne to the Danish crown prince, Frederick, of whose amiability, kind disposition, and popularity, favorable opinions were in vogue in Sweden. Particularly amongst the brave peasank; from the province of Dalecarlia a violent move- a. d., ment arose, fi.ve thousand of them advancing ^'^^■^• upon Stockholm, to force the election of the Danist crown prince. A most fearful and bloody conflict ensued within the city, and after several days of fighting, tho undaunted peasants from the mountains of Dalecarlia were overmatched and compelled to submit. With a loss of two thousand five hundred men their military operations terminated, and Sweden, in order to please the Russian empress, and avoid hostilities, consented to elect Adolphus Frederick successor to the crown of Swo den, excluding the Danish crown prince. Dejected, melancholy, and even enraged at seeing his son's expec- tations frustrated, and yet cherishing a glimpse of hope of his success. Christian VI. equipped his army and fitted out his fleet, threatening to wage a sanguinary war ; but Sweden making great preparations, and Russia promising to march twenty thousand auxiliary 366 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. trooj3s against Denmark, the Danish king deemed it unsafe to bid defiance to so mighty an alliance. The strife dropped fortunately, and amity was entertained with Russia during the reign of the empress Elizabeth, although Charles Peter Ulrick, the elected successor to the Russian throne, was highly exasperated at Denmark, and looked out for every opportunity to rekindle the flame of war. Christian VL was of a gentle, pious, and sincere dis- position, and preferred and cherished the arts of peace- ful industry to those of selfish and destructive war. Ho gained the affection and confidence of his subjects by many good institutions, tending to promote literature, public instruction, commerce, and naval affairs ; and there is more pleasure in contemplating such a man's character, than that of a mad conqueror like Charles - XII. of Sweden, the one producing happiness, and the other misery in the world. The king himself was of an unfeigned piety to (lod, and an exemplary Christian, and his mistakes in promoting a true religious life aie more to be ascribed to the artful and hypocritical insinu ations of his court chaplain, Bluhme, than to himself. A. D., After a reign of sixteen years, he died in the 1746. vigor of his age. No sooner had Frederick V. succeeded his father to '^- ^ ' the throne of Denmark and Norway, than that 174G. seriousness and formality of manner which, du- ring his father's reign, had prevailed at the Danish HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 367 court, was done a'way, and a more jovial life took place, comedies and concerts being again represented, and 'jther public amusements permitted. During the reign of Christian VI. there had been up- held a great distance between the people and the royal family, the members of which never appeared in public except when accompanied and attended by costly liveried servants and soldiers ; the palace of Christiansberg, also, was surrounded by numerous sentinels ; all of which ceased during Frederick V.'s reign, who regarded all stiff- ness and affected precision as not compatible with modern civilization, and married the jovial princess Louise, a daughter of George II. of England, both of whom, free from all pride and vain ambition, made themselves extremely beloved of their subjects. To see the royal couple making their appearance in the theatre, the cele- brated Louis Holberg, before mentioned, called a fasci- nating sight. On the 10th of September, 1747, Frede- rick V. and his queen, Louise, were crowned and anointed in the palace of Fredericksborg, the bishop of Copenhagen, Dr. Hersleb, performing the solemn act. In the beginning, many tried to insinuate themselves into the queen's favor, thereby to obtain rank, dignities, and high offices, but she answered that she had come to Denmark to embellish the days of her royal consort, not to interfere in public affairs, which did not appertain to her sex. Count Schultn, one of the few able and skill- ful Germans who, during Christian VI.'s reign, had 368 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. arrived in the country, and risen from a plain and poor student to the highest dignities, kept his situation under Frederick Y. After him the great politician and acute diplomate, John Hartvig Ernst, Count of Bernstorf, gained com- pletely the confidence of his royal master, and signally displayed his splendid abilities, while, on the other hand, the highly deserving Dajineskjold, above named, with- out any competent reason, was discharged. The finan- sial affairs were excellently administered by the baron, Otto Thott. Also, the great favorite of the king, Adam Gottlob Moltke, later exalted to Count of Bregentved, a beautiful estate in the island of Sjelland, exercised a considerable influence upon the state affairs. A. D., The dearly-beloved queen Louise became, on i'''^^- the 29th of January, mother to crown-prince Christian, afterwards king of both kingdoms by the name of Christian VII. ; but two years after, the twin- kingdoms had to lament her death, shortly after her delivery of a still-born prince. That spirit of disagreement which had so long existed between Denmark and Sweden, was done away with A. D., by the wise diplomatic efforts of Schulin and 1750. Bernstorff, a treaty being concluded, by which Adolphus Frederick, the elected successor to the Swe- dish crown, and the head of the younger line of the dukes of Holstein, renounced his claims to Schleswig, and engaged himself to exchange the ducal part of HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA, 369 Holstein, when this soon, by inheritance, might devolve to his line, for the two counties, Oldenburg and Del- menhorst. The want of certain limits between Norway and Sweden, which long had caused violent disputes, was, in the following year, adjusted by plenipotentiaries from both kingdoms ; and, to contract a yet firmer union between Denmark and Sweden, espousals ware arranged between the Danish princess, Sophie Magdalena, and' the Swedish crown-prince, Gustavus, a son of Adolphus Frederick, afterwards king of Sweden, by the name of Gustavus III. The wedding ceremony was, however, not performed till after the death of Frederick V. At this time, nearly all Europe was involved in the devastating Prussian seven years war, which a. j)., the talented warrior, Frederick the Great, waged i7b<5-C3. triumphantly against Austria, Russia, France, Sweden and Poland, all regarding with jealousy the increase of the Prussian monarchy; and the empress Elizabeth of Russia entertaining a personal hatred to Frederick the Great, who had often made her the object of his political satires, and the empress of Austria, Maria Theresa, still being dissatisfied with the loss of Silesia by the peace of Dresden, 1745. Although Denmark, through Bernstorff''s wise diplo- macy, v/as happy enough not to be involved in this destructive war, it was, nevertheless, the cause of heavy expenses, it being deemed necessary, to secure the fron. tiers, to keep a considerable standing army in Holstein, 370 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Besides, an alliance was made between Denmark and Sweden, both joining together in having their fleets in the Baltic during the war, to protect the commerce of the North against the hostile privateers, all of which was a great drain on the public treasury. The war, at length, approached to the Danish fron- A. D., tiers*. The French troops had entered Hanover, 1757. where the French general, D''Etree, defeated, near Hastenbek, an army of Prussians and Englishmen, commanded by the Duke of Cumberland ; but Frede- rick V. of Denmark was happy enough, through the A. D., interference of Count Li/nar, to effect the con- 1757. vention of Zeven, in Hanover, pursuant to which the allied army had to separate ; a convention, however, neither ratified by the English nor the French king, and, therefore, of no long duration. But it was the fate of Denmark soon to enter into a yet more critical situation. An unexpected event deliv- ered the king of Prussia from the ruin, that seemed to threaten him at the close of his last campaign. Eliza- A. D., beth, the empress of Russia, died, and was suc- 1762. ceeded by her nephew, Charles Peter Ulrik, who now mounted the Russian throne by the name of Peter III., and who entertained a romantic admiration of the Prussian king, but an unquenchable hatred against Denmark. He immediately re-demahded Schleswig, which Adolphus Frederick had renounced in 1750. Denmark peremptorily refusing his demand, Peter HI, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 371 marched an army to G-ermany to attack Denmark, and, as he declared, entirely to turn away the Danish royal family, against which he cherished the most inveterate hatred. Meanwhile Denmark had made strenuous military preparations to meet the threatening tempest. Frederick V, launcliing his fleet in the Baltic, numhering thirty- six men-of-war excellently equipped, and marching to Mecklenburg, his army consisting of seventy-one thou- sand men, commanded by the French • general, St. Germain, who, upon request of the Danish king, had undertaken to conduct the military operations. The Russian and Danish armies approaching each other in Mecklenburg, a bloody battle was impending, when the sudden intelligence was conveyed to the Danish court, that Peter III., who, by his imprudent reforms, had given ofTence to a great body of his subjects, had a. d. been dethroned, mainly by his wife, and killed i'^*^^. in prison a few days after his deposition. It has, how- ever, not been fully ascertained, whether he was the victim of disease or violence. Be it as it may, liis death delivered Denmark from the imminent danger that threatened her, the more so as the empress, Catha- rina II., who now usurped the Russian throne, renewed friendship and peace with Denmark, and resolved to observe a strict neutrality. Nevertheless, it was easy to foresee that the peace with Russia was not to be trusterl, as long as the dispu- 372 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. table point concerning Schleswig was not settled. The celebrated Bernstorff, therefore, deserved higlily of Den- mark for getting this point satisfactorily determined. After long negotiations he was happy enough to adjust a treaty, by which the house of Holstein renounced all claims to the former Gottorp part of Schleswig, and Denmark obtained the ducal part of Holstein in ex- change for the counties of Oldenburg and Delmenhorst, but had, at the same time, to pay the great debt of the house of Holstein, and to resign the diocese of Liibcck, which Frederick V., with great expense, had purchased for his younger son, the crook-backed prince, Frederick, whom the king had by his second queen, Juliane Blarie, of Brnnswick-Liineburg-'VVolfenbuttel, to whom ho liad been married on the eighth of July, 1752. This treaty being subscribed to a year after the death of Frederick V., was first ratified some years after, when the Russian crown-prince, Paul, in whose behalf his mother, Catharina H., had concluded it, was past mi- nority. On the same occasion was Hamburg, after some controverted points were settled, unbound from her dependence on Holstein, and declared a free impe- rial city. Frederick V. bought that part of the island of Aro, which belonged to the duke of Gliicksburg, with the proviso that he paid the debt contracted, amounting to about one million of rix-dollars. During the reign of this king, as during that of his predecessor, large sums were spent in promoting HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 373 domestic manufactures in Denmark ; "but however well-meaning these endeavors might be, particularly originating from the great BernstorfF, their consequences were not profitable nor permanent; the manufacturing of many things, as silks and other fine manufactures, with which many thousands in Copenhagen were occu- pied, was unnatural to Denmark and only brought to pass by large expenses, and by forbidding the import of foreign articles. These being cheaper, were, of oourse, imported into the country in great quantities, and greedily sought after, ignoring the severe punishments inflicted upon those who were found guilty of such importations. Of greater use was the foundation of the armory near Elsenore, and of the cannon foundery and the powder mills near Fredericksvccrk, by which the army was provided with arms and ammunitions. In spite of the high tariff placed upon trade and other ways of living, in order to create for manufactures and home-bred com- modities a home-market, nevertheless the great juris- consult, Henry Stampe^ who was attorney-general^ and exercised a beneficial influence upon many branches of the state affairs, effected a modification of the press- ing restrictions which, liitherto had been placed on com- mercial and mechanical corporations. Also trade and navigation were highly patronized under this king. Already Christian YL, towards the close of his reign, had contributed not a little to increase the Danish com- 374 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. merce in the Mediterranean, and in his name a treaty was concluded with Algiers, confii-med by Frederick V., who meantime had ascended the tlu'one, and on the whole, continued his father's endeavors, concluding commercial treaties with Morocco, Tunis, Tripoli, the Turkish Sultan, Mustapha III., Genoa and Naples. Hereby a foundation was laid for the important con- veyance of freight, which Denmark had in the Mediter- ranean, but the immediate trade with Africa became of no consequence, though Denmark spent immense sums on equipping merchantmen Ibr that purpose ; while on the other hand the East and "West Indian trade flourish- ed, and, at length, was raised to a height hitherto unknown, and could not fail to be an inexhaustible source of wealth to the nation ; and it can not be denied, that during the reign of Frederick V. a variety of excel- lent laws were enacted for the encouragement of trade. But the financial affairs grew s^U worse during the reign of this king. In the first eight years the debt was reduced to one million of rix-dollars, but afterwards grew, year by year. The reason was, the great expenses in fitting out the army and the fleet on account of the Prussian seven years' war, and yet more, the necessary preparations for the war against Russia ; finally the king's splendid court, as also the considerable amounts of money spent on supporting manufactures, mechanical occupations, and expensive commercial undertakings. Another hardy enterprise, on which was spent . more HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 375 than a million of rix-dollars, was the attempt at break- ing and cultivating the vast heaths of Jutland by G-erman colonists. The attempt, however, falling short •)f success, contributed, nevertheless, to make the culti- vation of potatoes more known in Denmark, which how produces the finest kinds of this vegetable. The public treasury was also very much incumbered . by the purchase of the possessions which belonged to the duke of Ploen, and of the allodial estates of the duke of Glticksburg. To remedy the increasing scarcity of money, it was, therefore, resolved, upon the proposal of Count Schimmelmann, who, in the latter part of the reign of Frederick V., tried to put the finances upon a better footing, to dispose of the large estates which the crown possessed. These estates hitherto having only yielded very small revenues, were now sold with great profit, and amounted to considerable sums ; moreover, an extra tax was imposed, which, to many, became very burdensome, every person, after having attained to the twelfth year of age, without respect of person, being forced to pay a tribute of one rix-dollar yearly. But although this taxation was complied with, with- out the faintest murmur on the part of the people, and afforded the king the most abundant supplies for the accomplishment of all his designs, and for the enjoy- ment of the pleasures of his splendid court, the disorder of the finances was, nevertheless, so great, that at the expiration of tlie reign of Frederick V. the debt of the 376 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. state had reached the immense amount of twenty mil- lions of rix-dollars : a debt which ever since has been too heavy a burden for Denmark to get rid of, the king himself being most to blame in this matter, as his desire to imitate the luxurious 'court of Louis XV. of France, had highly contributed to exhaust the wealth of his kingdoms. The severe restrictions placed on the peasantry by Christian VI. continued yet during the reign of Frede- rick v., and became yet severer than before, a law being enacted, that the country lad, from the very time he had filled his fourth year, should be bound to remain in his native county. The peasants groaned yet under all the miseries flowing from the despotic power of the nobility. The severe treatment to which they were exposed, occasioned many to concert measures for run- ning from their native place and emigrating from the country, notwithstanding they, if apprehended, had to undergo the severest punishment. Many estates, there- fore, were so deserted that the government found it necessary to permit the administrations of alms-houses and orphanotrophies to convey poor children to the noblemen to farm their estates. The sale of the large estates belonojino: to the crown, also, had unfavorable consequences on the peasants, who in very few places were able to buy their farms them- selves. Many new manors, therefore, were erected on the crown estates disposed of, and numerous farms fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 377 pulled down, the peasants often, under these new mas- ters not getting so good terms as during the royal administration. But notwithstanding these encroachments so higlily unfavorable to the peasantry, an active interest com- menced just at this time to manifest itself for this class of society, and caused the attention of the government to be drawn to their pitiable condition, and to the gross deficiencies and abuses which prevailed among all the agi'icultural classes. The enlightened count, A. G. Blollke, before mentioned, was desirous of making the best possible improvements in agriculture, and prevailed upon the king to give the liberty of the press to such authors who published books on state affairs and agri- culture ; on which occasion several writings and treatises were issued, not only throwing light upon the bad con- dition of agriculture, but also proving this to be founded in the many restrictions and oppressions placed on the peasantry. A royal committee was appointed, which particularly had to attend to the economical part of ag- liculture, causing several laws to be enacted aiming at abrogating that hitherto existing community of ground, in so high a degree detrimental to agriculture. The new spirit of liberty, which in view of the pea- santry began to stu*, did also appear in the efforts of several noble-minded lords to improve the economical situation of their peasants. Amongst these Bernstorffj minister of state, deserves to be mentioned, who, upon 378 