Haakon "The Young", King of Norway

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King of Norway Haakon "The Young" Haakonsson

Swedish: kung av Norge Håkan Håkansson, Norwegian: konge av Norge Håkon Håkonsson, Finnish: Håkan Håkaninpoika, Norjan kuningas, Norwegian: Håkon "den unge" Håkonson
Also Known As: "the Young", "(Junior) King of Norway"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Bergen, Hordaland, Norway
Death: April 30, 1257 (24)
Tønsberg, Vestfold, Norway
Place of Burial: Oslo, Oslo, Norway
Immediate Family:

Son of Håkon IV, king of Norway and Margrete Skulesdatter
Husband of Queen Consort Rikissa Birgersdotter of Norway
Father of Sverre Magnus Haakonsson av Norge
Brother of Thoron Håkonsdatter Hvite; Olav Håkonsson av Norge; Cristina de Noruega, infanta consorte de Castilla; Magnus VI Haakonsson, king of Norway and Princess Kristina Haakonsdaughter
Half brother of Sigurd Haakonsson, av Norge; Thoron Håkonsdatter Hvite and Cecilía

Occupation: Konge, Norsk kung, Medkonung av norge, tronarvinge, Med regent med sin far 1240-1257, gift med Birger Jarls dotter Rikissa
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Haakon "The Young", King of Norway

Håkon Håkonsson Unge, født i Bergen 10. november 1232, død i Tønsberg 30. april (eller 5. mai) 1257, begravd i St Hallvards kirke i Oslo, formelt norsk samkonge i årene 1240-1257. Håkon Unge var sønn av kong Håkon Håkonsson (1204-1263), som også ble kalt «Håkon gamle», og dronning Margrete Skulesdatter (død 1270).

Den norske tronarvingen Håkon Unge fikk kongstittel i 1240 da hertug Skule gjorde opprør for å kreve den norske kongedømmet for seg selv, men mislykkes. Håkon ble gift med Rikitsa Birgersdatter av Bjälboætten i Oslo i 1251. Rikitsa var datter av den mektige svenske jarlen Birger Magnusson, grunnleggeren av Stockholm, far til to sønner som begge ble konger av Sverige og styrte selv som Sveriges reelle hersker som formynderregent fra 1248 og til sin død i 1266.

Ekteskapet var en dynastisk allianse mellom det norske og det svenske kongedømmene og en forlengelse av fredsavtalen fra 1249 som sa «at det skulle være fred mellom Norge og Sverige, uvenner av den ene eller den andre ikke trives eller tåles i den andres rike.»

Deres eneste barn var Sverre Håkonsson (1252-1261). Normalt ville lille Sverre ha vært berettiget for den norske tronen etter at Håkon Unges altfor tidlige død, kun 25 år gammel. Det blir ikke aktuelt når Sverre dør som barn kun 9 år gammel. Den norske tronen gikk da uansett til Håkon Unges bror Magnus Håkonsson, kjent som Magnus Lagabøte og senere dennes sønner.



åkan "den unge", Håkon Håkonsson d. y., född i Bergen 10 november 1232, död i Tönsberg 30 april eller 5 maj 1257, begravd i St Hallvards kyrka i Oslo, norsk medkung 1240-1257. Son till kung Håkan IV "den gamle" av Norge (1204-1263) och Margareta Skulesdotter (död 1270).

Norske tronarvingen Håkan "den unge" fick kungatitel 1240 vid hertig Skules uppror. Håkan gifte sig i Oslo 1251 med Rikissa Birgersdotter (Bjälboätten). Deras ende son Sverre (1252-1261) blev efter Håkans tidiga död 1257 norsk tronarvinge, men Sverre dog som barn redan 1261.



