Haakon the Crazy
Håkon the Crazy (
Hákon galinn) was a Norwegian
earl, and
birkebeiner chieftain during the
civil war era in Norway. He was born no later than the
1170s and died in
1214. He was the son of
Folkvid the Lawspeaker and king
Sigurd Munn's bastard daughter Cecilia. His epithet "the Crazy" probably refers to ferociousness in battle.
Cecilia had been married off to Folkvid, the
lawspeaker in
Värmland in
Sweden, by her father's enemies after he had been defeated and killed in
1155. Soon after
Sverre arrived in Norway and took over leadership of the rebel faction the
birkebeiner in
1177, claiming to be a son of king Sigurd Munn, and thus Cecilia's brother, Cecilia left her husband and returned to Norway, probably taking young Håkon with her. After Sverre succeded in winning the throne of Norway, she had her marriage to Folkvid annulled, claiming she had been forced to marry him against her will.
Håkon is first mentioned in
1193, as one of the prominent men among the
birkebeiner fighting for king Sverre against the rising of the
Islebeards (øyskjegger). In January
1204, when king Sverre's son, king
Håkon Sverresson, died, Håkon the Crazy was made leader of the army and the kingdom during the minority of the child king
Guttorm, and given the title
jarl (
earl). When Guttorm suddenly died in August the same year, Håkon was the favored candidate among the birkebeiner military leaders, the
lendmenn, to become the next king. However, at the
Thing convened in
Nidaros to elect the new king, his candidacy was opposed by the archbishop and the farmers of
Trøndelag. According to the
bagler sagas, Håkon's Swedish origins were held against him. In the end, Håkon's half-brother,
Inge Bårdsson became king. Håkon remained earl and leader of the military, and was given half the royal revenues.
In
1205, Håkon married the Swedish noble-woman Kristina Nikolasdotter, whose maternal grand-father was
Eric the Saint, and they had the son
Knut (c.
1208 -
1261).
From 1204 until
1208, Inge and Håkon fought the
bagler rising, under the pretenders
Erling Stonewall and
Philippus Simonsson, until the warfare was ended by the settlement of
Kvitsøy. By this agreement, Inge and Håkon recognized bagler rule over the eastern parts of Norway with Philippus ruling as earl, under the nominal overlordship of king Inge, while the birkebeiner remained in control of the rest of the country. Earl Håkon ruled the western part of Norway, with his powerbase in
Bergen.
The relationship between Håkon and his brother Inge seems to have been at times tense. When it became clear that Philippus was continuing to call himself king, in breech of the Kvitsøy-agreement, Håkon made attempts to have himself declared king as well, but Inge refused to accept this. Instead, an agreement was drawn up by which the brother that survived the other would inherit the other's lands, while a legitimate son of either would inherit them both. Håkon's legitimate son, Knut, thereby seemed to be in a strong position to become the next king, as Inge only had an illegitimate son. In 1214, earl Håkon was suspected of having had a hand in a rising by the farmers of Trøndelag against king Inge. Open conflict between the two brothers never broke out, however, as Håkon died of natural causes in Bergen just after christmas of 1214. Inge took over his part of the kingdom. Håkon's wife Kristina, took their son Knut with her and returned to Sweden. She later married the
lawspeaker Eskil Magnusson.
Håkon was buried in the old cathedral of
Bergen, which was demolished in
1531. A memorial today marks its site, in
Bergenhus fortress.
Our main source to Håkon's life is the
bagler sagas. He is also mentioned in
Sverris saga and
Håkon Håkonsson's saga.
*Karl Jónsson; translator J. Stephton.
The Saga of King Sverri of Norway. Llanerch Press. ISBN 1897853491
*Sturla Þórðarson; translation to English by G.W. Dasent (1894, repr. 1964).
The Saga of Hakon and a Fragment of the Saga of Magnus with Appendices. London (Rerum Britannicarum Medii Ævi Scriptores, vol.88.4).
*Finn Hødnebø & Hallvard Magerøy (eds.); translator Gunnar Pedersen; (1979).
Soga om baglarar og birkebeinar (Noregs kongesoger 3). Det Norske Samlaget, Oslo. ISBN 8252108911 (in Norwegian)