Magnus Lagabøte (
old Norse Magnús lagabœtir,
English Magnus the law-mender) or
Magnus Håkonsson (
old Norse Magnús Hákonarson) (
1238 -
9 May 1280), was king of
Norway from
1263 until
1280.
Early life
He was the youngest son of king
Håkon Håkonsson and his wife
Margaret Skuladotter. He was born in
Tunsberg and was baptised in May 1238. He spent most of his upbringing in
Bergen. In
1257 his older brother
Håkon Håkonsson the Young died, leaving Magnus the heir-apparent to the kingdom. His father gave him the title of king the same year. On
11 September 1261, he married the Danish princess Ingeborg, the daughter of the late Danish king
Erik Plogpenning, after she was practically abducted by king Håkon's men from the monastery she was living in. The struggle to claim Ingeborg's inheritance from her murdered father later involved Norway in intermittent conflicts with
Denmark for decades to come. Magnus and Ingeborg were crowned directly after their marriage, and Magnus was given
Ryfylke for his personal upkeep. On
16 December 1263 king Håkon died while fighting the
Scottish king over the
Hebrides, and Magnus became the ruler of Norway.
Reign
Foreign policy
Magnus' rule brought about a change from the somewhat aggressive foreign policy of his father. In
1266 he gave up the Hebrides and the
Isle of Man to Scotland, in return for a large sum of silver and a yearly payment, under the
Treaty of Perth, by which the Scots at the same time recognised Norwegian rule in the
Orkney Islands. In
1269 the
Treaty of Winchester cemented good relations with the English king
Henry III. Magnus also seems to have had good relations with the Swedish king
Valdemar Birgersson, and in the 1260s, the border with
Sweden was officially defined for the first time. When Valdemar was deposed by his two brothers and fled to Norway in
1275, this stirred Magnus into gathering a
leidang-fleet for the first and only time in his reign. With a large fleet, he met with the new Swedish king
Magnus Ladulås to try to bring about a settlement between the two brothers, but without success, Magnus of Sweden wouldn't give in to pressure and the Magnus of Norway retreated without engaging in hostile actions.
Internal policies
In internal politics, Magnus carried out a great effort to modernise the law-code, which gave him his epithet
law-mender. In
1274 he promulgated the new national law, a unified code of laws to apply for the whole country, including the
Faroe islands and
Shetland. This replaced the different regional laws which had existed before. It was supplemented by a new municipal law (a law for the cities) in
1276, and a slightly modified version was also drawn up for
Iceland. A unified code of laws for a whole country was at this time something quite new, which had until then only been introduced in
Sicily and
Castile. His code introduced the concept that crime is an offense against the state rather than against the individual and thus narrowed the possibilities of personal vengeance. It increased the formal power of the king, making the throne the source of justice. The municipal law gave the cities increased freedom from rural control. A specific section fixed the law of succession to the throne, in accordance with the arrangements laid down by king Håkon Håkonsson in
1260. The royal succession was an important and prickly matter, the last of the civil wars, fought for decades over disputed successions to the throne, having finally ended only in
1240. In
1273 Magnus gave his eldest son, five-year-old
Eirik, the name of king, and his younger brother
Håkon the title of
duke, thus making unequivocally clear what the royal succession would be.
Although Magnus was by all accounts a personally very pious king, his work with the law-codes brought him into conflict with the archbishop, who resisted temporal authority over the church, and sought to preserve the churches influence over the kingdom. In
1277, the
Settlement of Tønsberg settled the conflict, with both sides compromising. The church preserved considerable independence in judicial matters, but gave up its old claim that the Norwegian kingdom was a
fief under the ultimate authority of the Catholic church.
In cultural terms Magnus continued his father's policy of introducing European courtly culture to Norway. In
1277 he replaced the old Norse titles
lendmann and
skutilsvein with the European titles
baron and
riddar (
knight), at the same time giving them certain extra privileges and the right to be addressed as
lord (
herra). Magnus is probably also the first Norwegian king to have named himself using an
ordinal number - he called himself
Magnus IV. Immediately after his father's death, he commissioned the Icelander
Sturla Þórðarson to write his father's
saga, or biography. In
1278, he commissioned the same man to write his own saga. The
saga of Magnus the lawmender thus became the last of the medieval Norwegian
kings' sagas, unfortunately only a short fragment of it has been preserved.
Death and aftermath
In the spring of 1280, Magnus fell ill in Bergen, and died
9 May. He had already planned to have his son Eirik crowned at midsummer as co-ruler, instead Eirik now took over as sole king at the age of 12. Real power fell to a circle of advisors, prominent among them Magnus' queen Ingeborg. Magnus was remembered as a good ruler, who ruled by law rather than by the sword. Some modern historians have considered him a weak king, for giving up the Hebrides and giving in to demands of the church, but others consider these wise policies, sparing the kingdom unnecessary and unfruitful wars abroad, while preserving stability at home. Magnus was buried in the church of the
Franciscan monastery in Bergen, which is since the 16th century the cathedral of Bergen.
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