(Junior) King of Norway 1240–1257

with Haakon IV

Haakon Haakonsson the Young (Norwegian: Håkon Håkonsson Unge, Old Norse: Hákon Hákonarson hinn ungi) (10 November 1232 – 5 May 1257) was the son of king Haakon Haakonsson of Norway, and held the title of king, subordinate to his father, from 1 April 1240 to his death. He was referred to as Haakon the Young to distinguish him from his father, who was sometimes correspondingly called Haakon the Old.

Haakon was born in Bergen on 10 November 1232, as the second son of king Haakon Haakonsson of Norway and his queen, Margrét Skuladóttir. His older brother died in infancy. In 1239, queen Margrét's father, Duke Skule Bårdsson, rebelled against his son-in-law, king Haakon, and had himself hailed as king. This revolt marked the end of the civil war era in Norway. Part of king Haakon's response to Skule's action was to have the seven-year-old Haakon the Young hailed as king and co-ruler. This took place at the thing of Eyrathing in Nidaros (Trondheim) on 1 April 1240. The ceremony was repeated at the thing in Bergen on 12 April. In this way, king Haakon the Old had provided his supporters with a successor, should he himself fall in the battle against Skule. Haakon proceeded to put down Skule's rebellion, and Skule himself was killed by Haakon's men on 24 May the same year.

The appointment of Haakon the Young as king Haakon the Old's heir-apparent marked a new development in the heredity of the Norwegian monarchy. King Haakon did have an older, illegitimate son, Sigurd, who was bypassed in favour of Haakon the Young. This marked a break with older traditions, when the question of legitimacy of birth was not of consequence in inheriting the kingdom.

Although he held the title of "king", it was clear that Haakon the Young's position was subordinate to that of his father. This was underlined at the coronation of Haakon the Old in 1247, when Haakon the Young carried the crown in the procession. He himself was not crowned.

In 1251, he married the Swedish Rikitsa Birgersdotter in Oslo. Rikitsa was the daughter of the Swedish de facto ruler, Earl Birger Magnusson, and sister of the under-aged Swedish king Valdemar Birgersson. The match was the result of diplomatic activity on king Haakon the Old's part to forge an alliance between Norway and Sweden, primarily directed against Denmark. The couple had one son, who was named Sverre (Old Norse Sverrir).

Haakon the Young took part in his father's military operations against Denmark in 1256 and 1257, when the Norwegian kings ravaged the Danish province of Halland. In the spring of 1257, he fell ill at Konghelle while preparing to travel to Oslo. He broke off his journey at Tønsberg, and took lodgings at a monastery there. The saga records that he was attended to by a Spanish physician, who was with a Spanish diplomatic delegation to Norway at the time. However, the illness got worse, and he died in Tønsberg on 5 May 1257. His body was taken to Oslo, where he was buried in the St. Hallvard's Cathedral.

The main source on the life of Haakon the Young is the saga of his father, the Saga of Haakon Haakonsson, written by Sturla Þórðarson in the 1260s. The saga describes Haakon the Young as "of somewhat over medium height, well-shaped, handsome of countenance, with pretty hair and beautiful eyes. He was a strong man, unusually fast and agile. He was the best horseman there was in Norway at that time."

After his death, his wife Rikitsa returned to her father in Sweden. Their young son Sverre remained in Norway with his grandfather. He does not seem to have been considered an heir to the throne, as Haakon the Young's younger brother, Magnus, was hailed as king already in 1257. Sverre died young, in 1261.

  • Sturla Þórðarson; translation to English by G.W. Dasent (1894, repr. 1964). The Saga of Hakon and a Fragment of the Saga of Magnus with Appendices. London (Rerum Britannicarum Medii Ævi Scriptores, vol.88.4).
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Haakon "The Young", King of Norway's Timeline

1232
November 10, 1232
Bergen, Hordaland, Norway
1252
1252
1257
April 30, 1257
Age 24
Tønsberg, Vestfold, Norway
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Norway - Crown Prince Haakon
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St. Hallvard's Cathedral, Oslo, Oslo, Norway