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. advice of his nephew, A. P. Bernstorff, parceled the grounds, and abrogated all community on his estates, and granted his peasants freedom from bond-service. Frederick V., though not a man of letters himself, was nevertheless a munificent patron of science and the arts. The Academy of Soro, the re-establishment of A. D., which Clu-istian VI. had prepared, was recalled i'''*'^- to life and inaugurated, wliich is especially to bo ascribed to Holberg bequeathing his immense riches of estate and money, and his large library, to this institu- tion. There lived under Frederick V., and the following king, many celebrated men of learning, of whom I shall enumerate a few of the most eminent and remarkable. In the science of law Kofod Ancher and Andreas Schytte excelled, not to foiget Henrik Stampe, before named, who all made an equally eminent figure in the political as in the literary world, their works being the fruit of mature study, and written in a refined and clas- sical style. As historians, we have to mention the fun- damental investigator, Langebek, who has gained a great reputation, both at home and abroad, by his work, Scriptores rerum Danicanim Medii JEvi, and Peter Suhm, whose favorite subject was the Northern mytholo- gy, on which he had published a work of deep erudition, which entitles him to the character of a thorough histo- rian. Erik Pontoppidan, above named, continued to enrich the literature by eminent productions ; for in- stance, his work, Exploits of the Danes abroad, writ- HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 379 ten in Latin, acquired for him a great fame. Pro- fessor Oeder has, by liis work, Flora Danica, distin- guished himself as a great botanist, Cramer was a famous ecclesiastical orator — even known abroad. The German poet, Klopstock, who was supported by Fredericlc V., by his immortal works is known to the whole civilized world. In point of fancy and imagina- tion hardly any poet has gone beyond him; and his poetry exhibits the most beautiful examples of the true pathetic. His lyric poem, Messias, has raised him an everlasting monument. The Danish poet, John Her- man Vessel, born in Norway, 1742, died in Co- a.d., penhagen, whose genius and humor are never to i'^^^- bo forgotten, has delivered masterpieces in dramatic literature, all distinguished for a correctness of language, a harmony of numbers, and a brilliancy of metaphor hardly ever surpassed, not to mention the striking wit wliich he in a masterly manner knew how to apply. The great politicians, also, Schlegel, Mallet, Roger, and Reverdil, ought to be cite4. Reverdil was appointed teacher in French to the young crown-prince, Christtati, and afterwards availed himself of the great influ3nce he exercised upon his pupil, to act in behalf of the oppressed peasantry ; in wliich respect Oeder, also, the great botanist, merits an everlasting remembrance. The great statesman, Bernstorff, influenced the king to send the learned Professor Niebuhr to Arabia, whose re- searches have thrown a new light on mineralogy and 380 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. oriental history. The celebrated Icelamlers, John Erich- son, Skule Thorlacius, Grim Thorkelin, and Saiidvig, applied themselves diligently to examine the northern antiquities. Sandvig has made himself famous by his rxanslation of the Edda, or sacred book of the Scandi- lavians, whose author, Snorro Sturleson, lived in the beginning of the thirteenth century, and was supreme judge of Iceland. Mallet, above named, has given an abridgment of this remarkable book, and shown that Snorro had composed it with the sole purpose of preserv- ing the memory of the ancient Scandinavian poetry, and of the wild and massive mythology therewith insepa- rably connected. During the reign of Frederick V., two important societies were formed in Copenhagen, and Throndhjem, Norway : the Society of Belle Lettres, and the Lite- rary Sac iety of Norway. Physics and cameralistics, for which CDunt A. G. Moltke had great affection, were vigorously pursued. Upon the proposal of Oeder, a cabinet for natural curiosities was erected in the palace of Charlottenborg, more professors being appointed to del: /er lectures on the sciences of nature. Oeder laid the ground-plot of a botanic garden, and commenced to publish his famous work, Flora Danica, i. e., a descrip- tion of Danish herbs. FredericlvS Hospital, founded during the reign of Frederick V., was not only a highly beneficial institution, but also of great importance for the study of medicine. The fine arts were promoted by HISTORY OF SOAA'DINATI-*, ^1 enlarging the school of painting and drawing, erected by Christian VL, and by changing it to an academy of sculpture, painting, and architecture, in which the im- mortal Thonvaldsen, who in sculpture stands unrivaled among the moderns, afterwards displayed his rare talents. After a reign of twenty years, Frederick V. died on the 14th of January, 1766. Although not dis- a.d, playing any considerable degree of self-activity, ^^gg. he entirely possessed the affections of his subjects by his engaging affability, which in him deriving its origin from a native goodness of heart, was very different from that colored complaisance, the usual courtly engine for acquiring popularity, and which, therefore, was the sub- ject of panegyric among his people, and has continued to be the object of honorable mention by posterity. He appeared just, liberal, and humane ; and when a war- rant for the execution of a criminal was brought to him to be signed, his courtiers often saw him walking long to and fro on the floor, before affixing his royal signa- ture, entertaining a continual doubt of his right to take human life. S82 HISTORY OF SCANMNaJIA. II. 1766— 18G3. Christian VII. — Altcratioi\s among the Higher OITiccrs of State — Care for the Peasantry — The King's going abroad — Struensee and Brandt — Ove Guld- berg, Minister of State — The Queen-dowager, Juliane Marie — Prince Fre- derick — Deed of Exchange with Russia — A. P. BernstorfT— The Armed Neutrality — ^The Finances — The Press — The Peasantry — Care for the Danish Language and Literature — The Charter of Naturalization — Crown Prince Frederick, afterwards Frederick VI. — A. P. BemstorfF— Henrik Stampo — ^Reventlow — C. Colbjornson — Hostilities with Sweden — Neu- trality during the French Revolutionary War — Independence of the United States acknowledged by Denmark — Tripoli — Hostilities with England — Renewal of the Armed Neutrality — Horrible Battle at Copenhagen — Co- penhagen cruelly Bombarded, and the Fleet carried away — ^^Var with Sweden — Peace of Jonkoping — Prince Christian August, of Augustenburg — His Death — War with Sweden, Russia, and Prussia — Alliance with France — Fierce Fight at Sehcstcdt — Peace of Kiel — Norway Lost — Eman- cipation of the Peasantry from Feudal Bondage — Other Important Altera- tions in Different Branches of the Government — Care of the King for Public Instruction — University and School Affairs — Literature — Pecuniary Af- fairs — Representative Council — Christian VIII. — School Affairs in Copen- hagen and in the Country — Iceland — The Danish East India Possessions disposed of — Care for the Danish Language in the Northern part of Schieswig — Railroads — Frederick VII. — Horrible War with the Rebel- lious Duchies — Marriage of Princess Alexandra with Princo of Walas. CIiristia?i VII., a son of Frederick Y. and his first queen, Louise, succeeded his father to the throne of both kingdoms, in the seventeenth year of his a. d., age. Soon after his accession, Christian VIL i'*^°- married Caroline Mathilde, a sister of the magnani- mous king of England, Gfcorgc III. ; and the engaging HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 383 manners of this young princess, only sixteen years of age when married to the Icing, won her the favor of the Danish king and people. Shortly after Christian VII. had mounted the throne several alterations amongst the higher officers were made. The well deserving Count Danneskjold Samso, who, during the reign of Christian VI., had so gloriously managed the naval affairs, but under the whole royalty of Frederick V. had been removed from any share in the government, now regained the administration of the navy, and was again introduced into the privy council. Prompted by Reverdil, who was now appointed secre- tary of the cabinet council, the young king, by nature possessed of uncommon endowments of mind, toolc an energetic care of the peasantry, which bo rightly re- garded the majority of the nation. A committee, in which Reverdil and Henrik Stampe presided, was appointed to propose improvements in the condition of the peasants, who, in the whole county of Copenhagen, were emancipated from bond-service, and declared owners of their farms. Soon after, however, new alte- rations were made at the court. Reverdil was dis- charged, the deserving Danneskjold Samso was sud denly, without any fault, deposed from all his offices, and banished from Copenhagen; likewise St. Grermain, before mentioned, who for some years had commanded the land force, was dismissed. After Reverdil's dis- 384 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. charge, Count Hoick exercised a detrimental influence upon the morality of the young king, and led him into dissipated habits. A. D., ►i>oon after the king undertook a tour through I7G8. Europe, for the purpose of acquiring more in- struction and experience, and bringing back to his sub- jects the improvements of more refined nations. Having established a regency, to direct the government during his absence, he departed from his dominions in the train of his courtiers and numerous attendants. In Altona the young king contracted familiarity with the talented physician, Joh7b Frederick Struensec, who was appointed to accompany the king as physician in ordinary. Shortly before the king left Denmark, his queen, Caro- line Mathilde, had on the 2Sth of January, 1768, been delivered of the crown prince Frederick, afterwards king of Denmark and Norway, by the name of Frederick VI. From Altona Christian VII. went to England, where lie, by his handsome appearance, natural wit and enga- ging manners, won universal favor, the University of Oxford even conferring upon him the honorary diploma of doctor Juris. On account of his talents and insin- uating manners, and of his availing himself of every opportunity to please his royal master, Struensec became a great favorite with the king, and upon returning he monopolized the favor of the king and the queen to such a degree, that he was raised to the office of prime minis- HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 385 tor, or rather, sole ruler of Denmark and Norway, ex- alted to the rank of a count, and decorated with the order of the Elephant, exercising an omnipotent influ- ence, and being able to undertake a complete revolution of the state affairs ; the easier, as the king himself, by dissolute, licentious manners, had fallen into a temporary insanity. To accomplish his schemes, Struensee availed himself of his intimate friend, Enevold Brandt^ who entertained the greatest familiarity with the king, had likewise been exalted to the rank of a count, and decorated with the order of the Elephant, and mastered Christian VII. so completely as to make him comply with his humor ; Struensee and Brandt thus being the real rulers of the kingdom, the king himself only nomi- nally. The old, generally-esteemed Bernstorff, being a stumbling-block to Struensee's carrying out his plans, was suddenly removed, through the interference of Count Ranzau Ascheberg, also striving for power and influ- ence. The privy council was annulled, audits a. d., members, among whom was baron Thott and I'^'^o. count A. Gr. Moltke, dismissed ; a cabinet council being erected instead of it ; which, however, signified nothing, Struensee himself deciding all matters of consequence, without any consultation either with the king or with the royal colleges, and soon gaining such an a. d., ascendency as to be authorized to pass com- ^"'^^ mands in his own name with the same validity a.<» if 380 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. they were subscribed by the king himself. Jealous ot the unheard-of power and influence extended to Struen- see and Brandt, count Ranzau Ascheberg soon became one of their most mortal enemies, and afterwards privy to the horrible conspiracy, which brought them to trial as criminals, and to suffer a dreadful death. Intoxica- ted with joy at the immense influence they exereised, they did not suspect that fearful event which was at hand. Struensee's administration was vigorous, and, in many respects, very useful, many alterations which he ir.ado being highly laudable, while others were of doubt- ful utility, and some altogether injurious. One of the greatest benefits which the ministry of Struensee efFect- A. D., cd was the liberty of the press. Immediately I'^'^o. after he had assumed his power, a royal rescript emanated, giving every individual right to express his opinion on the whole conduct of the government, with- out reserve, by word or writing ; the press should be open to every thing, but after publication, such writings as offended in the particulars, should be subject to the penalties of the law ; thus, at length, that tie was now untied, which for two centuries had retarded the free progress of literature and science, and furnished unjust officers with the most powerful impulse to every species of malversation. A better regulation of the finances was a main object of his attention, and to accomplish his j)lans in this fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA 387 respect, he employed the skillful Oeder, and his efficient brother, Peter Struensee, counselor of state. A col- lege of finances was erected to undertake the adminis- ti-ation of all the revenues and expenses of both king- doms, which formerly had been divided between different colleges ; a more economical system was adopted and a fixed sum of money assigned for the expenses of the royal court. As to the conferring of badges of honor and honorary titles, it was resolved henceforth to ascertain more minutely than before the worthiness of the persons on whom those titles were to be conferred, and no more to allow servants of the nobility offices in the kingdoms, the practice of which aheady long had intruded upon the patience of the people. In reference to the magistrate of Copenhagen, im- portant alterations took place, all the members of the magistracy being deposed and the council of the tliirty- two men removed, after which the whole administration was regulated in a nev/ and better way. Of gi-eat importance was the erection of the municipal courts from which the defendant could appeal to the supreme court, if not content with the sentence of the municipal court. Formerly the law-suits in Copenha- gen had been divided between many different tribunals : a great hindrance for quick and due procedure. It was also forbidden by law to put the criminals to the rack to compel them to confess their crimes. HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Struensee was also highly desirous of improving tho condition of the agricultural classes. In the beginning of the reign of Christian VII. something had been done for this purpose, but afterwards this importarit matter had again been dropped, only some few laws being passed as to improvements in agriculture, while the personal condition of the peasantry continued as before. But, prompted by Struensee, a new committee was appointed, in which Oeder, uniting a deep insight into agricultural affairs with ardent love of the peas- antry, presided. Upon the recommendation of this committee a law was enacted, that the bond-service should be adjusted to their acres of land, as also other regulations favorable to the peasantry. Besides that, it was proposed by this committee, shortly before Struen- see's declension, to emancipate the peasantry from all feudal bondage. It also conduced to the advancement of manufactures in Denmark, that the Moravian brethren, distinguished for their industry, were permitted to settle in Chris- tiansfeldt, in the duchy of Schleswig. Struensee's attention was also directed to the many deficiencies in the regulation of the University, and to remedy them he called down from Norway the learned bishop Ghinnerus of Trondhjem, who, with deep inspec- tion, elaborated a proposal for a reformation of the Oniversity, which, however, at Struensee's declension, shortly subsequent, was laid aside. fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 339 But although these excellent improvements met with great approbation amongst the sensible and educated people, nevertheless, he incurred their displeasure and censure for having made them too precipitately, without preparation and assurance for the future. All eyes were bent jealously upon him, and misfortunes were accumulating fast upon liis head. During the continu- ance of Struensee's useful designs, his friend, Count E nevoid Brandt, a man of weak intellect, and without any vigor of mind, had plunged into the pleasures of the court, and in the midst of luxury and festivity indulged the king's passions, often taking advantage of his famil- iarity with him to forget the distance between himself and his royal master, while many looked jealously upon him, and he stood over a hidden volcano. To return to Struensee ; several of his institutions gave great offence to the manners and habits of his age ; for instance, that he abrogated by law (26th of October, 1770) the following holy days : the third Christmas, Easter, and Pentecost days, the Epiphany, the Purifica- tion of St. Mary the Virgin, the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgm, St. John Baptist's day, and St. Michael's and All Angels, alleging that they were only used for idleness and vices, and not for true worship ; that he annulled all difference between legitimate and illegiti- mate children, and finally commanded to bury all corpses early in the morning, aiming thereby, it should be observed, at diminishing that luxury and funeral 390 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. pomp which long had taken place ; all of which gave ttie more offense as Struensee was a known despiser of all religion and a man of immoral principles. .if He is also blamed for having introduced the corrupt- ing system of raising money by lotteries, and there soon appeared a general dissatisfaction with the reign of Struensee, the more as he was a professed despiser of the Danish language. The royal orders were issued in Grerman, the royal colleges had to present their pro- posals in (jferman, and applications and supplications from private people had to be written in German, if they might expect them to be taken notice of. Struensee had formally monopolized the favor of the young queen ; wheresoever she was, he accompanied her ; he approached her without sufficient respect, and he was generally charged with having defiled the royal bed, which, however, never was clearly proved. Many officers had been despotically deposed from their offices, often without any pension ; his haughtiness had given great offense to the Danish nobles, and the most influ- ential families of the country had lost their influence. During some agitations arising from a few mariners and workmen, Struensee proved himself faint-hearted, which inspired his enemies with courage to precipitate him from his high place. His friend. Count E nevoid Brandt, was charged with having taken advantage of the king's momentary insanity, even so far as to have beaten hia majesty. HISTORV OF SCANDINAVIA, 391 A conspiracy was formed against them, the principal leaders of which were the king's stepmother, the queen- dowager, JiiUane Marie, and her son, the crook-hacked prince, Frederick, both of whom, during the ministry of Struensee, had been neglected and stripped of all influence ; Ove Guldberg, private secretary with Prince Frederick, whose teacher he had been ; the two counts, . Ranzaii Ascheherg and Osten, Colonel Kol/er, General Eichst'ddt and Commissary-General Beringskjold ; who all had before enjoyed the king's bounty, but by the influence of Struensee and Brandt had lost it. It was resolved to involve the unfortunate young queen, Caroline Mathilde, in their fate, preparations being made to strike a decisive blow. The plot was laid with a depth equal to the atrocionsness of a. d., the design. In the night, between the 16th and i''"^^. 