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Family Subtree Diagram : Descendants of Sigurd Magnusson (~1100)

PLEASE NOTE: If you do not see a GRAPHIC IMAGE of a family tree here but are seeing this text instead then it is most probably because the web server is not correctly configured to serve svg pages correctly. see http://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/SVG:Server_Configuration for information on how to correctly configure a web server for svg files. ? Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Parent (a child) (a child) (seven children) (a child) (three children) (five children) (a child) (two children) (four children) (four children) (six children) (three children) (two children) (eight children) (three children) (six children) (a child) (two children) (seven children) ~1100 - 1134 Sigurd Slembedjakn Magnusson 34 34 ~1100 - 1137 Queen of Norway and Denmark Malmfrida 37 37 1238 Bernhard Von Mecklenburg ~1200 Lord of Gdansk Sambor II ~1224 - 1282 Margaret Sambiria 58 58 Margaret Sambiria
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Margaret Sambiria (1230?-1282) was the Queen consort of Christopher I of Denmark, and acted as regent for Eric V of Denmark. In Danish she is also known as Margrethe Sprænghest.

She was born daughter of duke Sambor II of the ruling family of Slavic (Vendic) Cassubians and his wife Mechtild of Mecklenburg. They held a lordship (then treated as duchy or principality) of so-called Pomerelia, in regions of Gdansk in what later was known as west Prussia. Her birth is approximately in 1230.

She was 1248 married to prince Christopher, the youngest son of Valdemar II of Denmark and Berengaria of Portugal. Her husband ascended the throne of Denmark in 1252 as Christopher I of Denmark by the then succession custom which followed so called agnatic seniority and Margaret was crowned together.

Her husband died 29 May 1259 (rumoredly poisoned). Their son and heir Eric V of Denmark who succeeded was a minor and Margaret was made regent, in which position she continued until 1264. Eric's succession overrode rights of sons of earlier monarchs and was against the traditions of agnatic seniority. However, only such living were sons of king Abel, who had the fame of fratricide, murderer, and it was easier to dispossess them. King Christopher had all his reign made work to ensure his own line's succession. Although the accession of Eric led to serious rivalry for generations, Christopher's line was usually victorious and kept the kingship.

She quarreled with lord Jakob Erlendsen and her husband's nephew Eric Abelson, as well as with counts of Holstein. After a loss in Lohede 1261 she together with her son the young king became imprisoned by Holsteins, but soon succeeded to liberty with help from Duke Albert of Brunswick. She took initiative. Margaret has a reputation of a very competent regent. Her nicknames "Spränghäst" and "Svarta Grete" are based on her strong will and energy. She died in December 1282 andis buried in a Cistercian Church in Doberan in northern Germany.

Margaret and Christopher had three children:

Matilda (died 1311), married to Albert III, margrave of Brandenburg
Margaret (died 1306), married count John II of Holstein-Kiel
Eric, the future king of Denmark (1249-1286).
A never-ending rivalry between Eric and his supporters on one side, and the kin of former King Abel on the other, made Queen Margrethe write to the Pope in Rome around 1262 or 1263, asking the Pope to allow for women to inherit the Danish throne, thus making it possible for one of Eric's sisters to become reigning Queen of Denmark in the event of the young King's death (he had no children as of yet). The Pope seemingly agreed.

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Sambiria"
1204 - 1277 Nicholas Von Mecklenburg 73 73 1232 Margarethe Von Mecklenburg ~1214 - 1277 Jutta Von Anhalt 63 63 ~1220 - 1259 King of Denmark Christopher Valdemarsson 39 39 Christopher I of Denmark
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Christopher I (1219 – May 29, 1259) was King of Denmark between 1252 and 1259. He was the son of Valdemar II of Denmark by his wife, Princess Berengária of Portugal, and brother to Abel and Eric IV. He was elected King upon the death of his older brother Abel in the summer of 1252.

The king spent most of his rule on trying to fight his many opponents. By accepting Abel's sons as rulers of South Jutland he prevented their demands on the throne but in return the border district was now more or less independent. He also had to be reconciled with the kings of Norway and Sweden which had been provoked by Abel's interventions and finally he had to yield to some of the political demands of the Danish magnates. The Danehof seems to have become an institution during his rule.

Christopher found himself excommunicated from the Catholic Church, while trying to have his brother Eric IV of Denmark canonized. Eric was supposedly murdered by brother King Abel in 1250. His men had arrested and humiliated the proud and self-righteous Archbishop Jakob Erlandsen after Erlandsen had refused to recognize Christopher's son, Eric, as his (Christopher's) rightful successor. But the excommunication had little or no effect, and Christopher was buried in Christian soil by the Bishop of Ribe upon his death on May 29, 1259.

Some claimed that the King died very "unexpectedly" and shortly after taking the Holy Communion, but proof that he was in fact poisoned has never been offered. Christopher's allies, however, apparently took to calling him Krist-Offer ("Christ's sacrifice").

Christopher (Kristoffer) married Margaret Sambiria of Kassuben and had three children:

Matilda (died 1311), married to Albert III, Margrave of Brandenburg
Margaret (died 1306), married Count John II of Holstein-Kiel
King Eric V of Denmark.
~1205 Mechtild von Mecklenburg ~1245 - 1311 Princess of Denmark Matilda Christophersdatter 66 66 ~1247 - 1306 Princess of Denmark Margaret Christophersdatter 59 59 1249 - 1286 King of Denmark Erik V Christophersson 37 37 Eric V of Denmark
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Eric V "Klipping" (1249-1286) was King of Denmark (1259-1286) and son of Christopher I. Until 1264 he ruled under the auspices of his mother, the competent Queen Dowager Margaret Sambiria. In this period he was for some time 1261-1262 a prisoner in Holstein after a military defeat and afterwards he was for some years brought up in Brandenburg. He tried to enforce his power over church and nobility. His conflict with former was brought to a sitisfying result but 1282 he was forced by the latter to accept an agreement (a "handfastening" - a kind of a Danish Magna Carta) which limited his authority. In the 1270s, Erik Glipping attacked Småland.

