About: Treaties of Roskilde (1568)   Sponge Permalink

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After the Swedish king Erik XIV had become insane and murdered leading aristocrats in late 1567, his brother duke John (the later king John III) assumed control of the kingdom and had Erik imprisoned. When this was accomplished, he sent a delegation to Denmark to negotiate for an end of the Northern Seven Years' War inherited from his brother. Frederik II of Denmark was unable to exploit the inner-Swedish conflict, as his treasures were emptied by the costs of his German mercenary armies, on whom he had relied throughout the war, and the rebuilding of the Danish navy, finished by the summer of 1567, after a large part of it had sunk in a storm in July 1566. Furthermore, duke John maintained amicable relations to Sigismund II Augustus of Poland-Lithuania, thwarting hopes for an anti-Swedish

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Treaties of Roskilde (1568)
rdfs:comment
  • After the Swedish king Erik XIV had become insane and murdered leading aristocrats in late 1567, his brother duke John (the later king John III) assumed control of the kingdom and had Erik imprisoned. When this was accomplished, he sent a delegation to Denmark to negotiate for an end of the Northern Seven Years' War inherited from his brother. Frederik II of Denmark was unable to exploit the inner-Swedish conflict, as his treasures were emptied by the costs of his German mercenary armies, on whom he had relied throughout the war, and the rebuilding of the Danish navy, finished by the summer of 1567, after a large part of it had sunk in a storm in July 1566. Furthermore, duke John maintained amicable relations to Sigismund II Augustus of Poland-Lithuania, thwarting hopes for an anti-Swedish
sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
Footer
  • Frederik II of Denmark , Lübeck bürgermeister Christoph Tode and Duke John of Finland, since 1569 king John III of Sweden
  • From left to right: chancellor Johan Friis, his secretary Niels Kaas , hofmester Peder Oxe
Width
  • 150(xsd:integer)
  • 152(xsd:integer)
  • 175(xsd:integer)
  • 192(xsd:integer)
  • 235(xsd:integer)
header
  • Parties
  • Danish delegation
Image
  • Christoph Tode.jpg
  • Johan friis.jpg
  • John III of Sweden.png
  • Kaas Niels.jpg
  • Melchior Lorck Frederik 2.jpg
  • Peder Oxe.jpg
abstract
  • After the Swedish king Erik XIV had become insane and murdered leading aristocrats in late 1567, his brother duke John (the later king John III) assumed control of the kingdom and had Erik imprisoned. When this was accomplished, he sent a delegation to Denmark to negotiate for an end of the Northern Seven Years' War inherited from his brother. Frederik II of Denmark was unable to exploit the inner-Swedish conflict, as his treasures were emptied by the costs of his German mercenary armies, on whom he had relied throughout the war, and the rebuilding of the Danish navy, finished by the summer of 1567, after a large part of it had sunk in a storm in July 1566. Furthermore, duke John maintained amicable relations to Sigismund II Augustus of Poland-Lithuania, thwarting hopes for an anti-Swedish alliance in the contemporary Livonian War.
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