17th of January, the infernal scheme was carried out. Soldiers appeared in the streets and round the royal palace of Clnristiansborg, barricades were erected, popu- lar commotions took place in the capital, and the cry, " Down v\'ith the traitors ! " resounded throughout Co- penhagen. Struensee and his friend Enevold Brandt, not at all suspecting the peril to wliich they were expo- sed, were suddenly arrested at midnight, by virtue of an order which had been extorted from the imbecile king. ■While this was passing, Ranzau Ascheherg and Roller, guided by numerous soldiers, repaired to the royal palace, entered the queen's bed-chamber and dragged her 392 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. naked out of her bed and commanded her to follow them. Pleading her complete innocence and appealing to her royal dignity, she cried : "I will speak with the king, my royal consort ; " but they answered : " His majesty is asleep, we dare not awake him ; " after which they placed her by force in a carriage, and sent her, a prisoner, to the fortress of Kronborg, near Else- nore, where she remained for six weeks. Dread of British vengeance saved her, perhaps, from personal violence. While a prisoner in Kronborg, she was, under the pretence of having committed adultery with Stru- ensee, divorced, by a judicial sentence, from the imbecile king, Christian VIL, and then permitted to retire to Hanover, where, from 1772 to 1775, in a small town called Zelle, the remainder of her life was spent in comparative obscurity, pious contemplations, and in the exercise of secret charity. She died at the age of twenty-four. Even when breathing her last she assert- ed her innocence of the crime with which she had been charged, declaring solemnly that she had been sacrificed by a base plot. When she was carried away by force from Copen- hagen, her little son, the crown-prince Frederick, after- wards king by the name of Frederick VI., was only four years of age. She saw him no more. She is buried in a plain vault in the church of Zelle, with the laconic inscription on her cojEfin : " Carolina Mathilda^ Regina Daniai et Norvegia3." HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 393 "While this was passing with the young queen, Stru- ensee and Brandt were sitting in their prisons, wrapped in gloomy thoughts and awaiting their horrible sentence of death, at the circumstances of which abominable tragedy we cannnot but shudder. They were insulted with the mockery of a trial, and their sentence was : " Struensee and Brandt have forfeited honor, life, and property; their right hands shall first be stricken off, then their heads ; their bodies be divided into four parts and exposed on the wheel to public view ; " to which cruel sentence the deranged king was easily brought to affix his signature. Dr. Hee, minister of the church of the mariners, and Dr. Miinter, minister of the German church, and father of the learned bishop of Copenhagen, Dr. Frederick Miinter, were commanded to prepare the victims a. d., for death. On the 28th of April, the cruel i"2. sentence was literally carried into effect. Struensee, whose religious views had taken a happy change under his imprisonment, when ascending the scaffold, cried out : " The power of the blood of Christ speaks comfort to me." This horrible scene excited horror and detestation in all the courts of Europe, calling it the Danish judiciary murder. The hard-hearted queen-dowager, Juliane Marie, who was seen looking from a window of her palace upon the dreadful spectacle, now usurped the royal authority for a long time, after having removed 394 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. her rivals, and the young and talented nobleman, named Bernstorff, a nephew of the before mentioned count, was appointed minister of foreign affairs, which he conducted with excellent discretion. Struensee thus removed, the former principles of government were introduced, the privy council was re- established by the name of council of state, the royal colleges were replaced on their old footing, most of Struensee's institutions being abrogated, the good as well as the bad, and nearly all the men whom he had employed in carrying out his reforms, deposed and removed, although many of them were highly effioienl and deserving ofhcers. Besides the queen-dowager, Juliane Marie, baron Otto Thott, Schack Rathlau, and count Schimmebnann, exercised until 1784 the most important influence upon the government ; while, on the other hand, Ranzau Ascheberg, and several others of the most efficient coadjutors in removing Struensee, were soon dismissed. Only Ove Guldberg was gradually raised to greater and greater dignity and influence, his authority becoming so considerable that this whole period has been called ike period of Guldberg. Andrew Peter Bernstorff, a nephew of the elder BernstorfT, skillfully administered, (1773- 1780,) as above mentioned, the foreign affairs, but afterwards laid down his office, not approving of the principles which Gruldberg followed. But the adminis- tration of BornstorfF is remarkable for the fact that the HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 395 treaty wliich his uncle, in 1767, had concluded with Russia, concerning the exchange of the ducal part of Holstein for Oldenhurg and Delmenhorst, was a.d., now accomplished, the crown prince of Russia, '^'^'^^■ Paul Petroivitch, now passing his minority. Denmark herehy coming into an undivided possession of Holstein, the motives for future disputes with Russia were removed ; the more so, as the house of Holstein-Kiel renounced its claims to the duchy of Schleswig. The counties, Oldenburg and Delmenhorst, were, by Paul Petrowitch, resigned to the young Frederick August^ a prince of the younger line of the house of Kiel, and on this occasion elevated to a grand duchy, by the title of the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg. Six years after, also, the Gfliicksburg posses- a. d., sions, at the death of the last duke, by uiheri- i'^'^^- tance devolved to the Danish crown ; all the small par- cels wliich by earlier divisions had been separated from the crown were reunited to it, except the possessions of the duke of Augustenburg. In 1775, twelve years from the peace of Paris, by which Nova Scotia, Canada, Cape Breton, and all other islands in the gulf and river St. Lawrence were ceded to the British crown, the American revolutionary w^ar began, which, by the indefatigable efforts of the noble George "Washington, and many other patriots, termi- nated in the final separation of the United States from the British empire. Several of the European maritime 396 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA, powers sharing in this memorable war, the Danish and Northern commerce was highly molested by the priva- teers of the belligerent powers, France, Spain, and especially England, '^o remedy this evil, A. P. Bern- storff labored energetically for effecting an alliance between Denmark, Sweden, and Russia, to protect the neutra. commerce. His endeavors met, for a while, A. D., with difficulties, but at length a treaty was con- 1780. eluded, called the Act of the Armed Neutrality^ by which these three maritime powers jointly engaged themselves in maintaining the axiom, that a free ship makes free cargo, or that all merchandise, when not contraband, freely and without any control, could be carried on neutral vessels, to and from the countries of the belligerent powers. This alliance, entered upon by several states, exercised a highly beneficial influence upon the Danish commerce, England now altering her policy in this respect, and France and Spain acknow- ledging the principles of the armed neutrality. Espe- cially the lines of transportation in the Mediterranean and the West Indies were very flourishing, which lattei was carried on to a great extent, and with considerable profit. For the advancement of the commerce, a chan- nel was formed between the bay of Kiel and the Eider river, a conjunction being thereby effected between the Baltic and the North Sea. But, nevertheless, finan- cial affairs grew still worse during this period. In the first years several considerable expenses occurred, which HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 397 increased the debt, but even in the following years the debt was continually increasing, notwithstanding the sources of wealth were pouring in abundantly. In the year 1784 the debt, which from 1766-1772 had been reduced to sixteen millions, amounted to twenty-nine millions of rLx-dollars. The government tried to remedy the scarcity of money by redeeming the private bank, which, during the reign of Christian VI., had been esta- blished, and changing it to a royal bank. This altera- tion, though undertaken diametrically opposite to the charter of the bank, and detrimental to the shareholders, made it possible for the government, when want of money might happen, to issue out bills without having a corresponding value of silver ; which expedient, in the following time, was used to such an extent as to ruin altogether the pecuniary affairs of the country. The period of Guldberg is distinguished by a great care for the Danish hterature. Guldberg himself was a man of extensive learning, and an active promoter of scientific undertakings. The Danish language, which long had been neglected, and during the ministry of Struensee entirely trampled under foot, regained esteem. In the army the German drill words were exchanged for Danish ; at the court the Danish language was spoken ; the Latin schools were reorganized, on which occasion the mother tongue and history of Denmark were introduced as the objects of instruction. Also, the TIniversity was reformed, though not to that extent 398 HISTORY OF SCAIfDINAVIA. which bishop Gunnerus, during the ministry of Struen- see, had in view. The charter- of naturalization^ issued during the period of Gruldherg, hears a strong witness to the patriotic mind of the government. By this law, which the king enjoined his successors to regard as an unalterable radical law, it was determined, that only Danes, Norwegians and Holsteiners should have access to the offices of the state ; such men, however, excepted, as by rare talents, uncommon knowledge, or great wealth, might be of great service to the kingdoms. Notwithstanding science and the arts being protected and promoted, the government, nevertheless, during the ministry of Gruldberg, was very disaffected toward the liberty of the press. That liberty which, under Struen- see, had been given to every individual to express his opinions without reserve, by word or writing, ceased A. D., unfortunately again altogether. A law was now i'"^3. enacted, forbidding to insert in the newspapers or periodicals anything concerning the government and public institutions, the mayor of Copenhagen being en- titled to punish the violators of this law, either by fine or imprisonment, without allowing any appeal to the tribunals. Also, against larger works,' a high degree of arbitrary power was exercised, the government encroach- ing upon them, either through immediate orders from the cabinet council, or in other ways preventing them &-om being published. In reference to the peasantry, also, during the ministry mSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 399 of Gruldberg, principles were established diametrically opposite to those of the former government. Guldberg himself was fully convinced, that the yoke of the pea- santry could not be taken off without entirely subverting the state. The committee which, under Struensee, had been appointed to propose improvements in the condition of the peasantry, was dissolved, professor Oeder, its most active and skillful member, being discharged, with the notification, that he had forfeited the king's favor. The law concerning the bond-service, so favorable to the peasants, which had been enacted during the ministry of Struensee, was annulled, the bond-service again being made indefinite, and replaced on its old despotic footing. The pressure on the peasantry also grew still worse by the erection of many new manors, which came up by continually disposing of the crown estates. Neverthe- less, after count Joachim Gotshe Moltke had been appointed president of the exchequer, a law for the abrogation of the community of ground was enacted, liighly important and beneficial for the agricultural classes. The revolutionary war in America, of seven years' duration, had been waged vigorously, and successfully in its results to the cause of freedom. Misfortunes seemed to attend almost every scheme undertaken by England for coercing the Americans into obedience. The great continental powers, jealous of the maritime and commercial prosperity of England, and dissatisfied 400 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. with her policy, ardently desired her humiliation, and rejoiced heartily at every misfortune that befel her, and the northern kingdoms shared in the universal joy, and mentioned Washington's name with respect and admira- tion ; and when the proclamation of the cessation of hostilities was made to the army, on the 19th of April, 1783, Sweden had already, by virtue of the articles of peace, signed on the 30th of November, 1782, acknow ledged, 5th of February, 1783, the independence of the United States ; whereupon Christian VII., on the 25th of February, 1783, for Denmark and Norway, subscri- bed to the independence of this great Union, Already, the year before, Holland had, 19th of April, 1782, ac- knowledged said independence. The expenditure of blood and money which this war had cost England was enor- mous. Of course, also, the United States had suffered during the war ; the trade and the commerce of the country were almost destroyed, and agriculture was greatly interrupted and depressed, and the great Union was burdened with an immense debt, from which they, however, soon recovered, by maintaining a strict neu- trality, and engaging themselves in an extensive and profitable carrying trade. Crown-prince Frederick, son of Christian VII. and the unfortunate queen Caroline Mathilde, had now A. D., grown up and been confirmed by the court chap- ''''^*- lain. Dr. Bastholm, whereupon he conducted the reign ; his father, Christian VII., being so mentally HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 401 deranged as not to be able to rule the kingdoms. A few days after his confirmation, the crown-prince removed Ove Gruldberg, whose ministry ceased pursuant to an order in writing, signed by the imbecile king and the crown-prince, who now created a new ministry of state, into which were admitted the great and liberal jurisconsult, Henry Stampe, and the celebrated diplo- mate, Andreas Peter Bernstorff, who, after an absence of four years, returned to Denmark to conduct again the foreign aflairs. The peaceable terms on which Denmark was with Sweden, were for a little while interrupted, Sweden having attacked Russia, which Denmark, according to an earlier alliance, had to assist. Consequently a. d., a Danish army made from Norway an inroad ^''^^■ into Sweden, and, commanded by crown-prince Frede- rick, advanced briskly into the Swedish frontier-pro- vinces, which were unable to make any resistance, the Swedish troops having pitched their camp in Finland, in order to attack the Russians. A victory was obtained over the Swedes at Qvistrum Bridg-e, by the Danes, who advanced upon G-othenburg; but England interfering, and threatening Denmark with war, the hostilities soon ceased. This short campaign, however, had cost Den- mark the considerable sum of seven millions of rix dollars. Shortly after, the unfortunate Louis j^^^ 21 XVI. of France was guillotined in Paris, and the a. d., democratic spirit, which had called forth the revo- ^^^^' 402 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. lutionary war of America, was borne back to France by her chivalrous sons, who, in aiding the oppressed Ame- ricans, had imbibed their principles. The ancient con- stitution of France was overthrown, and the French Revohition was hurried forward, involving most Euro- pean powers in a sanguinary war. But Denmark, through A. P. BernstorfF's wise diplomacy, being happy enough to maintain an unshaken neutrality, abundantly enjoyed the blessings of peace, carrying on the most flourishing commerce. The East India and China trade was so profitable, that for many years merchandise was yearly brought to Copenhagen, to the amount of five millions of rix-dollars ; and the carrying trade in the Mediterranean, together with the North American and "West Indian commerce, was likewise pursued with great profit. The trade, however, in the Mediterranean, was for a long time greatly molested by the Dey of Tripoli violently outraging the Danish merchantmen. But, not- withstanding peace having long reigned, the Danes had not degenerated from the ancient Northern bravery. The undaunted Admiral, Steen Bille, gained a complete A.D., victory over a superior Tripolitan fleet, and com- 1797. pelled the Dey to pay respect to the Danish flag, thus securing to the Danish trade in the Mediterranean due freedom and progress. The victory gained, the Dey presented Steen Bille, to show him his esteem, with a costly sabre. But, in the course of the French revolutionary war, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 403 Denmark had a difficult game to play, frequent col- lisions occurring with the belligerent powers, especially with England, who despotically treated the neutral merchantmen. England now extending the list of con- traband goods, by which before only munitions of war were meant, to meal, grain, and other bread-stuffs, and claiming the right of searching neutral ships for contra-' band articles, and of seizing vessels not laden with exceptionable cargoes, attempted to forbid Denmark to enjoy free navigation from one port to another, and to bring meal and grain, her most important articles of exportation, to France or other countries, which were waging war with England. Nevertheless, the wise Bernstorff succeeded in getting it determined, that all effects conveyed by Danish merchantmen, excepting only warlike stores, should be free, and in maintaining the peace and dignity of Denmark and