Talk:Canute IV of Denmark

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Untitled[edit]

Note to self and others: http://www2.evansville.edu/ecoleweb/glossary/canuteiv.html [[User:Neutrality|Neutrality (talk)]] 20:45, 26 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Canute?[edit]

Canute is probably the english spoken version of the germanic name "Knut". If this is true, shouldn't it be included in the article?

It is the English version of the Danish name Knud. His Danish name is included in the article. Valentinian (talk) / (contribs) 15:43, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Cut[edit]

I cut this sentence for semi-incomprehensibility and speculation. I place it here in case anyone disagrees or wants to rewrite it.

It is likely that the men would have gone to help the English, if not for the dictation of their king and more for the Danegeld in a greater community feeling than a top-bottom infrastructure of cooperation.--qp10qp 23:52, 22 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Left Wing??[edit]

The interpretation that Canute was a bad king and that his canonization was mostly polytical is not an interpretation of "liberal historian" and "left-wing poets", but by far the most common point of view of Danish historian, and one should respect their point of view rather than that of the Catholic Encyclopedia, which, as one might infer, is not the most objective judge in matters of saints. Please remember that wikipedia is supposed to stand for history, not for proselitism.--Complainer 07:09, 5 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The entire section beginning with "From later Lutheran tradition, Canute, in spite of his official canonisation ..." sounds very poor to me so I'm moving it to the talk page. I'd very much like to see a Danish source saying that Canute was any worse or better than so many other Viking kings. Absolutism is a later invention, but despotism might perhaps be an adequate description. Canute IV is remembered in Danish history as the last (would-be) Viking king, but that is his main reason for fame. In every portrayal of him I've heard, the story went like this: In 1085, Canute called upon a large number of men to assemble on predesignated places where they would disembark and sail to England. The men turned up but the king never arrived since he was preoccupied with problems on the southern border. The result was that many peasant families had poor harvests since the husband had not been able to attend the field for most of the year or to help with the harvest. When the king issued the same order the following year, the peasants rebelled, remembering last year's poor harvest and the months they had wasted waiting for the king. Canute attempted to flee but the peasants caught up with him in Odense and killed him in St. Alban's Church (Sankt Albani Kirke, it was located between what is now St. Canute's Cathedral and "I. Wilhelm Werners Plads"). The Catholic Church named him a saint because he was killed in a church. I believe this is the legend like most Danish children have heard it. If anybody is interested, two skeletons identified with Canute and Benedict are still preserved and displayed in the church. Unfortunately, nobody seem to know which of them is the former king. Valentinian T / C 21:16, 8 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
(paragraph moved from article space, quote.)
From later Lutheran tradition, Canute, in spite of his official canonisation, came to stand as a tyrant par excellence that exploited the peasantry and was killed by his freedom-loving people. This picture is only partly true, since the farmers (husbands) of early Medieval Denmark were “free men” of political influence and not an underclass. There is no doubt that his course was regarded an early form of absolutism along the Carolingian model, while the Danes were not yet accustomed to Continental feudalism. Considering the lengths to which the Danes resisted Mediterranean cultural influences in the time of Gudfred and the Danevirke, the style of Canute's government could have offended a great many in Denmark. (end quote)
Well guess what - all canonizations were political.
Also, shouldn't his name be Saint Canute and not Canute the Saint? Just like the Norwegian Olaf den Hellige who is commonly known in English as Olaf the Saint. --dllu 11:46, 17 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Devout or Devoted?[edit]

The first paragraph contains the phrase "and devoutedly supported the Roman Catholic Church," which I think should be either "devoutly" or "devotedly". Does anyone have a preference? Bedetech (talk) 03:57, 22 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Why IV?[edit]

The previous king Canute of Denmark was Canute I. What happened to Canute II and Canute III? -- JackofOz (talk) 01:55, 8 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Not quite so but close. You'll find the reason in his Danish name: "Knud". The traditional view is that two other monarchs went by the name of "Hardeknud" [the first syllable meaning something like "Hard"] so the line is thus: Hardeknud (= Knud I, 920s?-940s?) [predating Gorm the Old who is normally referred to as Denmark's "first" monarch, for the singualar reason, that he is the one that can be positively verified]. Extremely little is known about this Knud I. The other monarchs of this name an be positively verified from historical records: Knud II den Store (Canute the Great, king of Denmark 1018-1035), Hardeknud (= Knud III. King of Denmark 1035-1042 and of England 1040-1042), Knud IV den Hellige (Canute the Holy. King of Denmark 1080-1086), Knud V was one of three rival kings during the Danish civil war in the 1150s and Knud VI reigned 1182-1202. Some authors (as I understand it, often associated with the Politiken publishing house) have tried to modify the list of kings to differ between people named "Knud" vs. "Hardeknud", but counting the Saint-king as number IV is the traditional view. This is also the one used on the official website of the Palace.[1] (English) and [2] (Danish). The Danish version of the Palace's web page notes about the issue [see Knud II den Store in the Danish version of the list of monarchs]: (quote) "Knud II den Store er den første konge, der førte navnet Knud. I tidens løb - i opslagsbøger m.v. - kaldet Knud II, hvilket reelt er forkert. Denne fejl fortsætter for senere konger, der førte navnet Knud. For ikke at skabe forvirring bibeholdes de anerkendte betegnelser.) (unquote) = "Knud II the Great was the first monarch to hold the name Knud. In the course of time - in reference works etc - referred to as Knud II, which is technically seen wrong. This error continues for subsequent monarchs of the same name. In order to avoid confusion, this page uses the established terminology"). 80.163.68.22 (talk) 20:28, 16 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Knut's Son[edit]

Karl or Carl. His Wiki page,Charles of Flanders, doesn't even say the word on it. Yet, it says it both ways on this page. I vote for Karl but didn't want to change it and get screamed at on my page..

Mark 9:23 (talk) 13:47, 17 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

San Canuto[edit]

King Canute IV was canonized as a saint under the name San Canuto.6

That seems to be what the Danish reference says:

Han blev i 1100-1101 som den første i Danmark helgenkåret af paven som Sct. Knud (San Canuto).

but I don't understand why a Pope would use an Italian or Spanish name in the canonization in 1100. Shouldn't it be a Latin name (* Sanctus Canutus)? --Error (talk) 22:57, 13 January 2014 (UTC)[reply]

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