Charles IX (Swedish: Karl IX) (4 October 1550 – 30 October 1611), was King of Sweden from 1604 until his death. He was the youngest son of King Gustav I of Sweden and his second wife, Margaret Leijonhufvud, brother of Eric XIV of Sweden and John III, and uncle of Sigismund III Vasa king of both Sweden and Poland. By his father's will he got, by way of appanage, the Duchy of Södermanland, which included the provinces of Närke and Värmland; but he did not come into actual possession of them till after the fall of Eric and the succession to the throne of John in 1568. He came into the throne by championing the protestant cause during the increasingly tense times of religious strife between competing sects of Christianity, where forcible conversion was considered a "best course". With his brothers' death (1592) during the era beginning the end (dated 1648 by some) of both the reformation and counter-reformation, while the Catholics were growing increasingly belligerent— which, in just over a decade, would break out as the Thirty Years' War—the thought processes during the tense political times viewed the inheritance of the throne of protestant Sweden by his devout Roman Catholic nephew and Habsburg ally, Sigismund of Poland and Sweden was viewed with alarm, and after various preliminaries, his nephew was forced to abdicate the throne to Charles IX, which eventually kicked of nearly seven decades of sporadic warfare as the two lines of the divided House of Vasa continued to rejoin the Polish and Swedish thrones. It is also quite likely, that the dynastic outcome between Sweden and Poland's Vasa was a factor which exacerbated and radicalized the later acts of Europe's Catholic princes and worsened European politics to the abandonment or prevention of settling events by diplomacy and compromise. Duke CharlesIn 1568 he was the real leader of the rebellion against Eric XIV, but took no part in the designs of his brother John III against the unhappy king after his deposition. Indeed, Charles's relations with John were always more or less strained. He had no sympathy with John's High-Church tendencies on the one hand, and he sturdily resisted all the king's endeavours to restrict his authority as Duke of Södermanland on the other. The nobility and the majority of the Riksdag of the Estates supported John, however, in his endeavours to unify the realm, and Charles had consequently (1587) to resign his pretensions to autonomy within his duchy; but, fanatical Calvinist as he was, on the religious question he was immovable. The matter came to a crisis on the death of John III in 1592. The heir to the throne was John's eldest son, Sigismund of Sweden, already king of Poland and a devoted Catholic. The fear lest Sigismund might re-catholicize the land alarmed the Protestant majority in Sweden, and Charles came forward as their champion, and also as the defender of the Vasa dynasty against foreign interference. It was due entirely to him that Sigismund was forced to confirm the resolutions at the Uppsala Synod in 1593, thereby recognizing the fact that Sweden was essentially a Protestant state. In the ensuing years, Charles's task was extraordinarily difficult. He had steadily to oppose Sigismund's reactionary tendencies; he had also to curb the nobility, which he did with cruel rigour. Necessity compelled him to work with the people rather than the gentry; hence it was that the Riksdag assumed under his government a power and an importance which it had never possessed before. In 1595, the Riksdag of Söderköping elected Charles regent, and his attempt to force Klas Flemming, governor of Finland, to submit to his authority, rather than to that of the king, provoked a civil war. Technically Charles was, without doubt, guilty of high treason, and the considerable minority of all classes which adhered to Sigismund on his landing in Sweden in 1598 for the Battle of Stångebro, indisputably behaved like loyal subjects. But Sigismund was both an alien and a heretic to the majority of the Swedish nation, and his formal deposition by the Riksdag of the Estates in 1599 was, in effect, a natural vindication and legitimation of Charles's position. King Charles IX
Statue of Charles IX in Karlstad.
Finally, the Riksdag at Linköping, February 24, 1600 declared that Sigismund abdicated the Swedish throne, that duke Charles was recognized as the sovereign under the title of Karl IX. Karl's short reign was an uninterrupted warfare. The hostility of Poland and the break up of Russia involved him in two overseas contests for the possession of Livonia and Ingria, while his pretensions to Lappland brought upon him a war with Denmark in the last year of his reign. In all these struggles, he was more or less unsuccessful, owing partly to the fact that he had to do with superior generals (e.g. Jan Karol Chodkiewicz and Christian IV of Denmark) and partly to sheer ill-luck. Compared with his foreign policy, the domestic policy of Charles IX was comparatively unimportant. It aimed at confirming and supplementing what had already been done during his regency. He did not officially become king until March 6, 1604. The first deed in which the title appears is dated March 20 1604; but he was not crowned until March 15, 1607. Four and a half years later Charles IX died at Nyköping, October 30, 1611. As a ruler, he is the link between his great father and his still greater son. He consolidated the work of Gustav I, the creation of a great Protestant state; he prepared the way for the erection of the Protestant empire of Gustavus Adolphus. Swedish historians have been excusably indulgent to the father of their greatest ruler. Indisputably Charles was cruel, ungenerous and vindictive; yet he seems, at all hazards, strenuously to have endeavoured to do his duty during a period of political and religious transition, and, despite his violence and brutality, possessed many or the qualities of a wise and courageous statesman. Ancestors
ChildrenHe married, firstly, Anna Marie of Palatinate-Simmern (1561–1589), daughter of Louis VI, Elector Palatinate (1539–1583) and Elisabeth of Hesse (1539–1584). Their children were:
In 1592 he married his second wife Christina of Holstein-Gottorp (1573-1625), daughter of Adolf of Holstein-Gottorp (1526-1586) and Christine of Hesse (1543-1604) and first cousin of his previous wife. Their children were:
He also had a son with his mistress, Karin Nilsdotter: See also
References
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