Norway, a. d., But, unfortunately, Bernstorff died amidst these i^^^- critical circumstances. To protect the merchantmen against future outrage, Denmark now commenced to convoy them by ships of war ; but England stubbornly claimed the right of searching even such merchantmen as were convoyed. Mutual recriminations were, therefore, almost constantly passing between the Danish and the English govern- 'nents, the former complaining, that great numbers of Danish vessels, not laden with contraband goods, had been seized and carried into the ports of England; the 404 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. latter accusing the former of supplying the enemies of A. D., England with naval and military stores. A 1800. slight collision in the English Channel, hetween Freia, a Danish man-of-M^ar, and a superior English vessel, which,* after a brave resistance, at last captured her, together with the merchantmen sailing under her convoy, increased the hostile feelings of the two nations ; a war being about to break out, when fortunately a Convention was concluded, pursuant to which England returned the captured vessels, and Denmark promised not to convoy her merchantmen by ships of war until the matter in question was settled. In the meantime. Napoleon, since the 10th of No- vember, 1799, seated on the consular throne of France, was successfully planning a union of the northern A.D., powers against England, and on the 16th of 1800. December, a Maritime Confederacy was signed by Russia, Sweden, Denmark, and soon after by Prussia, on principles similar to the Armed Neutrality of 1780, and its effect would have been, if fully carried out, to deprive England of her naval superiority. Denmark having lately concluded a convention with England, was not inclined to accede to this new confederacy, but gave way, however, to the wish of the Russian emperor, Paul, who was highly exasperated at England ; the Danish government now ordering her armed vessels to resist the search of the British cruisers, and the Russian emperor issuing an embargo on all the British ships in his harbors. HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 405 Still, England maintained her superiority at sea, and, determined to anticipate her enemies, despatched, as soon as possible, a powerful fleet to the Baltic, a. d., under the command of Sir Hyde Parker and i^oi. Nelson. Passing through the sound at Elsenore under a tremendous fire from the Danish batteries, on the 30th of March, the English fleet, numbering fifty-one . men-of-war, came to anchor opposite the harbor of Copenhagen, which was protected by an imposing array of forts and floating batteries ; but the Danish men-of- war were old and almost unmanageable, commanded by admiral Olfert Fisher. It is an interesting fact, that Charles G-. Sommers, a Baptist minister in the city of New- York, still living, was in Copenhagen on the eventful day of the 2d of April, 1801. I cannot refrain from quoting the following graphic words from the " American Pulpit," published by Henry Fowler, Professor of the University of Ro- chester, N. Y. : "Within two miles from Copenhagen the British fleet came to anchor, in the evening of the first of April, Here these mighty battle-ships lay all night, in a fore- boding silence, broken only by the dash of waves against their huge black sides, or by sound of revelry, and low murmur of preparation, which ever and anon issued from the open port-holes. In the British fleet it was a night of wild joy and hope, and glorious antici- pation of the morrow's victory, with the thrilling excite- 406 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. ment which nerves the arm and steels the heart of soldier and seaman in the prospect of desolating contest. But the gloom of night, which settled over the doomed city of Copenhagen, was hut a faint image of the fore- hodings shutting down so darkly on the hearts of all its desperate defenders. About ten o'clock on the ^ -j ^ following morning (Good Friday), Lord Nelson's a.d., ships had taken their allotted places, and at the signal opened their tremendous fire on the Danish armament. It was returned by the shot of one thousand guns, which spoke in terms not to be misun- derstood, of the desperate bravery with which the Danes would defend their native land, and of the terrible destruction through which the British flag must pass, ere it waved in triumph over the citadel of Copen- hagen. For more than five hours did these two mighty combatants, the flower of the English navy, and the concentrated strength of Denmark, wage upon each other a warfare of magnificent bravery, but of awful carnage. It was one of the hardest fought battles that humanity ever has been called to mourn over. Young Sommers was witness of it all, in its terribleness, its havoc, and its magnificence. When Nelson came on shore, Sommers had a good sight of him. Villemoes^ too, he often saw, and describes him as of a very modest and retiring appearance, of whom the following is told A Danish youth of seventeen, named Villemoes, par- ticularly distinguished himself on this memorable day, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 407 TJo liad volunteered to take the command of a floating battery, which was a raft, consisting merely of a num- ber of beams nailed together, with a flooring to support the guns ; it was square, with a breastwork full of port-holes, and without masts, carrying twenty-four guns and one hundred and twenty men. With this ho got under the stern of the Elephant, below the reach of the stern-chasers, and, under a heavy fire of small arms from the marines, fought his raft till the truce was announced, with such skill and bravery as to excite Nelson's warmest admiration. Nelson requested of the crown-prince of Denmark, that Villemoes might be introduced to him ; and shaking hands with this young northern hero, told the prince, that Villemoes ought to be made an admiral. The prince replied : ' If, my Lord, I am to make all my brave officers admirals, 1 should have no captains or lieutenants in my service.' " After a continued fight of five hours the Danish fleet was almost altogether destroyed, but Nelson had under- gone so great a loss as not to bo able to continue the battle, his largest men-of-war being in a dangerous situation. The formidable fire from the Danish batte- ries being silenced, Nelson sent a white flag ashore, and negotiations were transacted. Nevertheless, it is not to be denied, that the victory in this horrible engagement rested with the English, but the Danes had fought with such courage and obstinacy as to procure them everlasting honor, to which Nelson's words to the crown 408 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. prince bear witness : " Your royal highness ! I have been in one hundred and five engagements, but tnat of Copenhagen was the most terrible of them all." iSix thousand of Denmark's bravest sons were taken from her ; the English loss was two thousand two hundred men, but many of their men-of-war had blown up. Against each other were arrayed men who knew no inspiration equal to that of their country's call, and paid no heed to personal safety, when her safety was endangered. Nelson, a man of refinement of manners, humanity, and with studied courtesies of polished life, was, after the battle, cordially received in Copenhagen ; and as an instance of his courtesy, it is related, that in the very midst of the battle, when the work of carnage and destruction was the hottest around him, and he judged it expedient to propose a cessation of hostilities, a wafer being brought to him to seal his communication to the Danish authorities, he rejected it, directing the wax and a taper to be brought, saying: "What! shall I send my own spittle to the crown-prince ? " An armistice was now concluded for fourteen weeks, during which time Denmark abdicated active participa- tion in the Armed Neutrality. This armistice soon led June 24 *^ ^ Complete peace, when the Russian emperor, A. D., Paul, the founder and head of the Northern Con- ■ federacy, who had provoked the indignation of the nobles and the people, was murdered by a party of HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA, 409 conspii'ators, who placed upon the throne his son, Alexander J., who immediately resolved to atandon the armed neutrality, and to cultivate the friendship of Great Britain. Sweden, Denmark, and Prussia followed his example, and thus was dissolved the League of the North, the most formidable confederacy ever arrayed against the maritime power of England. Denmark soon retrieved the consequences of tliis war, and her commerce continued to flourish as before ; but the incessant wars in the north of Germany occasioned immense expenses, Denmark deeming it necessary to keep her army in Holstein to protect the frontiers. Meanwhile Napoleon had rapidly extended his suprem- acy over the continent of Europe, and when the a. d., German empire was dissolved, and fourteen i^^^- princes of the south and west of Germany were induced to form the Confederation of the Rhine, and place them- selves under the protection of France, that feudal obligation in which Holstein had been to the German emperor ceased, and Holstein was now incorporated as an inseparable part of the Danish monarchy. Denmark having liitherto sought, as far as possible, to keep out of the terrible war in which the French Revo- lution had involved most of the other states of Europe, was suddenly thrown into the middle of the great movements, which then shook Europe ; and the blessed peace which Denmark, except a few short interrup- tions, had enjoyed since the yoar 1720, was now ex- 410 HISTORY OF SCANDINA\aA. changed for a seven years' war of the most lainentabla consequences. It was generally believed that Napoleon intended to blockade all the harbors of the continent against Great Britain, and that he would compel Denmark to give up her neutrality, and probably avail hims&lf of the Danish navy to execute his old project of an invasion. To prevent such an enterprise England sent, without any previous declaration of war, a powerful armament against Den- mark, under the command of admiral Gambier and general Cathcart. An imperious demand for the in- stant surrender of the Danish fleet and naval stores, to be retained as a deposit by the English until the con- clusion of the war, being peremptorily rejected, the Danes were briskly attacked by land and sea ; but as their army was in Holste-in to protect the frontiers, and was prevented by English men-of-war, cruising round in the Belts, from coming to the assistance of the capital, they could only make a very weak resistance. Sept. 2-5, A-fter Copenhagen had been furiously bom- A. D., barded for three days, general Peymann was 1 QC\'7 constrained to submit to the demands of the British, and the Danish fleet was, six weeks after, removed, while the indignant people could scarcely be prevented from .avenging the national insult, even by the presence of a superior force. A militia, consisting principally of men who had never stood under fire, commanded by general Gastenskjold, tried at Kjoge, raSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 411 four Danish miles from Copenhagen, to mako head against the British troops, but were immediately routed. The enemy carried away thirty-three men-of-war and sf.veral frigates, besides a great store of ammunition. Here I may^quote the following gi-aphic account from the American Pulpit : "It was six years after the horrible battle of 1801, that a British fleet suddenly appeared off Elsenore, the toll-gate city of Denmark.' It amounted to nearly a score of line ships, a large number of frigates and gun-boats, with transports car- rying some twenty thousand men. As they swept into the straits under a light wind, with all sails spread, flags, pennants, and streamers flying from mastheads, bows, and sterns, every yard throughout the v/hole fleet manned with seamen, Mr. Sommers describes it a mag- nificent sight. And when the bands of eleven regiments struck up the national air : ' Rule, Britannia, Britannia rule the AVaves,' the eflect was thrilling. With his usual enterprise in search of incident or information, Sommers jumped into a skifl" with a companion, and pulled off" for the Prince of "Wales, a ninety-eight gun ship. Going on board, he was most kindly received, and invited below to a repast with the officers. He frankly inquired where they were going with such a fleet. An officer replied : " We do not know ; sealed orders have been given us, which will be opened this afternoon ; and we hope it is not to Copenhagen." But alas, it was. That afternoon the fleet weighed 412 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVfA. anchor for that unfurtunato capital, and the next morn- ing the booming of cannon was heard at Elsenore, twenty-four EngUsh miles distant, and Copenhagen was hombarded. " This attack was made under the command of Lord Grambier. It was done for the purpose of getting pos- session of the Danish fleet, which lay dismantled in its harbor. This fleet the English government was inform- ed by their active minister abroad, Jackson, was to come into possession of the French, which John Bull could not, and would not allow. The fleet was captured ; English sailors swarmed on board of the stripped vessels, rigged them, fitted them for sea, and the two fleets passed over to England. In this engagement, the enthusiasm of young Sommers would not allow him merely to sit quietly on the end of a ship-crane, but he must assist in the defence of Denmark, his adopted country. So he joined the company which manned the old fort of Kronborg, the guns of which swept the straits, and there played away at the ships as they passed." Tliis act of violence against Denmark, called so by the whole of Europe, furnished the Russian emperor with a pretext for breaking off" his connection with G-reat Britain. He complained, in strong language, of the disregard which England had ever shown for the rights of neutral powers, and the unscrupulous use that had been made of her naval supremacy, and many of HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 413 the maritime states seconded his remonstrances. Den- mark, though deprived of her navy, resented the blow inflicted on her by England, by throwing herself without reserve into the arms of France. Shortly after, a. d., Denmark declared war against Sweden, whose i^'^^- king, Gtistavns IV., a son of the celebrated Gustavus III., who, in 1792, at a masked-ball, had been mur- dered by Captain John Jacob Ankarstrom, was in the closest connection with England, and strove for the possession of Norway. A few days after the breaking out of the war with Sweden, the imbecile Chris- a.d., tian YII. died in Rendsburg, Holstein, and his i^^^- son, who, since 1784, had ruled Denmark and Norway as crown-prince, ascended the throne of both kingdoms by the name of Frederick VI. The kingdoms were, at that time, in a very criticaj situation, involved in a double war, and on account of the loss of the fleet not able to undertake anything of consequence against England, their most dangerous enemy ; their commerce was weakened by England's Q^pturing many hundred merchantmen, and their agri- culture was greatly interrupted and depressed. The capital had suffered greatly by the English bom- bardment ; and some years before, 1794, it had been greatly injured by a fire, which even consumed the splendid palace of Christiansborg, considered one of the most costly and beautiful in Europe. French reinforcements arrived in Denmark under the 414 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. command of Charles John Bernadotte, prince of Pon- tecorvoj one of Napoleon's most celebrated marshals, and preparations were made to make a descent upon Skane in Sweden. The reinforcements consisted mostly of Spanish soldiers, who mutinied, and the expedition was abandoned. But on the Norwegian frontier, the war was waged very successfully by the skillful, tal- ented, and generally beloved prince. Christian August, of Augustenburg. Meanwhile the eccentric Gustavus Adolphus IV., who, by his imprudent reign, had brought Sweden into the most miserable condition, had been deposed on the 13th of March, 1809, and his uncle, Charles XIIL, raised to the Swedish throne. After his accession to A. D., the crown of Sweden, peace was concluded with 1809. Denmark, in Jonkoping, by which everything remained as before the war, and with Russia the same year, in Frederikshamn, by which peace Sweden lost 'Finland, which for six hundred and fifty years had belonged to Sweden — the most unfortunate peace Swe- den has ever concluded. «9 Charles XIIL being old and childless, the Swedes A, D., elected prince Christian August, of Augusten- 1810- burg, successor to the throne. By the name of Charles August he arrived in Sweden, where he, by his mild and unaffected deportment, made himself highly beloved ; but while ho was reviewing a regiment of hussars in Skane, at Quidinge Heath, he died suddenly, HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. ~ _ 415 not without some snspicion of poison. Count a.d., Axel Ferse7i, suspected of having poisoned him, i^io. was, when the body of the dearly beloved crown-prince was escorted to the tomb, cut to pieces by the mob of Stockholm, The Swedish senate feeling convinced that a tried warrior was, under the sad circumstances, neces- sary for Sweden, tendered the succession to Charles John Bernadotte^ who had won their favor by the leni- ency and prudence he had displayed some years before in the North of Germany. Bernadotte, willingly accepting the glorious offer, to the secret annoyance of Napoleon, who had long been jealous of his military fame and independent spirit, arrived in Sweden in October, 1810, by the name of Charics John. To return to Denmark : against England the war could only be waged very weakly, Denmark being deprived of her fleet ; and the few men-of-war which had escaped the attention of the English in 1807, were suc- cessively captured, amongst others, the Prince Christian, ■ which, after a most heroic resistance under admiral lessen, was entirely cut up on the northern coast of Sjelland. But, notwithstanding Denmark had nothmg but a few small vessels and gun-boats, which had been built by patriotic private people, to oppose the English men-of-war cruising all the time round in the Danish sounds and belts, the Danish sea- warriors often battled bravely against the enemy, and caused him, in the course of the war, many severe losses. But an attempt 416 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA, made by the Danes to recover the island of Anholt, in the Cattegat, was defeated by the English garrison ; a great loss to the international commerce. Sweden could scarcely be said to be at war with Great Britain. Bernadotte soon discovered that subser- viency to France was inconsistent v/ith the interests of his adopted country, and he secretly entered into nego- tiations with the Russian emperor for restoring their mutual independence. In the year 1812 the situation of Denmark became yet more critical. On the 24th of June, 1812, Napoleon crossed the Niemen at the head of " the Grand Armp" and entered upon his ever-memorable Russian campaign. On the morning of the 7tli of September the great battle was fought at the small village of Borodino, seventy miles from Moscow, where neither side gained a decisive victory. Napoleon now approached Moscow, the ancient capital of the Czars, revered by the Russians as Jerusa- lem by the Jews. The citizens resolved not only to abandon their beloved metropolis, but to consign it to the flames ; and Napoleon, not able to check the conflagra- tion, had to undertake his perilous retreat. Exasperated at Napoleon, and to acquire assistance against this his enemy, and, if possible, to break him entirely, the Russian emperor, Alexander, although there was at that time peace and amity between Denmark A. D., and Russia, offered Sweden his aid in depriving 1813. Denmark of Norway. The following year Den- HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 417 marK was summoned to share in the war against Napo- leon, and resign Norway to Siueden. This iniquitous request left nothing to Denmark but to take a yet closer part with France, whereby all the powers which were allied against France now became Denmark's enemies ; and after Napoleon, on the 18th of October, 1813, had been signally defeated at Leipsic, an immense array of Swedish, Prussian, and Russian troops, commanded by the elected crown-prince of Sweden, Prince of Ponte- corvo, now called Charles John, rushed upon the fron- tiers of Denmark. The Danish army, which had pitched its camp in Holstein, had to retreat, but fought bravely against superior numbers. A division of the arm.y had on its retreat been cut off from the fortress of Rends- bwg; but, after an honorable and obstinate battle a. d., at Sehesiedt, won the field. i^'^i^- Denmark having now, through seven years, endured a desolating war, could no longer afford to con- j.