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Magnus Minniskiöld (also spelled Minnisköld or Minnesköld —) was a medieval Swedish Lawspeaker from the House of Bjelbo. He is commonly believed to have been killed in battle, most likely in the Battle of Lena in 1208, or at the Battle of Gestilren in 1210. ==Family== His earliest known ancestor is thought to be Folke the Fat, a powerful Swedish leader of the early 12th century, who married Ingegerd Knudsdatter daughter of Canute IV of Denmark, becoming one of the first magnates of the Kingdom of Denmark.〔S. Otto Brenner: ''Nachkommen Gorms des Alten König von Dänemark 936 I. – XVI. Generation''; Dansk Historisk Haanbogsvorlag DK- 2800 Lyngby 2. Ausgabe (Reprint 1978) ISBN 87 85207 20 9, Nr. 137 der Nachkommen von König Gorm des Alten〕 He lived at the family estate Bjälbo, in the current Mjölby municipality, Östergötland, Sweden. He was the son of Bengt Snivil, and younger brother of the Riksjarl Birger Brosa. He married the noblewoman Ingrid Ylva, and fathered several sons who would influence early Swedish history, most notably Birger Jarl. He is mentioned in two contemporary diplomas (DS 70, 116), as the brother of Birger Brosa, as well as by King Magnus Birgersson, who in a letter in 1280 called him "grandfader". Magnus Minnesköld was probably married twice; this has been inferred from the great differences in the ages of his children. Nothing is known about his supposed first wife. Magnus married his second wife around 1195 - Ingrid Ylva, who, according to the Swedish reformer and historian Olaus Petri, was a daughter of Sune Sik. Sune Sik, if he existed, was a younger son of King Sverker I of Sweden. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Magnus Minniskiöld」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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