Sverker II of Sweden
Sverker The Younger Karlsson or
Sverker den yngre Karlsson in
Swedish (born c. before
1167, probably already before 1160 – died
July 17 1210 in the
battle of Gestilren), was king of Sweden from
1196 to
1208.
He was a son of king
Karl Sverkersson of Sweden and queen
Christina Stigsdatter Hvide, a Danish noblewoman.
When his father Charles had been murdered in Visingsö 1167, apparently by (minions of) the next king,
Knut Eriksson, he was taken to Denmark and grew up there in the clan of his mother's. The Danish king used him as claimant to Sweden, thus helping to destabilize the neighboring country yet more.
However, when king Canute I of Sweden died, 1195, (Knut's sons were only children at the time) he was chosen, surprisingly without quarrel, as the next king of Sweden, and he returned to his native country, however being regarded quite Danished... his uncontested election was largely thanks to Jarl
Birger Brosa, whose daughter Ingegerd he married soon after his first wife had died.
King Sverker had a church-friendly policy. He confirmed and enlarged privileges for the Swedish church and the archbishop Valerius of Uppsala. This privilege document of 1200 is the oldest known ecclesiastical privilege in Sweden.
1202 Earl Birger died and the late jarl's grandson, Sverker's one-year old son John received the title of Jarl from his father. This was intended to strentghen him as heir of the crown.
Around
1203, Canute's four sons, who had lived in Swedish royal court, began to claim the throne and Sverker exiled them to Norway. His kinship became unsecured from this forward. The boys returned with troops in
1205, supported by the Norwegian party of
Birkebeiner, but Sverker succeeded in winning them in the
battle of Älgarås, where three of them fell. The only survivor returned with Norwegian support in 1208 and in the
battle of Lena Sverker was defeated. Sverker's troops were commanded by Ebbe Suneson, the father of his late first wife and brother of archbishop Andrew of Lund. King
Eric X of Sweden drove Sverker to exile to Denmark.
Pope Innocentius III's attempt to have the crown returned to Sverker did not succeed.
Sverker made a military expedition, with Danish support, to Sweden, but was conquered and killed in the
battle of Gestilren 1210. The ancient sources state that "he was killed by the
Folkung clan".
With his first wife, Danish noblewoman Benedicta Ebbesdatter (Hvide, b c 1170, d 1200), whom he married before 1190 when yet living in Denmark, Sverker had at least one well-attested daughter, Helena, as well as possibly further children, such as Prince Charles (who died young, if ever lived), and possibly even two other daughters (if they existed, their names are given as Margaret and Christina). Later pretensions of the
House of Mecklenburg claim that Sverker's daughter (if he had such) Christina was their ancestress, wife of Henry Borwin II of Mecklenburg.
The second marriage in 1200 with
Ingegerd of Bjelbo, daughter of the
Folkunge Jarl
Birger Brosa produced a son and heir, Jon (1201-1222), who was chosen king of Sweden 1216 as
John I of Sweden.
His certain daughter
Helena Sverkersdotter married earl Sune Folkeson of the family of Bjelbo, justiciar of Westrogothia. Their daughters Catherine and Benedikte became pawns in marriages to gain Swedish succession after 1222, when the
Sverker dynasty went extinct in male line. Catherine was married to the rival dynasty's heir
Eric XI of Sweden (but they remained apparently childless), and Benedikte had several daughters, who married high Swedish noblemen.