^^^ ^^ tinue the contest, and Frederick YI. submitted to a. d., conclude the peace of Kiel, by which Denmark ^^^^' resigned Norway to Sweden. Thus the close union which, for four hundred and thirty-four years, had existed between Denmark and Norway, was dissolved, and Denmark lost a large kingdom, the inhabitants of which had always obeyed the Danish kings with love and loyalty ; and the allies have incurred just censure for aiding in this forcible annexation of Norway to Swe- den, against the earnest remonstrances of the inhabi- 418 HISTOKV OF SCANDINAVIA. tants As a sort of compensation for the loss of Norway, Denmark obtained Sivedish Pomerania, which was afterwards exchanged with Prussia for the duchy of Laiienburg and a sum of money. Peace was also con- cluded with England at Kiel, hy which Denmark had to concede Helgoland, a rocky island in the North Sea, to Great Britain, Nevertheless the Norwegians tried to defend their independence under the Danish hereditary prince, Chris- tian Frederick, who gave Norway a free constitution, and was proclaimed king, but never acknowledge by any European state. The Swedish crown-prince, Charles John (Bernadotte), now marched his victorious army into Norway, and the Swedish fleet conquered Frederickstad. The fortress of Frederickshald was be- sieged, and the Swedish army advanced upon Christiania, the capital of Norway. The superiority being too large, the Norwegians hastened to secure their persons and August, property by a capitulation in 3Toss, upon condi- A. D., tion that Norway should belong to Sweden, and ^^^*' Christian Frederick immediately leave Norway ; the Swedish king, however, confirming that free consti- tution which Christian Frederick had given to Norway, Although Norway is now under the same crown with Sweden, it is in reality little connected with the latter country. Its democratic assembly, called the Storthing", meets for three months once in three years, by its own right, and not by any writ from the king. If a bill HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 419 passes both divisions of this assembly in three successive Storthings, it becomes a law of the land without the royal assent ; a right which no other monarchico-legis lative assembly in Europe possesses. In the meantime the fate 'of France was decided ; Napoleon was, on the 2d of April, formally de- a. d., posed, and, by a treaty between him and the ^^i^- allies, promised the sovereignty of the island of Elba' and a pension. But when he suddenly landed at Frejus, (March 1, 1815), and soon again found himself at the summit of power, and re-ascended the throne of France, Denmark took part with the other European powers in fighting against him ; and after having lost the memo- rable battle of "Waterloo, nine miles south of Brussels (18th of June, 1815), Napoleon a second time abdicated the throne of France, and was banished by the allies to St. Helena, where he died on the 5th of May, 1821. At the general congress of the allied powers, a. d., which assembled at Vienna, the Danish king, i^^^- Frederick VI., was present, and subscribed to the incor- poration of the duchy of Holstein into the Grermanic Confederation. Of Schleswig not a word was spoken, it being considered an inseparable part of the Danish body. Since that time the peace of Denmark has not been interrupted until 1848, when the rebellious duchies tried to shake off the Danish yoke, and erect themselves into independent states, and waged a sanguinary three years' war against the Danish king, being assisted by more than twentv thousand Prussians and Hanoverians 420 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Of the favorable period previous to tlie breaking out of the war. the government had availed itself, to make important improvements in agriculture and in other matters. "VVlien crown-prince Frederick, in the year 1784, during his father's imbecility, assumed the reins of government, the peasantry was in a most lamentable condition, and agriculture very defective. Community of ground still prevailed in most places, although in 1781 a strict law had been enacted against it, but on account of prevailing prejudices, it had been very diflicult to carry this law into execution. Not less detrimental for the advancement of agriculture was the bond-service, with a few exceptions, yet in use. The number of owners of farms decreased more and more, and the tenants were in most places impoverished and oppressed. Many sorts of grain were not cultivated at all, and when sterile years happened, the country could not supply itself with provisions^ Public instruction was yet at a very low ebb, though Frederick IV. and Christian VI. had made active efforts for improving it. As far as the personal relation to the nobility was concerned, the tenants were subject to the greatest despotism. When the nobleman was just and well-minded, the tenants did tolerably well ; but if he would intrude upon them, it was difficult for the peasants to be protected against oppression and injustice. After military service of many years, the country lad was obliged to return to that estate from which he was enlisted, and then to take HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 421 what farm soever the nohleman might please to give him, and on whatsoever terms. The hond-servico bein^ mdefinite, the nobleman exercised the most unlimited power over the tenants' time and labor, and was autho- rized to lash them and punish them with the wooden horse and jail ; a right which the nobility often exer- cised in its full extent, and occasionally with circum- stances of peculiar atrocity. But the crown-prince, a warm and munificent patron of the peasantry, appointed (1784) a committee, consist- ing of Christian Frederick Ditlcv Reventlov, Andrew Peter Bernstoi'ff, and Chr. Colbjornsen, who, by their skill and activity in improving the condition of the agri- cultural classes, have acquired an immortal name. The beginning was made in the counties of Kronborg and Fredericksborg, near Copenhagen ; the ground was parceled, bond-service abrogated, the tithes changed to a money tribute, and the farms were given to the pea- sants as property. As the result of this reform, a general improvement took place among the peasantry. Next year a a. d., law was immediately enacted, which forbade the 1"^^^- nobility to exercise any despotism over them, their mutual rights and duties being exactly fixed. The noblemen were now forbidden to inflict punishment upon the peasants, either by stripes or imprisonment, and it was decided that the farm.s, previous to being given to the peasants, should be examined by umpires ; 422 fflSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. controversies respecting the farming out should be deci- ded upon by the magistracy, and no longer left to the sentence of the despotic nobleman. Yet more important was the emancipation of the June 20 P^(^santrij from feudal bondage. A law was A. D., enacted enfranchising all the peasantry who were ■ under fourteen or above thirty-six years of age, and all others from the first of January, 1800. This memorable law restored personal liberty to the Danish peasantry, and made the peasant a free citizen of the state, as well as the other inhabitants of the country. The government also extended its care to the peasantry of the duchies, where an abominable slavery resting upon the peasantry, and depriving not only the males but also the females of personal liberty, was entirely abolished. All these thorough reformations in the condition of the agricultural classes, met, however, with great oppo- sition from a great part of the nobility, an application signed by one hundred and two noblemen being tendered to the crown-prince, to repeal the new laws, which they particularized as detrimental to the country, and repug- nant to their own privileges ; but, fortunately, the crown- prince had firmness enough to answer in the negative, and the government continued to follow the humane principles it had adopted. Those inequalities in burdens and privileges among the citizens of the state, which through centuries had been kept up, were now succes- HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 423 sively diminished. The great privilege which the nobiUty had of appointing clergymen and judges on their estates, gave no assurance that these important offices would he filled by qualifi.ed persons, and had often occasioned the grossest abuses. No sooner, therefore, had the a. d., crown-prince ascended the throne, than he i^^^^- changed this detrimental privilege to a right of nomi- nating [jus proponendi)^ upon the practice of which, moreover, many restrictions were placed. The Jews, in Denmark as well as in most other states, deprived of all civil privileges, and excluded from exer- cising any profession and filling any offices, were nov\r placed nearly on equal terms with the other inhabitants, and Frederick YI. already, when crovv^n-prince, testified to his humane and philanthropic principles, by a. d., putting a stop to the slave-trade in the Danish ^'^^2. West Indies ; and it is remarkable that Denmark and the United States preceded England 'in declaring the slave-trade unlawful. But the example thus set forth has afterwards been followed by all the great maritime countries of Europe and America. At length, in the year 1807, under the Grenville administration, an act for the abolition of the slave-trade passed the British legislature, to which the impulse was given in the year 1784, when Dr. Peckard, vice-chancellor of the Univer- sity of Cambridge, proposed as the subject of a Latin essay, for which a gold medal was to be given, an an- swer to the question : Anne liceat invitos in servitutem 424 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. dare? or, "Is it right to make slaves of others against their will?" But, although both the king and the people of Denmark have manifested the strongest repug- nance to the trafhc in human heings, this trade lingered in her colonies in the west for years after it had been declared illegal. So difficult is it to enforce just laws in distant possessions, demoralized by a vicious and crimi- nal system. Besides the institutions above mentioned, Frederick VI. made, in other respects, many important improve- ments. The criminal code was highly improved by a new law on theft. The tribunal of inquisition, also called the sharp examination, the branding, and the barbarous running the gantlet, were abrogated. Of great importance for commerce was the new tariff, which regulated the commercial affairs according to sounder principles than before. Useful alterations were also made in the organization of the army ; the enrollment of foreign soldiers was abrogated, the army now consist- ing exclusively of the native subjects, while formerly German soldiers comprised a considerable part of the Danish army. The military officers' higher scientific education was provided for by the erection of a Military Academy^ where the young engineers learn mathematics, and to unite mobility of manoeuvre with rapidity of fire and precision of aim. That the peasantry might enjoy the right fruit of the many improvements which had been made for their HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 425 advancement, Frederick VI. deemed it necessary tho- roughly to organize and ameliorate the public instruc- tion. To train up qualified teachers for the peasantry, normal schools (seminaries) were established in various sections of the country ; many new schools were built, and money was assigned for the salaries of the teachers. A new school-law was enacted, and every peasant was enjoined to send his children to school for instruction. The Polytechnic School, founded upon the recom- mendation of the celebrated natural philosopher, Hans Christian Oersted, has exercised a censiderable influ- ence in promoting the study of the science of nature, and spreading useful knowledge and greater skill amongst mechanics. The University and the learned schools were thoroughly reorganized, mainly to be ascribed to the active and skillful Frederick Christian, duke of Augustenburg, who, in the beginning of the present century, was appointed patron of the University. The examinations were made more strict, and a special examination was enjoined upon those, who intended to be teachers in the learned schools, called Examen philolog-icum. The Academy of Soro, consumed by fire in 1813, was rebuilt and recalled to life in 1822, and solemnly inaugurated in 1827. It deserves g^ ^ also to be remarked, that Frederick VI. founded a. d., the University of Christiania, in Norway, which ^ ' the Norv/egians, therefore, call the Frederick's Uni* versity. 426 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Although Frederick VI. had not himself had tho benefit of a thorough education, we have to observe how much literature was indebted to him for its ad- vancement and dissemination in Denmark. Classical learning, the art of criticism, poetry, and history, began from his time to make a rapid progress. The two learned bishops of Copenhagen, Frederick Milnter and Peter Erasmus Mailer, enriched the historical, antiqua- rian, and theological literature with invaluable treasures. Miinter is also celebrated for his extensive knowledge in the oriental languages. Malte Conrad Bruun, who, for having by his writings offended tho government, was banished, acquired in Paris an immortal name as the greatest geographer of the world. Rask is cele- brated as a great linguist. Brondsted has immortalized himself by deeply searching into tho curiosities of the Greek antiquities. Finji Magnusson and C. Rafn, both yet living, unite, deep knowledge in the antiquities of the North, with perspicuity of narration and force of language. The study of jurisprudence was vigorously promoted by Kongslev, E. Colbjornson and F. Schlegel ; that of medicine by Tode, ^axtorph, F. L. Bang, Winslow, and Herholdt. IT. C. Oersted is known over the whole civilized world, for his deep knowledge, and discoveries in physics. Tetens, Bitgge, and Degen have signalized themselves as great mathematicians, and Abildgaard and Viborg, as superior veterinarians. Beriel Thorvaldsen has placed himself at tho head HISTORY OF SCAXDINAVIA. 427 of all the sculptors that ever the world produced. OehlenschlcBger has won a great name as a poet, and the strict unity of his pieces demonstrates a thorough ac- quaintance with the rules of the classic tragedy. His genius was original, and he disdained to imitate. Coeval with Oehlenschteger was his friend, the illustrious theologian and poet of Sweden, bishop Esajas Tegner. He was born on the 13th of Novem- ber, 1782. . In the year 1824 he was appointed bishop of Vcxo, and justified this promotion by the most zealous guardianship of the educational institutions of his large diocese. His spirited speeches on public occa- sions often excited an extraordinary sensation, and his eloquent address to the assembly of the Swedish clergy, in Vexo, in 1836, has not been confined vvithin the limits of his diocese, but convinced all classes, that he no less deserved consideration as a deep and fearless theologian, than as an accomplished and nearly une- qu^led poet. In his charming poem, Frithiof^s Sag-a, he has bequeathed a poetic inheritance to posterity, never to be lost, in which he, in a masterly manner, resolved the epic form into free lyric romances. The noble, the high-minded, the bold, the great features of all heroism, are not wanting there. His is, therefore, a perpetual glory, " cut neque profuit quisquam lau- dando, neque vituperando quisquam nocuitP Hans Christian Andersen has, by his poems and novels, made an agreeable impression upon his readers, and has acquired a great name in Europe and even now 428 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Ill the United States. His productions are not the fruit of deep study or learning, hut of native talent ; and it is to he ohserved to his honor, that in all his w^orks, good- ness and virtue are inculcated, as he himself is the impersonation of goodness and morality. This charac- teristic distinguishes him from the many worthless novelists, who, in a variety of licentious novels, have prostituted excellent talents in the service of vice. As Latinist, /. N. Madvi^ stands nearly unsurpassed, and has acquired such a renown, that the great German philologers, when uncertain how to interpret a difficult passage in the Latin classics, write : " Constdamus juniorem Madvigium DaniccP Dr. Jacob Peter Mynster, bishop of Sjelland [ob. 1854), has, as a learned linguist, theologian, and talented pulpit-orator, gained a name never to he forgotten. The truth of Chris- tianity, which he, after a deep philosophic searching, had embraced with all his heart, appears eloquently and powerfully embodied • in his edifying sermons and theological writings, in the clear reflections of which a rich fullness of sublime thoughts and a deep insight into the human heart are manifest. The strength of his pious and devout feelings warmed his audience ; a mild, but ministerial earnestness gave his words dignity, and in short, he had a strong and vigorous intellect, rendered, by scientific culture, capable of clear discrimi- nation, correct analysis, and happy combinations. His views of the Christian doctrines were clear and decided ; HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 429 he received the great system of evangehcal truth in its simplicity, and he defended that truth with modesty and gentleness. In all his preparations for the pulpit, his great and leading desire and purpose were to set forth Christ, the great high-priest of our profession. "When he departed tliis life, the great theologians of Grermany wrote : " Who can predict the day when Mynster's name shall he forgotten ? " Nicolai Frederick Severin Grundlvig, still living, equally remarkable as a pulpit-orator, poet, and deep historian, has exercised a mighty influence upon the religious and literary life, and in his learned explana- tions of the massive Northern mythology, he is generally considered unrivalled. As elegant and thorough histo- rians, L. Englestoft, E. Werlauf and C. Molbeck in Denmark, and Geyer in Sweden, deserve to he men- tioned, who all have sought to inspire their readers with esteem for history, to warm their hearts and strengthen their moral power. But I shall not close this hasty sketch of Scandina- vian literature, without mentioning Henry Nicolai Clausen, supreme theological professor at the University of Copenhagen. Richly endowed with gifts and graces, he has published, both in Latin and Danish, many learned works, which have gained him a great number of disciples and admirers, both at home and abroad. He ascended, in early youth, to the post of a theological professor, and there he has stood, from week to week 430 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. during a period of nearly thirty-two years, reflecting from his own clear and polished mind the light of divine truth, and communicating it to his numerous disciples, who, after having sat at the feet of this approved master in Israel, have come forth from his instruction ahle minis- ters of the New Testament. Besides his theological erudition he has excited admiration by managing the Latin language with an uncommon degree of volubility and genius, and, on the whole, I can convey but a faint idea of that portraiture of the Christian and the learned professor, which his life has exhibited. There have rarely been combined such simplicity and spirituality, such youthful elasticity and manly vigor, such gentle- ness of manners and decision of character, as are seen in him. The seven years' unfortunate war, terminating in so heavy losses, had excessively enervated the state. Agriculture was in a most lamentable condition, com- merce almost annihilated, industry was stagnant and money matters deranged. The interest of the public debt remained unpaid, the certificates of it depreciated every day, and many, who held them, were obliged to sell them for almost nothing. To remedy these evils, A. D., the surplus revenue from the duties on imports, 1818. and the change of the royal bank to a national bank, administered without the control of the govern- ment, were appropriated. This measure immediately restored public credit, certificates of public aebt rose to mSTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 431 par, and those who had purchased low realized immenso fortunes. Business of all kinds revived, and the country- entered upon a career of prosperous activity and enter- prise. Nevertheless, the national debt yet amounted, in 1847, to one hundred and six millions of rix-dollars. Sweden having also suffered very severely by her war with Russia and Denmark, was, however, this year, happy enough to get rid of her inefficient and demorali- zed king, Charles XIIL, who expired in February, 1818, and John Baptista Julius Bernadotte, prince of Ponte- corvo, who already (21st of August, 1810,) had been elected Swedish crown-prince, ascended now the throne oi Sweden and Norway, and was solemnly crowned on the 11th of May, 1818. His personal influence, due alike to his diplomatic wisdom, his virtues, and his eminent military talents acquired in Napoleon's school, became of the utmost importance to Sweden. During the twenty-six years of his wise administration, all differ- ences with foreign nations had been settled ; public and private credit was restored, and ample provision made for the payment of the public debt. Wlien ascending the throne, he assumed the motto: "The love of my people is my reward," and he fully realized it. This celebrated monarch, to whom Sweden is indebted for her present influence and temporal happiness, was born on the 26th of January, 1764, in the city of Pau in the southern part of France, and married to Eugenia Bern- hardina Desideria, daughter of a rich merchant in 432 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Marseilles, by wliom he only had one son, prince Oscar, afterwards the talented and highly beloved king of Sweden and IsTorway, by the name of Oscar I, Although, as above mentioned, the kingdom of Den- mark had commenced to enter upon a career of activity and enterprise, its rapid thriving was highly retarded by a series of unfavorable years, through which the grain prices were so low, that the king had to lighten the taxes for the peasants. The flourishing commerce which Copenhagen had carried on with China, America, and the East and West Indies, and which had been a ricr; .-^'nirce of wealth for the whole kingdom, had, during the war, been utterly ruined, and since that time the commerce of Copenhagen has not been of any conse- quence. Only in the last decennary of the reign of Frederick VI., the country recovered a little strength, the commerce of the cities increased, and on account of the improvements which had been made in agriculture and in the condition of the peasantry, the productions of the country increased to such a degree that the exports almost doubled ; even in industry and home trade a brisker life began to stir up. But the very last part of the reign of Frederick VI. has been remarkable for an institution which became of great influence upon Denmark's felicity and advancement. Since the introduction of the absolute power, 1660, the people had been deprived of all influence upon the legis- lation and tlie rule of the state ; this was altered by the HISTORY or SCANDmAViA 483 introduction of a council representative of fhe people Already, in the year 1720, Sweden, under Frederick of Hesse Cassel, had hecome a hereditary monarchy, with a representative Diet consisting of four chambers, formed respectively of deputies from the nohility, clergy, burgh- ers, and peasants, and in a great part of Europe the people had obtained either a deciding or an advising influence upon the government ; and the Danish people, influenced by the European culture and by the increas- ing enlightenment, had gradually come to such a matu- rity as to make its co-operation in the government highly desirable. Frederick VI., though as fond of his sove- reignty as a baby of his puppet, resolved, nevertheless, to meet the demand of the time by the introduc- -^^ js tion, both for Denmark and the Duchies, of a A.D., council representative of the people ; a resolution ^^^^' received with every demonstration of joyous enthusiasm throughout the whole kingdom. All measures respect- ing government, all questions regarding public affairs, all propositions for the public good, might take their rise indifferently in this council and be discussed there, and then presented to the king's consideration. But being only a deliberative assembly, the king was not compelled to admit the proposals of the council, but had promised to take all proposals, wliich had taken their rise from this council, into serious consideration, and make them laws, if his wisdom thought it proper or pru- dent to do so. This inestimable privilege of the Danish 4B4 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. subjects was productive of very much good, and made Frederick VI. yet more beloved and popular than he already, by liis unassuming manners, his national and sincere mind, had been, when, at the age of seventy- two, and after a remarkable reign of fifty-five years, first twenty-four years as crown-prince, then thhty-one Dec 3 years as king, the Lord removed him from this A.D., scene of trial to inherit life everlasting. His ^^^^- people .mourned for him, but offered thanksgiv- ing to God that he had raised up for them so good and so faithful a steward, who had always been found wil- ling to share their hardships. Twelve peasants from the county of Copenhagen asked permission to bear the royal coffin, on which was written " The memory of the just is blessed." Prov. x. 7. His queen was the virtu- ous and intelligent Blarie Sophie Fredericka, a princess of Hesse Cassel, who survived liim thirteen years. Hav- ing no sons by her, he was succeeded in the reign by his cousin. Christian Frederick, ascending the throne by the name of Christian VIII. Enriched by nature and cultivation, he was, when assuming the reins of govern- ment, considered one of the most enlightened monarchs of Europe ; and added to this his prepossessing appear- ance and engaging manners, and that, from his shoul- ders and upward he was, lilce Saul, liigher than any of the people, he was received everywhere with the greatest enthusiasm and veneration, Denmark flattering herself with the prospect of enjoying golden days under his HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 4:6b sway, and of profiting by the liberal spirit to which he, twenty-five years ago, had testified in Norway. Pufied up, as we have noticed before, by a transient gleam of prosperity, he had in Norway, 1814, assumed the title of king, but was after a little while, by Bernadotte, whose star was then on the ascendant, compelled to resign the crown of Norway. But, however short his reign was in Norway, he has left behind him an undying monument in the hearts of the Norwegians, by giving them the free Constitution above mentioned, by which he sowed the seeds of freedom, and produced a rich harvest in the blessings of independence, which spread quickly over the whole kingdom. The Danish people, on good grounds expecting that the new king. Christian YIIL, would bless them with a like freedom, were nevertheless liighly deceived in their expectations, as the king, having confined all his ideas to the power, dignity, and splendor* of the crown, deci- dedly declined gi\^ng a free constitution, asserting that the people had not yet attained to such a degree of intel- lectual maturity as to be capable of duly enjoying the blessings of freedom. A spirit of opposition, which con- fined itself to complaints under this reign, began in the next to break out into active efforts. But, although declining to bless Denmark with the privilege of liberty, and unwilling to renounce even the smallest particle of the royal prerogatives, he was in many other respects a useful ruler. He reformed the laws, encouraged .corn- 430 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. morcc ; and science and the arts, which the king himself loved dearly, were munificently patronized by him. During his reign Dr. Hans Larsen Mariensen, now bishop of Sjclland, commenced to draw the attention of the learned of Europe to his brilliant talents. After having, in the year 1832, passed his theological examination at the University of Copenhagen, to the greatest satisfac- tion and admiration of his examiners and the faculty, ho went to Berlin, where he deeply profited by the instruc- tion of the great theologians and philosophers, Neander, Marhcinccke, ydiclling, and Twcsten, and joined their scientific debates. Upon his returning. Christian VIII. appointed him theological professor at the University, where Martenscn, to ihe most crowded and refineli audience, delivered his sj)iritcd lectures on the strict conjunction of the scientific theology with philosophy, and on the exegesis of the New Testament. His bril- liant gifts as a pubHc orator induced the king to appoint him court chaplain, expecting in him an able champion and defender of the Christian faith. The king was not disappointed in his expectations. In the king's chapel lie mounted the pulpit, where he did not shun to de- clare the whole counsel of God, proclaiming His severity in due conjunction with His loving-kindness. Peculiarly skilled in setting forth the awfulness of Sinai, and in launching forth the terrors of the law, he never fails in the tender presentation of the great sufferings and love of our Saviour, and of the attractions of his cross to HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 437 dying men. In the year 1846 he published his Dog- matics, a clear and learned work, which immediately was translated into German, and received with great applause among the learned theologians of Germany. Clu-istian VIII, not only patronized literary men, but also directed his royal attention to other branches of his kingdom's welfare and advancement. Railroads were laid down in Holstein and Sjelland, the Sound Dues at Elsenore were reduced, the public and learned schools were re-organized, a new seminary (normal school) was erected in Jutland, Iceland was given a council repre- sentative of the people, and the East,India possessions no longer being of any pecuniary profit to Denmark, were disposed of to England. Many circumstances had long contributed to check the prosperity of the Danish East India Company, but none more than the pertinacious jealousy of the Dutch, who excluded them from the most profitable branches of trade ; and Christian VIII. , there- fore, did well in selling them. But, although the kings of Denmark were not successful in carrying out any congiderable commerce there, they have honorably dis- tinguished themselves by their zeal for the propagation of the Gospel ; and, notwithstanding their limited means. they have diffused the principles of true religion through a considerable portion of the south of India and of the east of Africa. In North Schleswig, where the Danish language was used in divine service and school-teaching, Christian 438 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. VIII. comraanded it to be used also in lawsuits and public affairs, instead of the German language, before used, as he also in other ways has promoted the interest of the mother-tongue. During his reign the neigh- boring kingdom, Sweden, lost, on the 8th of March. 1844, her great and talented king, Charles John XIV.. once, as we know, Napoleon's celebrated marshal. He was succeeded in the Swedish throne by liis son, Oscar I., born on the 4th of July, 1799, and married to Josephitie Maximiliane Eugenie, princess of Leuchten- berg, daughter of Napoleon's step-son, prince Eugene. By her King Oscar^ has four sons and one daughter. Sweden thus now ruled by French blood, and no more by the descendants of the celebrated house of Vasa, has, nevertheless, not had any reason of complaining over it, Charles John XIV. being an excellent king, and his son, Oscar I., having wielded the sceptre with clemency, wisdom, and justice. In the year 1859, Sweden and IlTorway had to mourn for the loss of this high-minded and accom- plished monarch. His son, the crown prince Carl Eugene, then ascended the throne of the twin-king- doms, on the 8th of July, of the same year, under the name of Carl the Fifteenth, whose genius and talent for government, combined with knowledge of the eminent masters of antiquity, will enable him to redeem the expectations of his dear Swedish and Norwegian subjects. HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 439 Christian YIII., although declining to give Denmark a free constitution, thought, liowever, at the close of his life, of meeting the demand of the time, and had him- Jan. 20 ^®^^' delineated such a one, when, in an earlier A. D., hour than he and his people expected it, death ■ claimed him. He was married to Caroline Amalie, a princess of Augustenburg, and sister to the rebellious duke who mainly involved Denmark in the horrible war with the Duchies. She is still livins:, and has, loving her God and her Redeemer, done, and is doing, very much tp promote a true religious life. After the death of Christian VIIL, the crown was placed on the head of his only son, Frederick VII., born on the 6th of October, 1808. No sooner had he ascended the throne, than he yielded to the clamors of his subjects, dismissed his father's old aristocratic min- istry, appointed a new one, and gave Denmark the long desiderated free constitution, wliich made him very popu- lar and beloved, Denmark now being no more an abso- lute, but a constitutional monarchy. The Constitution, freed from all tliose despotic restraints with which it had been fettered by the Act of Sovereignty in 1660, was now fixed on a basis more favorable to the people's liberties than had ever been known in the annals of the nation. Undeniably, a few men, who had put this important wheel in motion, had made patriotism a cloak for their views of private interest, and made a great harvest ; but, be it as it may, it is sufficient to say, that, 440 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. under the influence of this Constitution, of which Den- mark now, together with the United States and Norway, has to boast, the condition of society, whatever fluctua- tions it must, from the constitution of our frail human nature, he liable to, has been such as to answer all the wishes of the good, the virtuous, and the industrious part of the community, and its restraints have proved grievous to the overweening nobility alone, on whom restraint was necessary. Frederick VII. mounted the throne under critical circumstances, but before entering on the abominable war with the Duchies, wrought by the treacherous policy of the rebellious duke of Augustenburg, it will be neces- sary to cast a brief glance at tlie aflairs of Europe. A revolutionary spirit, pervaded, in the year 1848. nearly all Europe, like an epidemic fever. Louis Phi- lippe, of France, having acquired a high reputation for wisdom and firmness, was, however, far from finding his throne a bed of roses. In the beginning of his reign, zealously supported by the middle classes, who looked upon him as their guarantee for constitutional freedom, he soon lost their favor, as they believed themselves deceived in their expectations, and an all-pervading feeling of discontent taking place, led to the Revolution of February, 1848. On the 23d of February, crowds appeared in the streets of the capital, barricades were erected, and the cry : "To arms ! Down with Louis Philippe ! Down with the Bourbons ! " resounded HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 441 throughout Paris. The troops allowed themselves to bo disarmed by the mob, who then demanded the abdica- tion of the king, who, with liis queen, escaped to St. Cloud, and thence, in disguise, to England. Royalty had vanished, and France was again a Republic. No sooner had the accounts of the affairs in Paris reached Grermany, than popular commotions took place, and the j)eople demanded a political constitution, that should give them a share in legislation, establish the liberty of the press, and otherwise secure them their rights. The grand-duke of Baden had to yield to the demands of his people, and appoint a ministry from the popular party. The king of Saxony was compelled to grant the requests of his subjects. At Munich, the capital of Bavaria, the people stormed the arsenal, and forced from the king the concessions in question. The elector of Hesse-Cassel yielded, after a severe conflict. The king of Hanover also yielded, when he saw that resist- ance would have cost him his throne. Frederick William IV., of Prussia, vainly and foolishly resisted a popular revolution in Berlin. In Vienna, the capital of Austria, the citizens, headed by the students of the University, sympathized with the Parisians, and expressing them- selves openly upon the great subject of reform, pre- sented