Magnus, Duke of Östergötland

Swedish prince and duke
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Magnus
Duke of Östergötland
Prince Magnus of Sweden
Born25 July 1542
Died26 June 1595(1595-06-26) (aged 52)
Kungsbro [sv]
Burial
Vadstena Abbey
IssueLucretia Magnusdotter Gyllenhielm
Helena Magnusdotter Gyllenhielm
Virginia Magnusdotter Gyllenhielm
HouseVasa
FatherGustav Vasa of Sweden
MotherMargareta Leijonhufvud
Swedish Royalty
House of Vasa
Gustav I
Parents
Erik Johansson
Cecilia Månsdotter
Children
Eric XIV
John III
Catherine
Cecilia
Magnus
Anna
Sophia
Elizabeth
Charles IX
Eric XIV
Children
Sigrid
Gustav
John III
Children
Sigismund
Anna
John
Sigismund
Children
Władysław IV
John II Casimir
John Albert
Charles Ferdinand
Alexander Charles
Anna Catherine Constance
Charles IX
Children
Catherine
Gustavus Adolphus
Maria Elizabeth
Christina
Charles Philip
Grandson
Charles X Gustav
Gustavus Adolphus
Children
Christina
Christina
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Magnus Vasa (25 July 1542 – 26 June 1595), prince of Sweden, Duke of Östergötland from 1555. Magnus was the third son of King Gustav Vasa. His mother was queen Margareta Leijonhufvud.

Biography

Magnus was the only of Gustav Vasa's sons – except for Karl and Sten, who died in infancy – that didn't become king of Sweden. In 1555, he was made Duke of Ostrogothia, Kinda and Ydre, Dalsland, Sundbo härad in Närke, Kåkind, Valla, and the major part of Vadsbo härad in Västergötland. As Duke of Ostrogothia, he lived permanently at Vadstena Castle in Vadstena.

Magnus suffered from a severe mental illness.[1]: 322  The illness showed its first signs in 1563, and eventually became permanent. In 1574, the responsibility of his fiefs were taken over by his brother King John III, who managed them as his guardian because of his mental condition. A smaller part of them was granted to his other brother, Charles.

Magnus died at the Manorhouse of Kungsbro, outside Linköping, in 1595 and is buried in the Bridgettine Abbey Church in Vadstena.

Legacy

Many ballads and stories were inspired by Magnus and his alleged interest in mythological creatures such as fairies.

There are many stories about the "Mad Duke", for instance about how he saw a mermaid in the castle moat and threw himself out of a window, nearly drowning himself. There is no proof that this event ever took place, but the story might have evolved from an incident in 1563 when he fell in the moat, during the construction of the castle drawbridge. Geijer and Afzelius note that the alleged mermaid incident appears to have found its way into the ballad "Hertig Magnus och Hafsfrun" ("Herr Mannelig").[2]

Issue

Magnus was never married. He had three confirmed and acknowledged children outside of marriage.

With Valborg Eriksdotter:

  1. Lucretia Magnusdotter (Gyllenhielm) (1562–1624) married to nobleman Christoffer von Warnstedt

With Anna von Haubitz

  1. Helena Gyllenhielm (1572-1630) married to nobleman Wollmar Yxkull

Mother unknown:

  1. Virginia

Ancestry

Ancestors of Magnus, Duke of Östergötland
Johan Kristiersson (Vasa)
Erik Johansson (Vasa)
Birgitta Gustafsdotter (Sture)
Gustav I of Sweden (Vasa)
Måns Karlsson (Eka)
Cecilia Månsdotter (Eka)
Sigrid Eskilsdotter (Banér)
Magnus of Sweden (Vasa)
Abraham Kristiernsson (Leijonhuvud)
Erik Abrahamsson (Leijonhufvud)
Birgitta Månsdotter (Natt och Dag)
Margareta Leijonhufvud
Erik Karlsson (Vasa)
Ebba Eriksdotter (Vasa)
Anna Karlsdotter (Vinstorpa)

Sources

  • "Magnus Gustavsson Vasa". Historiesajten.
  • "Vadstena kloster och stad". Bengans historiasidor.

Citations

  1. ^ Roberts, Michael (1968). The Early Vasas: A History of Sweden, 1523–1611. London: Cambridge University Press. SBN 521069300.
  2. ^ Afzelius, Arvid August; Geijer, Erik Gustaf (1816). "96. Hertig Magnus och Hafsfrun". Svenska folk-visor från forntiden (in Swedish). Stockholm: Zacharias Hæggström. p. 178.
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The generations indicate descent from Gustav I, of the House of Vasa, and continues through the Houses of Palatinate-Zweibrücken, Holstein-Gottorp; and the Bernadotte, the adoptive heirs of the House of Holstein-Gottorp, who were adoptive heirs of the Palatinate-Zweibrückens.
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1 Also prince of Norway
2 Also prince of Poland and Lithuania
3 Lost his title due to an unequal marriage
4 Not Swedish prince by birth, but created prince of Sweden
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1: Maria Elizabeth was Consort of Prince John; 2: Prince Oscar succeeded as Oscar II in 1872 upon his brother's death, and his titles merged with the crown.; 3: Sophia of Nassau was Consort of Prince Oscar
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