John III of Sweden
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John III | |
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King of Sweden Grand Duke of Finland | |
Reign | January 1569 – 17 November 1592 |
Coronation | 10 July 1569 |
Predecessor | Eric XIV |
Successor | Sigismund |
Born | 20 December 1537 Stegeborg Castle |
Died | 17 November 1592 Tre Kronor castle | (aged 54)
Burial | 1 February 1594 |
Spouses | |
Issue | |
House | Vasa |
Father | Gustav I of Sweden |
Mother | Margaret Leijonhufvud |
Religion | mediating between Lutheranism and Catholicism[1] |
Signature |
John III (Swedish: Johan III, Finnish: Juhana III; 20 December 1537 – 17 November 1592) was King of Sweden from 1569 until his death. He attained the Swedish throne after a rebellion against his half-brother Eric XIV. He is mainly remembered for his attempts to close the gap between the newly established Lutheran Church of Sweden and the Catholic Church, as well as his conflict with and possible murder of his brother.
He was also, quite autonomously, the Duke of Finland from 1556 to 1563. In 1581 he assumed the title Grand Prince of Finland.
His first wife was Catherine Jagellonica of the Polish–Lithuanian ruling family, and their son Sigismund eventually ascended both the Polish–Lithuanian and Swedish thrones.[2]
He ended the Northern Seven Years' War, but instead Sweden was drawn into the 25 Years' War with Russia, where minor gains were eventually made. He worked for closer relations with Poland.
John III was interested in religion and culture. During his reign, he countered the growing Lutheran tendencies of the Church of Sweden under the influence of Duke Charles, and worked for a reunion with the Catholic Church and the Pope in Rome.
John III was the son of King Gustav I of Sweden and his second wife Margaret Leijonhufvud. He was the brother of Charles IX and Magnus and half-brother of Eric XIV. He was married from October 4, 1562 to Catherine Jagellonica (1526-1583), with whom he had a daughter Anna Vasa in addition to Sigismund, and from February 21, 1585 to Gunilla Johansdotter (Bielke) (1568-1597).[2]
Childhood and adolescence
[edit]John III was born at Stegeborg Castle on December 20, 1537, the son of Gustav I (Vasa) and his second wife, Margareta (Eriksdotter) Leijonhufvud. He was more than once the cause of his father's displeasure, especially when, as hereditary Duke of Finland Proper (since June 27, 1556), he sought to interfere in Livonian affairs behind King Gustav's back. Gustav had placed his son in Finland to secure Swedish territory in the eastern Baltic from a Russian threat. John also cooperated with his brother Eric, and traveled to London on his behalf, while Eric looked after John's interests in Livonia. The marriage would have secured Swedish access to Western Europe. That mission failed, but in England John observed the reintroduction of Protestantism and the Book of Common Prayer (1559). The Finnish duke had liturgical and theological interests.
As Duke of Finland, he opposed the efforts of his half-brother King Eric XIV (1560–1569) to secure Reval and other East Baltic ports. John and his wife, Catherine, were imprisoned in the Gripsholm in 1563 after being captured during the Siege of Åbo. After his release from prison, probably because of his brother's insanity (see Sture Murders), John again joined the opposition of the nobles, deposed Eric and made himself the king. His important ally was his maternal uncle Sten Leijonhufvud, who at deathbed was made Count of Raseborg. Shortly after this John executed his brother's most trusted counsellor, Jöran Persson, whom he held largely responsible for his harsh treatment while in prison.
John further initiated peace talks with Denmark–Norway and Lübeck to end the Scandinavian Seven Years' War but rejected the resulting Treaties of Roskilde in which his envoys had accepted far-reaching Danish demands. After two more years of fighting, the war was concluded without many Swedish concessions in the Treaty of Stettin. During the following years he successfully fought Russia in the Livonian War, concluded by the Treaty of Plussa in 1583, a war that meant a Swedish reconquest of Narva. As a whole his foreign policy was affected by his connection to Poland of which country his son Sigismund III Vasa was made king in 1587.