their petition for a constitutional government, a responsible ministry, liberty of the press, and religious freedom. After a formidable struggle in Vienna, during which many victims fell, the Emperor was comoelled, 442 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. on the 15th of March, to comply with the demands of the people. Also, the subjects of Ferdinand IL, king of Naples and Sicily, had revolted early in 1848, and their request for a constitution was granted. That victory which had followed the popular commotions of France and G-ermany, was an inducement for the two southern duchies of Denmark, Schleswig- and Holsteifi, to revolt. The duke of Angustenburg had already long, through speeches and periodicals, sown that seed of resistance and discord which now commenced to break out into acts of violence. The two Duchies, long, without any reason, dissatisfied with the Danish rule, and irritated by the refusal of the king to accede to any of their imperious demands, declared the new ministry appointed by Frederick VII. hostile to their privileges A. D., and themselves independent of Denmark. On ^^•^s. the 24th of March, 1848, a message was written from Rcndsburg to Copenhagen : " Schleswig-Holstein twenty-four hours ago became an independent state, shook off the Danish yoke, and appointed a provisional government." On the 25th of March, the duke of Augustenburg arrived in Rendsburg, where the provis- ional government resided, and the insurgents assembled under the command of his brother. Prince Frederick. On the 26th of March, there was written : "The king of Prussia has ordered his army to check the Danish troops, if they make their appearance." The king of Denmark, Frederick YIL, of" course not HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 443 evincing any inclination to abate his pretensions to the Duchies, giiaranteed him hy England and France, and decidedly declining the admission of Schlcswig into the Grermanio Confederation, to which it had never belonged, marched his army into Schleswig, where it arrived be- tween the 28th and 29th of March, under the command of the generals Hedemann and Meza. Meanwhile Ger- man volunteers, amongst whom were many enthusiastic young students, resorted now from all parts of Germany to assist the rebellious Duchies, whose interest they joined. The first battle between the Danes and the Schleswig-Holsteiners was fought at Bau, near to F lens- burg, on the 9th of April, 1848. The, battle was a. D., brief, but for its duration sanguinary enough ; i^^^- the insurrectional troops were entirely routed, and eight hundred prisoners of war carried to Copenhagen. From Prussia numerous troops now arrived, under the com- mand of General Bonin, declaring that any attack of the Danish army on the Schleswig-Holsteiners would be regarded a declaration of war against Prussia, a d., Easter Day, 23d of April, 1848, eleven thousand iS'^s- Danes, while preparing to attend divine service, were unexpectedly attacked by nineteen thousand Prussians, close by the city of Schleswig. The combat was very obstinate ; the Danes, although fighting as madmen, and with the greatest contempt of death, were defeated, and General Hedemann had to yield to superior numbers ; but, as the Roman senate formerly thanked Varro, quia 444 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. de republica 7ion desperasset, so Frederick VII. rendered thanks to his soldiers for that bravery they had display- ed at Schleswig — a good omen of future success. Norway and Sweden now sided with the Danes, and two thousand Norwegians and Swedish volunteers arrived in Schleswig, to join ther Danish army. Shortly after the unfortunate battle of Easter Day, the Danes gained a glorious victory at Diippel, 28th of May, a. D., over the Prussian general, Wrangel, though hav- i^*^- ing a difBcult game to play — twelve thousand Danes against sixteen thousand Prussians. Proposals of medi- ation were now made by Russia, which sided with Den- mark, and on the 26th of August an armistice was A.D., agreed on. The insurgents, nevertheless, con- 1848. tinuing to cherish a revolutionary spirit, and the partisans of anarchy taking advantage of the popular A. D., excitement, the king of Denmark declared, 26th 1849. Qf March, the armistice invalid, ordered the for- tress of Fredericia to be more strongly fortified, and his army to enforce the royal authority, and prepared to strike a decisive blow against the insurgents, who at first gained some advantages at the towns of Ulderup and Kolding, and threw a strong garrison into Frede- ricia, which they seized. The Danes, seeing that no moment was to be lost, determined to defy the whole A. D., strength of the insurgents, and on the 6th of July 184^- the Danish army attacked the Schleswig-Hol- steiners at Fredericia. The garrison was numerous, the HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 445 resistance obstinate, and the insurgents fought as lions ; but the Danish artillery made so dreadful a havoc in the hostile line, that after a most sanguinary combat, of more than eight hours' duration, the insurrectionary army was irretrievably ruined ; six hundred of their best troops were left dead on the field, and two thousand were taken prisoners. The Danes lost three hundred men, and sixteen hundred severely wounded, but had to mourn over the loss of Olaf Rye, a native of Norway, i>ne of their most gallant officers. Prussia having more seemingly than sincerely assisted the Schleswig-Holsteiners, now settled (10th of a.p, July) the preliminaries to a peace with Denmark, i^^- and a convention of truce, pursuant to which the king of Prussia promised to withdraw his forces, and no more to act in concert with the insurgents, whose affairs seemed to be more and more on the decline. Their chief leaders, the Duke of Augustenburg, and his brother, Prince Frederick of IS'oer, to the latter of whom the insurgents had committed the command of their army, had, in a military point of view, accomplished very little, Prince Frederick being a \NTetch without spirit, courages, or tactical abUit}^, who, after the lost battle of Bau, fled into the city of Flensburg, narrowly escaping being made prisoner ; and the duke, for his personal safet)^, select- ing the securer occupation to travel round to fan the flame of insurrection. The revolutionary spirit con- tinued, and Schleswig-Holstein was in a ferment 446 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Through immense exertions the insurgents raised an array of thirty thousand men and eighty-two field-pieces, under the command of General Willison, and formed a bold plan for carrying on the war against Denmark ; hut the end of the mighty power, which the rehellious Duchies had tried to wield, was fast approaching. As it was impossible, save in blood, to quench the re- volutionary sph'it, and compel the Duchies into subjec- tion to their hereditary monarch, Frederick VII. ordered an army of thirty-eight thousand men and ninety-six great guns, to march out of the camp under the com- mand of the noble and undaunted warrior, General A. D., Kro^h, and the brave Assistant-General, Schlep- 1850. pegrel. On the 13th of July, 1850, the rebel troops crossed the Eider river, frequently skirmishing A. D., with the Danes, until, on the 24th of July, the 1850. royal army gained, at the town of Idsted, the most brilliant victory that had been obtained during the war, over the united forces of the Schleswig-Holsteiners. This dreadful battle, lasting two days without intermis- sion, and attended with a most cruel carnage, cost Den- mark three thousand six hundred and fifty-seven men and one hundred and forty officers ; amongst whom were the magnanimous General Schleppegrel, and the skillful tactician, Colonel Lsessoe. The insurgents were, however, not yet tranquilized, but, to the inexpressible astonishment of every one, formed a new plan for the destruction of the Danes On HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 447 A.D., the 29th of September, 1850, they laid a terrible 1850. siege to the city of Frederickstad, situated on the Eider. Through five days they showered fire-balls upon the unfortunate town, and vast clouds of smoke arose in awful sublimity over the bloody scene, until the Danish artillery, commanded by the courageous Nor- wegian, Greneral Helgesen, after having made a most dreadful havoc amongst the insurgents, compelled them A. D., to raise the siege and order a retreat. Finally, 1851. next year, on the 1st of February, 1851, after almost one continued battle of three years, the insurrec- tion ceased, the royal authority and the whole state thus again being considered re-established. But the turmoil of the war had not diverted the new ministry's attention from the internal affairs of the country. The free constitution, which the king had promised his subjects, had been elaborated and finished, to which, on the 5th of June, 1849, the royal signature was affixed ; and the same year the possessions on the coast of Guinea, proving unprofitable to Denmark, were disposed of\ to England for the amount of ten thousand pounds sterling. Frederick YII. having, when crown-prince, been twice married — first to the Danish princess, Wilhelmine, daughter of king Frederick VI., and then to princess Caroline Charlotte Mariane, daughter of the grand duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, but on account of domestic disagreement, divorced from both of them — was, 7th of 448 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. A^ugust, 1850, by tbe bishop, Dr. Mynster, solemnly joined in a morganatic marriage to Louise Christine, Countess of Banner, nee Miss E-asmussen. She had for some years back, kept a millinery shop in Copen- hagen. The insurrection having been crushed (1st of Feb- ruary, 1851), the cessation of hostilities taken place, and the king of Denmark thus having regained his authority over the Duchies, a treaty was concluded in London, on the 8th of May, 1852, between a. d., Denmark^ Siveden^ Norway^ England, Austria, i^^^. France, Russia, and Prussia, which yet more firmly than before by the peace of Fredericksborg in 1720, guaranteed the integrity of the Danish monarchy. The line of Augustenburg was set aside because of the duke's treacherous conduct, and the succession to the crown of Denmark, and to the ducal dignity of the three duchies, — Schleswig, Holstein, and Lauenburg, — settled on the loyal Prince Christian, of the Sonderburg-Gliicks- burg line, and his male heirs, upon whom in the next year, 1853, according to a law passed in the diet and Subscribed to by the king himself, the title of Prince of Denmark was conferred, his civil list being fixed to the amount of -^0,000 rix-dollars annually. Though a recon- ciliation was thus established, the revolutionary spirit still fermented in the minds of the Schleswig-Holsteiners, waiting only for a favorable opportunity to break out into a new rebellion. The perfidious Duke of Augustenburg, of HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 449 course, deprived of his ducal possessions, and now an exile traveling round in Europe with the stigma of Judas Is- cariot on his forehead, is still fanning the flame of re- bellion ; and what the future conceals in its bosom He only knows, who, as David sings, "shall strike through kings in the day of his wrath, and turn their hearts whithersoever he will." An event of no ordinary importance to Denmark took place March 10, 1863, when the Danish princess a. d., Alexandra Caroline Mary Charlotte Louise Julia, 1863. born in Copenhagen December 1, 1844, daughter of the intelligent and refined Prince Christian of Gliicksburg, proclaimed Prince of Denmark July 31, 1853, was mar- ried to Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, the heir-appa- rent to the throne of England. February 26, the ^oung and amiable princess left the shores of the Baltic, where her infant years had been watched by parental care, to become the wife of the future king of Great Britain, accompanied by the warmest wishes of the whole Danish nation for cloudless days in the illustrious country of her adoption; and on the momentous 10th of March, whici bound them together for better and for worse, fervent orisons to the royal throne of mercy went forth from the king's costly palace, from the nobleman's stately manor, from the clergyman's quiet parsonage, and from the thatch-covered cot of the poorest husbandman, for bless- ings to be vouchsafed to this union. The magnificent and hearty reception which the Danish princess had in England could but immediately convince her that t>he 450 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. was already the darling of this great nation, that they cherished her as the apple of their eye, and that they united in prayers for Heaven's blessings on her bridal contract. And that such a benison will be bestoAved, and that the union of Albert Edward and Alexandra will be as peerless in bliss as in splendor, all Britons seem to be glad both to hope and to believe. On the 15th of November, 1863, King Frederick VII. died from erysipelas. By his mildness of temper and decision of character, and by his readiness to identify himself with the nation, he had gained the attachment and respect of his subjects, who with heartfelt grief re- ceived the sad intelligence of the sudden termination of his earthly career. Frederick VII. dying without issue, the throne of Denmark devolved, by virtue of the treaty of 1852, and of the law of 1853, to Prince Christian, the father of the Princess of Wales and the new King of Greece, who immediately was proclaimed King of Denmark, and Duke of Schleswig, Holstein, and Lauen- burg, under the name of Christian IX., Avhose national mind and clear intellect will, no doubt, easily enable him to redeem the expectations of his subjects, and manly and justly to encounter every contingency. He began his reign with the menace of a second " occupation " impending over the southern provinces of his kingdom. '' May the cloud hanging over him -be dispelled !" This was the prayer of the whole kingdom. But, alas ! alas ! the cloud was not dispelled, but was ( HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 451 gathering blacker and blacker, and the so-called second Sleswick-Holstein war commenced. And here is the proper place, I think, to take a retrospective view of this intricate controversial point, and to bring together all the feeble and scattered rays which may throw any light upon it, serve to bring order out of confusion, and view the whole question in its naked reality. The history of the two dukedoms — Sleswick and Holstein — is lilce the history q{ human achievements, a history of great results from small beginnings. For centuries Sleswick has been subject to the rule of the Danish kings. Sleswick was anciently called Anglia, held as a Danish province of the Danish Crown, ruled according to the code of the Jutland law-book, given by the Danish king, Waldemar the Second, in the year 1239, up to this very day, an almost entire Danish- spealdng province, with the exception of the southern districts, where only German is spoken, and considered by all European Powers and treaties an inseparable part of the Danish body. Holstein, anciently called North- alhingia, being, it is true, a male fief of the German em- pire, was at times subject to the Danish kings as Counts of Holstein, at other times to counts independent of Denmark, until the year 1459, a.d., when the Danish king and his successors' male descendants were elected Dukes of Holstein, an election ratified by the German Emperor, Frederick the Third, Avho then, upon the ret^uest of the Danish King, Christian the First, elevated 2 F 3 452 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. Holstein from an earldom to a dukedom. Violently to wrest these two provinces from the Crown of Denmark, to annex the entire Danish province, Sleswick, to the jrerman Confederacy, to which it has never belonged ; nd by its close annexation to Holstein, to create a large so-called Sleswick-Holstein Dukedom, which was to be entirely severed from the Danish Crown, for all time to come, was, as we have seen, the object of the scandalous crusade waged against Denmark in 1848, and the two subsequent years, by the treacherous Duke of Augusten- burg, the ringleader of the rebellion, and supported well nigh by all Germany. The knavish duke, though nearly related to the Royal Danish house, and having sworn the usual allegiance to the Danish king, had ah'eady long — through a host of periodicals, in Avhich stupendous lies, gibings, and mockeries were summed up, the most unerring arrows in the hands of revolu- tionists at every era, sown that seed of discord, which now commenced to break out into acts of violence. This ungodly crusade was, however, crushed by the un- daimted bravery and perseverance of the Danes, and resulted in the maintenance of Denmark's independence, nationality and ancient territories, the result thus prov- ing that the Danes, only a handful of people when com- pared with all Germany, had not degenerated from the well-known bravery, constancy, and intrepid spirit of tneir fearless ancestors, the grim-visaged Seakings and bearded Vikings, the result at the same time confirming HISTORY OF SCANDIKAVIA. 453 the truth of the words of the royal sage of Israel, that the battle is not always to the strong, but to whomsoever the Lord willeth to exalt. But a new crusade from Ger- many, based upon the same villainous principles as the former one, recommenced, at the close of 1863, to threaten Denmark's integrity and nationality, and con- summated, this time, I grieve to say, its nefarious designs. Little Denmark, being rendered no assistance from her allies, and although wont to defend herself bravely against two, and not yield to three, as the old sagas tell, could not withstand the innumerable com- pany of Prussians and Austrians inundating the Danish dominions, and committing the most merciless devasta- tions and cruelties. But I now propose to enter upon the survey of the merits of this intricate historical question, and to let history speak somewhat in detail ; and an intelligent reader may judge for himself. However, I shall not attempt to give a sketch of these two disputed pro- vinces, before the dawn of authentic history, as I would then be obliged to cite a number of hypotheses, that, after all, would prove inconclusive. Charlemagne had with violence compelled the Holsteiners, then called Saxons, to embrace Christianity, and thus deprived the people of its independence. But the daring and efficient Godfred, King of Denmark, protected Holstein, and commenced war. Making large progress, and even threatening to visit Charlemagne in his residence, Aix- 454 HISTORY OF SCANDINAYIA. la-Cliapelle, the Emperor was happy enough to get rid of that •intelligent and 'brave enemy — Godfred, unfor- tunately, being treacherously killed by one of his own people. His successor, Hemming, made peace with Charlemagne in the year 811, by Avhich peace the river Eider, Avhich separates Sleswick from Holstein, was appointed the limit between Denmark and Germany ; and in the year 920, Thyra Dannehod, the queen of the Danish king, Gorm the Old, founded the celebrated DannevirJce, a fortified wall of earth and stones across Sleswick, strengthened by moats and tower bastions, to protect Denmark against inroads of the Germans. The aforesaid Godfred had erected a similar fortification, called Kurvirke ; but the invasion of the German Em- peror, Henry the Fowler, had proved that Denmark needed a stronger bulwark, wherefore the queen, Thyra, erected the famous Dannevirke. But, Sleswick border- ing on Germany, the German emperors were continually eager of getting possession of this fertile province, when finally in the year 1026, Canute the Great, King of Denmark and England, visited the Emperor Conrad the Second, and induced him to renounce both for himself and his successors, all future claim to the Margraviate of Sleswick, as it then was termed. In the twelfth century Sleswick was mercilessly dealt with by the Vende7's or Vandalians — a rapacious set of pirates occupy- ing the coast of the Baltic, right from Denmark up to the Gulf of Finland — till at length the warlike Danish HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 455 prince, Canute Lavard, a son of the Danish king, Eric the Good, conquered the Venders, and not only secured the Margraviate of Sleswick to the Crown of Denmark, but prevailed upon the German emperor, who by virtue of his dignity as Roman emperor, was acknowledged tlie secular head of the whole Christian world, to elevate Sleswick to a dukedom ; and Canute procured for him- self the dignity of a duke, and the ducal dignity of Sleswick has since invariably been invested, either in the Danish king himself, or in whomsoever of his rela- tives he Avas pleased to invest it, the dukes, of course, always taking the oath of allegiance to the Danish Crown.