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Ingegerd Knutsdatter

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Danish princess, daughter of King Canute IV
Ingegerd Knutsdatter
Bornc.1080–1085
SpouseFolke the Fat
IssueBengt Snivil
HouseEstridsen
FatherCanute IV of Denmark
MotherAdela of Flanders

Ingegerd Knutsdatter of Denmark also called Ingerta and Ingerd (born between 1080 and 1085 – year of death unknown), was a Danish princess, daughter of King Canute IV of Denmark and Queen Adela. She is regarded as the founding mother of the House of Bjälbo of subsequent Swedish and Norwegian kings (beginning with two great-great-grandsons).

At the deposition and murder of her father in 1086, her mother left Denmark and returned to Flanders with her son Charles, while Ingegerd and her sister Cæcilia Knudsdatter followed their paternal uncle Eric I of Denmark and Boedil Thurgotsdatter, who became their foster parents, to Sweden. Both sisters married Swedish aristocrats: Cæcilia married Jarl Eric, and Ingegerd married Folke the Fat and became the mother of Bengt Snivil. It is known that both of these marriages took place in Sweden.

Eric and Boedil returned to Denmark when Eric became monarch in 1095. Her sister Cecilia later returned to Denmark, but nothing suggests that Ingegerd did the same.

References

  1. Anteckningar om svenska qvinnor
  2. Dansk biografisk Lexikon / IV. Bind. Clemens - Eynden
  3. ^ Line 2007, p. 499-500.
  4. Dansk biografisk Lexikon / IV. Bind. Clemens - Eynden
  5. Dansk biografisk Lexikon / IV. Bind. Clemens - Eynden

Sources

  • Line, Philip (2007). Kingship and State Formation in Sweden: 1130 - 1290. Brill.
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