In domestic politics, John showed clear Catholic sympathies inspired by his Polish wife, a fact that created frictions to the Swedish clergy and nobility. He sought to enlist the help of the papacy in gaining release of his wife's family assets, which were frozen in Naples. He also allowed Jesuits to secretly staff the Royal Theological College in Stockholm. However, John himself was a learned follower of the mediating theologian George Cassander. He sought reconciliation between Rome and Wittenberg on the basis of the consensus of the first five centuries of Christianity (consensus quinquesaecularis). John approved the publication of the Lutheran Swedish Church Order of Archbishop Laurentius Petri in 1571 but also got the church to approve an addendum to the church order in 1575, Nova ordinantia ecclesiastica that displayed a return to patristic sources.[4] This set the stage for his promulgation of the Swedish-Latin Red Book, entitled Liturgia suecanae ecclesiae catholicae & orthodoxae conformis,[5][6] which reintroduced several Catholic customs and resulted in the Liturgical Struggle, which lasted for twenty years. In 1575, he gave his permission for the remaining Catholic convents in Sweden to start receiving novices again. From time to time, he was also at odds theologically with his younger brother Duke Charles of Sudermannia (afterwards Charles IX of Sweden), who had Calvinist sympathies, and did not promote King John's Liturgy in his duchy. John III was an eager patron of art and architecture; he turned the medieval Kalmar Castle into a Renaissance palace and often resided there because it was closer to Poland.
John III as king
[edit]Hailed as king
[edit]In January 1569, John III was recognized as king by the same Diet (Riksdag) that forced Eric XIV from the throne. But this recognition was not without concessions on the part of John: Duke Charles was confirmed in his dukedom without the restrictions on his power imposed by the Articles of Arboga; the nobility were granted privileges which, in extending their rights and limiting their duties, represent a significant moment in the history of the nobility; and special privileges were granted to the higher nobility which consolidated and developed the distinction between the various classes of the nobility which is of such profound significance in the history of the Swedish nobility.
Eric dies - John is free
[edit]Although power was now in King John's hands, he did not feel secure on his throne as long as his captured half-brother was alive. Three plots were uncovered during these years to depose him: the 1569 Plot, the Mornay Plot, and the 1576 Plot.[7][8] Fear of his possible release constantly worried the king (compare Eric XIV) and led him, as early as 1571, to order the guards, in the event of the slightest danger of an attempted rescue or the like, to assassinate the captured king, and it was probably as a result of such an order that Eric XIV's life was ended in 1577. Even if this was not the case, the fact remains that John III did not shrink from the possible murder of his half-brother and that it was not against his will if it was carried out.
Like his father
[edit]John III often likened himself to his father for propaganda purposes, and in particular he tried to emphasize that while his father had "liberated Sweden" from the "bloodhound" Christian II, he had saved the population from the "tyrannical" Eric XIV, his own brother. He had some similar characteristics to his father and brothers; violent, with a fierce temperament and great suspicion.[9] But he lacked sharpness, firmness, prudence and a practical eye.
Son far away - Karl supports
[edit]John and his wife Catherine Jagellonica had ensured that their son Sigismund received a Catholic upbringing, probably to help him acquire the Polish crown. This aim was achieved in 1587,[10] and John had thus given Sweden a new union, more unnatural than the one his father had torn apart (the Kalmar Union), as Sweden and Poland often had directly conflicting interests in the Baltic. He also soon came to regret his decision and vainly demanded the return of Sigismund to Sweden, which the high nobility opposed as they foresaw that this would lead to war with Poland, something Sweden after 28 years of war would find difficult to cope with.
John responded with a political shake-up; instead of relying on the council aristocracy as before, he now sought the assistance of his brother Duke Charles, with whom he had been at bitter odds for most of his previous reign. The reasons for this had been many, but one of the most important had been that John III, as king, had sought to apply the same principles with regard to royal rights within Charles's principality that he had so ardently opposed as duke. In 1587 he had finally succeeded in persuading his brother to approve statutes very similar to the Articles of Arboga, which he himself had repealed in 1569, but judging from a proposal in 1590 for a new arrangement of the princely rights, he gave up the claims he had previously stubbornly maintained after the break with the high nobility.