* Thus the Danish king, Canute VI., made his brother Waldemar Duke of Sleswick; Eric Ploughpence made his brother Abel Duke of Sleswick, and so forth. Nevertheless, this system of dividing Sleswick amongst the king's brethren or relatives, a system adopted and adhered to for a long series of years, was pregnant with the most ruinous consequence^ to the solid interests of the Danish body, contributing very much to the diminishing of the royal power ; for Abel, recently men- tioned, and his successors, tried now to make Sleswick an hereditary and independent possession in their family, all of which resulted in a series of destructive internal wars, Sleswick thereby more and more being alienated from the kingdom. Abel soon assumed a hostile posi- tion to his brother Eric, the king, the more, as he * See Siihm's and Allen's History of Denmark and tJie Duchies. Eoyal Library of Copenhagen. 456 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. claimed the Dukedom of Sleswiek as an independent sovereignty. Abel assassinated the king, who left no male issue ; and the States, though detesting Abel on account of the unnatural crime he had committed, chose him king, to avoid a civil war. By this means they also indisputably reunited Sleswiek to the Crown ; and, had the royalty remained in Abel's flimily, Sleswiek would, of course, have been with the Crown, and all future contests prevented. But Christopher I., the third son of Waldemar the Victor, was happy enough, after Abel's death, immediately to be acknowledged king ; although the throne was promised to Abel's sons, Waldemar and Eric. Both parties exerted all their power to gain the ascendancy. The king encompassed SlesAvick with his army, and claimed as uncle the guardianship of Abel's children, whom the mighty counts of Holstein supported. Seasonably for the king, some German princes offered their mediation, a peace being concluded on these terms, that Christopher, the king, should have the guardian- ship, but restore the dukedom of Sleswiek as a fief to Waldemar, the eldest son of Abel, when he had attained his majority. After the demise of this Waldemar, the kingdom was soon alarmed by a dangerous irruption of Eric, the second son of Abel, because the then King of Denmark, Eric GUpping, would not comply with giving him Sleswiek as an hereditary fief, but only as a per- sonal. The young preposterous claimant, assisted by the Counts of Holstein, commenced a w-ar, in which the HISTORY OF ScA'DINATIA. 457 royal troops were totally defeated at Loheath, 1261, close by the city of Sleswick. The king re-entered the dukedom with a powerful army, seized upon the fortress of Tonder, which he razed, and constrained the rebellious duke to submit, who lost his dukedom ; and Sleswick remained for thii'teen years united with the kingdom, until unfortunately again Waldemar, a son of the rebel- lious Eric, was, according to the aforesaid ruinous system of division, invested Avith Sles^vick as a fief But, not content with it, he now also laid claim to Aro, Alsen, Femern, three islands in the Baltic. He fell, however, into the hands of the king, had humbly to throw himself at his feet, resign his brazen-faced claim, and confess in writing to his want of loyalty. Thus Denmark had for a num- ber of years been the theatre of continual domestic wars with the rebellious dukes. In the year 1372, there was a good pi-ospect of getting the dukedom of Sleswick reunited with the kingdom, as Henry, the then Duke of Sleswick, was old and childless. Upon this important point, the efficient king, Waldemar H^., dii'ected all his attention ; but he only survived Henry so short a time, that the question could not be decided, but had to be deferred to the following reign. The great Queen Margaretha, the daughter of Waldemar IV., styled the Semiramis of the North, now ascended the throne, and aimed all her efforts at regaining the dukedom of Sleswick, which cu'cumstances had compelled her iu the beginning of her reign to resign to Gerhard IV., 458 IIISTOUY OF SCANDINAVIA. Count of Holstein. But the prosecution of her plan for tlie perfect reunion of Sleswick was unfortunately interrupted by her death, 1412 ; and her imprudent and weak successor, Eric of Pomerania, had no vigour of mind to restrain the turbulent spirit of the three sons of the deceased duke, who, taking advantage of his inability, endeavoured to withdraw themselves from his authority, and to be enfeoffed with Sleswick. At the diet of Nyburg, in the isle of Funen, the king sum- moned the young dukes to appear, and opened the assem- bly himself with a full explanation of the dispute. When he had finished his speech, the Archbishop, in a fulmina- ting harangue, declared that tliQ dukes had no right whatever to be enfeoffed Avith Sleswick, Ijut that it should be annexed to the Crown of Denmark. * No sooner had the archbishop pronounced this sentence, than the eldest son of tlie deceased duke, Gerhard, threw himself at the king's feet, and besought him to grant the investiture of the dukedom as a *fief. The king's reply was in the negative. The three young dukes now began to concert measures for taking it by force ; and, although Eric of Pomerania had the military power of thi'ee kingdoms — Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, at command, he was defeated near Immenxtdj-in Sleswick. Although this defeat did not terminate the war, it pro- duced a truce, in order to settle preliminaries for a peace. Umpires were chosen, and the whole question was again canvassed. The young dukes embraced every oppor- HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 459 tunity to frustrate the intention of the truce, and chose to decide the difference by the sword. The king, per- ceiving their aim, now took the course of appealing to the German emperor, Siijismund, arid repaired to Ofen, Hungary, where the emperor then resided. Construing the appeal in favour of the king, the emperor declared that all Sleswick should henceforioard be annexed in full riglit to the Crown of Denmark, and that the dukes, Henry, Adolphus, and Gerhard, had, by their rebellious conduct, divested themselves of their rights to Sleswick. The king now believing the whole dispute to be settled, resolved upon a pilgrimage to Palestine. But after returning he found the ancient leaven of contest revived, and violently fermenting in the minds of the dukes, who, making alliance Avith the Ilanse towns, a mighty league in the northern part of Germany, continued the war ; and, although Eric collected all his strength to oppose the dukes, and even gained a complete victory over the Hanse fleet, yet at last the dukes got the better of him, and weakened the kingdom by the most destructive ravages. However, their attempts to seize upon Copenhagen failed, the city being saved by the bravery and intelligent preparations of Eric's queen Philijopa, a daughter of Henry V. of England. At length the war A^'ith the Danes was ended by the treaty of Wordinghurg, in the isle of Zealand, 1435, a.d., by which Adolplms, the only one yet alive, should enjoy, during his life, the dukedom of Sleswick, and his heirs, for two years after 4(50 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. his decease, Denmark thus again being dispossessed of Sleswick. Finally a surer prospect than ever before of reuniting Sleswick permanently with the kingdom, and thus of terminating the incessant contests, presented itself at the death of this Adolphus, called Adolphus VIIL, who died without issue, 1459. But Christian J., then King of Denmark, the first king of the House of Oldenburg, instead of incorporating Sleswick as an escheated fief, very unwisely engaged himself in negotia- tions with the nobility and clergy to be elected Duke of Sleswick and Count of Holstein, to which latter, how- ever, Otho, of Schaumburg, was more entitled ; where- fore the Danish king had to purchase Holstein for the sum of 43,000 florins, and to buy off the pretensions of Gerhard and Maurice, nephcAvs of the late Adolphus, for an equivalent of 40,000 florins. Thus Christian I. became Count of Holstein, which now the German em- peror, upon the king's request, elevated to a dukedom, the representatives of the political body of Holstein binding themselves to choose their following dukes amongst the Danish kings and their successors' male heirs, according to the Salic law. This year 1459 is, therefore, an essential year in the history of Denmark and the dukedom of Holstein, the stipulation showing that the kings of Denmark should be dukes of Holstein, as long as they left male issue. Of Sleswick not one word was spoken in this stipulation, it being regarded for centuries back as pertaining to the Danish body. HISTOKY OF SCANDINAVIA. 461 One should now think that the ruinous consequences which the system of dividing Sleswick among the king's brethren and relatives had had, would have taught the following kings a lesson ; but no, they all seem to have been blindfolded and deaf to the lessons of experience, for Christian III. undertook, 1557, a new division amongst his brethren, although the old and expert general, John Ranzaw, strongly advised against this imprudent step. His son, Frederic II., continued the fatal division, and so it went on. Owing to these divisions and parties, the affairs in Sleswick continued to take a disastrous ^urn for Denmark, and occasioned sanguinary national wars, the king often not knoAving how to keep the rebellious dukes within due bounds. At length all controversy concerning Sleswick was brought to a close by the treaty of 1720, when Sweden, who had sided with the then rebellious duke, Frederick, pledged herself no more to assist the duke, and England and France guaranteed to Denmark the dukedom of Sleswick, binding themselves to defend Denmark's right to this entire Danish province against all who directly or indu-ectly should dare to invade it. And seven years after, 1727, a special treaty was signed by the two powers, England and France, to which Russia acceded, binding themselves to oppose hy an armed force, hy sea and hy land, all and sundry the powers tcho shordd dare attach the Danish dukedom of Slesivick. As to Holstcin, being a male fief of the German empire, it 462 IlISTOKY OF SCANDINAVIA. had, of course, its final court of appeal in Germany ; while Sleswick, held of the Danish crown as a Danish province, was never called to a German diet, and in law questions the appeal has invariably been to its own Supreme Court. Hence it follows that Holstein is a German province, but whose duke is, according to the stipulation of 1459, above stated, the king of Denmark and his male heirs. Various changes, however, took place in the sequel, in consequence of the division of the ducal Holstein families into different branches^ and the sub- sequent extinction of collateral lines ; and it was not before the year 1750, that all Holstein came per- manently under the Danish sway, when Adolphus Frederick, the elected successor to the Swedish throne, and the head of the younger line of the dukes of Hol- stein, engaged himself to exchange the ducal part of Holstein for the two counties of Oldenburg and Del- menhorst, Denmark thereby coming into an undivided possession of Holstein. Some years after, 1779, A.D., the Gliicksburg possessions of Sleswick, at the death of the last duke, devolved by inheritance to the Danish crown, and all the small parcels of Sleswick, which by earlier division had been separated from the crown, were re-united to it, except the possessions of the duke of Augustenburg, which remained in his family as allodial estates. As duke of Holstein, the king of Denmark had a seat in the German diet ; but on the dissolution of the Germaa empire, 180G, that feudal obligation, in HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 463 which Holstein had been to the German emperor, ceased, and Holstein was incorporated as a part of the Danish monarchy. However, on the formation of the German Confederacy in the year 1815, at the General Congress of the allied powers at Vienna, the king of Denmark, Frederick VI., was present, and subscribed there to the re-incorporation of Holstein into the Germanic Con- federation, upon condition that he and his male heirs should continue to be dukes of Holstein, and as such be members of the confederacy, having three votes in the full Council, and binding themselves, if need be, to fur- nish a contingent of 3,600 men, and to rule Holstein as a male fief of Germany, according to its peculiar German laws, all of which that noble and simple-hearted monarch faithfully fulfilled, no complaints of oppression being ever made by the inhabitants of the dukedom. At the Congress at Vienna, no single syllable was spoken of Sleswick, it being considered an entire Danish province, and an inseparable part of the Danish monarchy. Since the Congress^ of 1815, the peace of Denmark was not disturbed till 1848, Avhen the treacherous duke of Augustenburg — the only surviving lineal descendant of the dukes of Sleswick, and brother of the queen- dowager of Denmark — revolutionized the two dukedoms, and tried to shake off the Danish yoke, as he was pleased to call it, and erect for himself an independent Slesivick- HoUtein state. That victory which in the beginning of 464 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 1848 had followed the popular commotions of France and Germany, was a bait for him to induce the duke- doms to revolt. A sanguinary three years' war was waged against Denmark, the insurgents being aided by more than 20,000 Prussians and Hanoverians. What did England do ? Did she act according to the great covenants of 1720 and 1727? "All the time it was said" — writes the able English historian, Mr. Laing — " England is negotiating ! Mirabile dictu! What was there to negotiate about ? Negotiating ! while she was bound by sacred treaties to protect the dukedom of Schleswig from all invasion." France acted no better. Russia was the only power which did something to vin- dicate Denmark's right. Little Denmark had to do it almost alone, and struggled hard, but successfully, to maintain her integrity. England and France remained quiet beholders of all the innocent blood that manured the fields of Fredericia, Duppel, Idsted, and so on. Denmark had, I repeat it, to do it alone ; did it, defeated the insurgents and the German troops almost in every engagement, crushed the rfebellion, regained the authority over the dukedoms, and May 8th, 1852, a treaty, generally called the London Protocol, was con- cluded in London between Denmark, Norway, Sweden, England, France, Austria, and Prussia, guaranteeing the integrity of the Danish monarchy, setting aside the line of Augustenburg, because of the duke's treacherous conduct, and settling the succession to the crown c HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. 465 Denmark and to the ducal dignity of the dukedoms upon the loyal Prince Christian, of the Sonderbiirg- Gliicksburg line, and his male heirs. On the 15th of November, 1863, the king of Den- mark died without issue ; the throne, according to the aforesaid London Protocol of 1852, devolving to Prince Christian, who immediately was proclaimed king of Denmark and duke of Sleswick and Holstein, under the name of Chnstian the Ninth. But I must bestow a few words more upon Prince Christian, the present king, the father of the Princess of Wales, and also some upon the crafty Duke of Augustenburg, and my words concerning them I quote from the Edinburgh Revieic. They are too true and too good to be omitted here. " The Prince Christian of Glikhburg, as a descendant of Christian III., stood high in the male succession, and most of them who stood befqre him Iiad been guilty of treason in i848, and had rendered themselves liable to for- feiture of all their rights. Accordingly, renunciations were obtained from Prince Frederick of Hesse, from his sisters, from the emperor of Russia, and, finally, from the duke of Augustenburg himself, xoho, of course, had fed the country. For this, and for the cession of all claims to his estates, which were of sm/ill value to him, as he had forfeited them, by his rebellion, he received a sum of rather more than £400,000 sterling. It is a curious coincidence that the Prussian plenipotentiary at Frankfort, who negotiated this 2 G 466 HISTORY OF SCANDINAVIA. renunciation ivith the duke of Augustenhurg, loas Herr von Bismark. In consideration of this e?iormous indemnity, the duke made the folloicing promise : — " ' We promise for us and our family, by our pidncely ivord and honour, not to undertake anything loherehy the tranquillity of His Danish Majesty^s dominion and lands might be disturbed, nor in any xcay to counteract the reso- lutions which His Danish Majesty might have taken, or in future might take, in reference to the arrangement of the succession of all the lands noio united under His Danish 3£ajesty''s sceptre, or to the eventual organization of his monarchy.^ " In the vocabulary of the duke of Augustenburg , it is, of course, to be presumed that the icord 'family' does not include sons, since it is just his son icho is note revohttionizing Holstein. It is, however, right to say, that said son has protested against the above renunciation ; but it is also right to add that he kept his protest to himself till six years after the deed had been signed, and the money paid. The protest teas issued on the i5th of January, 4859^ Thus far the Edinburgh Review. Pretty smart piece of business. And A'^---^. /" ' - -^ -,^, :- '-^■ - • - •«e ; - ~- '^ ' ^ /-. ^ z -1^^ I I ^ ? ^^ 8 6 f T -v^vr' OF CALi .rviMA, LOS ^N ' IS JNIVERSn ST LIBRAK\ This book ■ ^"T, on the last date stampeu ueic w UNIVERSITY fh CALIFORNIA \at LOS Vngeles 3 1158 00134 5619 P UC SOUTHf RN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY AA 000 919 973 8