Stones of Mora
|
Fragments of comemmorative stones from the monument |
Stones of Mora was the place where the
Swedish kings were elected. The origin of the tradition is unknown.
Mora Meadow
In
Lagga parish about 10 km south-east of
Uppsala, but (since 2003) in neighbouring
Knivsta municipality, is Mora äng (Mora Meadow). The location is at equal distance from the
Tings of the old
folklands
Attundaland and
Tiundaland.
The Thing of Mora
This was the location of
Mora Thing (called
Múlaþing by
Snorri Sturluson, see
Þorgnýr the Lawspeaker), where the Swedish kings were elected. After his election was decided, the king was elevated on top of a flat stone and hailed by his subjects.
The law of
Uppland and
Södermanland state:
The three folklands, i.e. Tiundaland, Attundaland and Fjädrundaland, shall first elect king. Then the election will be sanctioned by the lawspeaker of Uppland and then by all his subordinate lawspeakers in the rest of the kingdom, one by one. This process was done during the so called
Eriksgata.
In the
Westrogothic law, bishop
Brynolf Algotsson (
1279â€"
1290) of
Skara reminded the
Geats that they had to accept this election by adding the following line on the top of the first page:
Sveær egho konung at taka ok sva vrækæ meaning
It is the Swedes who have the right of choosing and deposing the king.
The detail that the Swedes were not only entitled to elect their king, but that they also had the right to depose him was institutionalized a long before, to which testify Snorri Sturluson's (dead
1241) accounts of Swedish history (the speech of Þorgnýr the Lawspeaker, and the deaths of
Domalde and
Egil in the
Heimskringla). The location was on the border of a wetland, and according to Snorri, five kings had been drowned in this wetland, when the people had been displeased.
Stone of Mora
|
The building which contains the remaining fragments |
The stone was flanked by many stones with inscriptions comemmorating the elections of earlier kings. However, the stones were destroyed in
1515 during the civil war against the
Danes.
Gustav Vasa and
John III are said to have tried to reconstruct the Stones of Mora without success.
One of the fragments is known as
the stone Three Crowns since it is the earliest known example of the use of Sweden's national symbol. The fragment is what remains of the election of
Albert of Mecklenburg.
Elections of which documents have survived
#
Magnus Ladulås. There is a document which tells that he was elected at the Stones of Mora in
1275.#
Magnus Birgersson was elected at the stones in
1319 shortly after which he was executed.#
Kristian I, in
1457, he was the last one to be elected at the stones.
The building
The building where the fragments are contained was constructed by
Carl Wijnbladh in
1770.
Knivsta coat of arms
In 2002, in anticipation of
Knivsta, part of the municipality of
Uppsala since 1971, regaining its status of a municipality of its own in 2003, the
Swedish state herald designed and registered a coat of arms for Knivsta based on the stone of Mora motif: an
open crown over a
heraldic trimount. The design was based on a sketch by a schoolchild, one of many emerging from a local contest.
*
Stone of Scone*
Germanic king