Family
[edit]John married his first wife, Catherine Jagellonica of Poland (1526–83), of the House of Jagiello, in Vilnius on 4 October 1562. In Sweden, she is known as Katarina Jagellonica. She was the sister of king Sigismund II Augustus of Poland. Their children were:
- Isabella (1564–1566)
- Sigismund (1566–1632), King of Poland (1587–1632), King of Sweden (1592–99), and Grand Duke of Finland and Lithuania
- Anna (1568–1625)
He married his second wife, Gunilla Bielke (1568–1592), on 21 February 1585; they had a son:
- John (1589–1618), firstly Duke of Finland, then from 1608 Duke of Ostrogothia. The young duke married his first cousin Maria Elisabet (1596–1618), daughter of Charles IX of Sweden (reigned 1599–1611)
With his mistress Karin Hansdotter (1532–1596) he had at least four illegitimate children:
- Sofia Gyllenhielm (1556–1583), who married Pontus De la Gardie
- Augustus Gyllenhielm (1557–1560)
- Julius Gyllenhielm (1559–1581)
- Lucretia Gyllenhielm (1560–1585)
John cared for Karin and their children even after he married Catherine Jagellonica, in 1562. He found Karin a husband who would care for her and the children: in 1561, she married nobleman Klas Andersson (Västgöte), a friend and servant of John. They had a daughter named Brita. He continued supporting Karin and his illegitimate children as king, from 1568. In 1572 Karin married again, as her first husband was executed for treason by Eric XIV in 1563, to a Lars Henrikson, whom John ennobled in 1576 to care for his issue with Karin. The same year, he made his daughter Sofia a lady in the castle, as a servant to his sister Princess Elizabeth of Sweden. In 1580, John married her to Pontus de la Gardie. She later died giving birth to Jacob De la Gardie.
Ancestry
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See also
[edit]- History of Sweden (1523–1611).
- Scolding letters exchanged between King John III and Ivan IV the Terrible from 1572–1573
References
[edit]- ^ "was not a Lutheran": Encyclopedia of Martin Luther and the Reformation, Volume 2, p. 737
- ^ a b Harrison & Eriksson 2010, p. 391.
- ^ "Vaakuna - Kansallisarkisto". Europeana Heraldica. National Archives of Finland. Retrieved 26 May 2021.
- ^ Roland Persson, Johan III och Nova Ordinantia (CWK Glerups 1973)
- ^ Sigtrygg Serenius, Liturgia svecanae ecclesiae catholicae et orthodoxae conformis (Abo 1966)
- ^ Frank C. Senn, Christian Worship – Catholic and Evangelical (Fortress 1997), pp. 421–445
- ^ Karin Tegenborg Falkdalen (2010). Vasadöttrarna (2). Falun: Historiska Media. ISBN 978-91-85873-87-6
- ^ Nordisk familjebok / Uggleupplagan. 7. Egyptologi - Feinschmecker. pp. 787–788
- ^ Harrison & Eriksson 2010, pp. 414, 416.
- ^ Harrison & Eriksson 2010, p. 423.
- Signum svenska kulturhistoria: Renässansen (2005).
- Michael Roberts, The Early Vasas: A History of Sweden 1523–1611 (1968).
- Sigtrygg Serenius, Liturgia svecanae ecclesiae catholicae et Orthodoxae conformis (1966).
- Roland Persson, Johan III och Nova Ordinantia (1973).
- Frank C. Senn, Christian Liturgy – Catholic and Evangelical (1997), pp. 421–445.
Bibliography
[edit]- Harrison, Dick; Eriksson, Bo (2010). Sveriges historia 1350-1600 (in Swedish). Stockholm: Norstedt. ISBN 9789113024394.
External links
[edit]- Media related to John III of Sweden at Wikimedia Commons