A never-ending rivalry between Eric and his supporters on one side, and the kin of former King Abel on the other, made Queen Margrethe write to the Pope in Rome aroung 1262 or 1263, asking the Pope to allow for women to inherit the Danish throne, thus making it possible for one of Eric's sisters to become reigning Queen of Denmark in the event of the young King's death (he had no children as of yet). The Pope seemingly agreed, but it never became an issue; Eric was succeded by his son, who was named Eric after his uncle, Eric IV "Ploughpenny".

Eric Klipping was assasinated November 22, 1286, and a number of the nation's most powerful noblemen, led by Marsk Stig Andersen Hvide were outlawed by the Danish court. Whether or not they actually had anything to do with the murder, which took place in a small village near Viborg called Finderup, is still being questioned; the King's death meant that they lost almost all the power and influence that the 1282 charter had given them, since a new King would not be bound by the same agreement. The murder of Eric Klipping, who was stabbed to death in his sleep, is a middle-age murder mystery which has never really been solved. Some historians have tried to point out the Duke of South Jutland but no prove has been found.
1141 - 1210 King of Sweden Sverker II Sverkersson 69 69 ~1170 Christina Sverkersdatter 1268 - 1313 Richenza Von Mecklenburg 45 45 1234 - 1291 Heinrich Von Mecklenburg 57 57 1234 - 1288 Richiza Birgersdotter 54 54 1264 Nicholas Von Mecklenburg 1266 Heinrich Von Mecklenburg 1240 - 1287 Hedwig Von Mecklenburg 47 47 1242 Jutta Von Mecklenburg 1236 - 1283 Johann Von Mecklenburg 47 47 1244 Henningus Von Mecklenburg ~1172 - 1226 Heinrich Von Mecklenburg 54 54 1182 - 1248 Kristina Knutsdotter 66 66 ~1160 Mathilde Von Sachsen 1146 - 1227 Heinrich Von Mecklenburg 81 81 ~1110 - 1178 Pribislaw Von Obotrites 68 68 ~1120 - 1172 Christina Sigurdsdotter 52 52 ~1174 - 1225 Nicholas Von Mecklenburg 51 51 ~1176 Elizabeth Von Mecklenburg 1274 - 1337 Johann Von Mecklenburg 63 63 1211 - 1264 Johann Von Mecklenburg 53 53 1206 Mechtilde Von Mecklenburg 1208 Margarethe Von Mecklenburg 1202 Heinrich Von Mecklenburg 1211 - 1267 Luitgard Von Henneberg 56 56 1230 - 1302 Heinrich Von Mecklenburg 72 72 1231 - 1280 Elizabeth Von Mecklenburg 49 49 1233 Albrecht Von Mecklenburg 1234 - 1274 Nicholas Von Mecklenburg 40 40 1236 Johann Von Mecklenburg 1238 Poppo Von Mecklenburg 1240 Hermann Von Mecklenburg 1242 Margarete Von Mecklenburg ~1238 - 1317 Anastasia Von Stettin 79 79 1261 Luitgard Von Mecklenburg 1267 - 1329 Heinrich Von Mecklenburg 62 62 1269 Johann Von Mecklenburg 1256 - 1315 Gräf Von Holstein Adolf Von Holstein 59 59 1232 - 1290 Gräf Von Holstein Gerhard Von Holstein 58 58 1251 - 1289 Luitgard Von Holstein 38 38 1252 Elizabeth Von Holstein 1254 - 1312 Gerhard Von Holstein 58 58 1258 Hedwig Von Holstein 1260 - 1304 Heinrich Von Holstein 44 44 1258 - 1316 Nicholas Von Mecklenburg 58 58 1238 - 1302 Sofie Von Lindau Ruppin 64 64 1212 - 1285 Gunter Von Lindau Ruppin 73 73 1218 Eufemie Von Rugen 1177 - 1249 Wizlaw Von Rugen 72 72 1183 Margareta Sverkersdotter 1148 Ulfhild Von Mecklenburg 1206 Jaroslaw Von Rugen 1208 Peter Von Rugen 1210 Jaromar Von Rugen 1212 Wizlaw Von Rugen 1214 Burizlaw Von Rugen 1216 Nicholas Von Rugen 1250 Ulrich Von Lindau Ruppin 1260 Johann Von Mecklenburg 1262 Gunther Von Mecklenburg 1264 Werle Von Mecklenburg 1266 Heinrich Von Mecklenburg 1268 Bernhard Von Mecklenburg 1264 - 1304 Agnes Von Brandenburg 40 40 1236 - 1281 Johann Von Brandenburg 45 45 1266 Johann Von Brandenburg 1268 Konrad Von Brandenburg 1262 - 1310 Mechtild Von Brandenburg 48 48 ~1262 - 1323 Count Von Schwerin Nicholas Von Schwerin 61 61 1242 - 1291 Elizabeth Von Holstein 49 49 ~1172 - 1226 Heinrich Von Mecklenburg 54 54
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