IV. The Early Modern Period, 1500–1800 > B. Early Modern Europe, 1479–1815 > 5. National Patterns, 1648–1815 > h. Scandinavia > 1. Sweden and Finland > 1686
  PREVIOUS NEXT  
CONTENTS · SUBJECT INDEX · BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
  The Encyclopedia of World History.  2001.
 
 
1686
 
Charles XI promulgated a church ordinance that placed the Lutheran church under the king's jurisdiction and established Lutheran doctrine.  1
 
1691–93, 1695–97
 
A series of crop failures resulted in famine and hardship.  2
 
1697
 
A technical school founded.  3
 
1700–1721
 
GREAT NORTHERN WAR (See 1700–1721), caused by the common opposition of Russia, Poland, and Denmark to the Swedish supremacy in the Baltic region. Heavy population losses (Finland 16 percent and Sweden 10 percent).  4
 
1708–9, 1717–20
 
Crop failures, the first worsened by the spread of the plague.  5
 
1719–22
 
THE AGE OF FREEDOM ushered in by the constitution established under Queen Ulrika Eleanora.  6
18th-century Economics and Society: Writings on agricultural reforms appeared in the 1720s, sparked by mercantilism. These writings encouraged improved methods and the end to farming in strips, but progress was slow. Industry also received increasing attention. Swedes concentrated on iron and shipbuilding. Sweden signed a series of trade agreements with other countries and introduced tariffs and controls on imports.  7
 
1718–20
 
ULRIKA ELEANORA, who, after Charles XII was shot (Dec. 11, 1715) on a military expedition to Norway, was accepted on condition that the riksdag should be allowed to draw up a constitution. The new constitution provided for joint rule of the monarch and the council when the riksdag was not in session. While the riksdag was sitting, the principal decisions were to be made by a secret committee comprising members of the three higher estates (nobility, clergy, and burghers). The peasants were, however, to be heard in matters of taxation. The riksdag was chosen by separate elections for each estate in which certain “qualified” women (mainly propertied widows) among the burghers and farmers could vote. The constitution also recognized the bureaucratic elements within the state and determined that Sweden would be ruled by four separate estates rather than a body representing the Swedish people as a whole.  8
 
1720–51
 
FREDERICK I (of Hesse-Cassel), Ulrika Eleanora's husband, to whom she turned over the government. Count Arvid Horn, as minister, sought better relations with Great Britain and Russia and weakened connections with France. Ruling class divided between “Caps” and “Hats,” the former backing Horn and favoring cautious foreign policy.  9
 
1720–21
 
Conclusion of the Northern War by the Treaties of Stockholm and Nystadt (See 1721, Aug. 30) (See 1721, Aug. 30).  10
 
1723
 
The farmers' estate received a constitutional provision that forbade officers or members of another estate from holding a seat in the farmers' estate.  11
 
1724
 
Swedish administration prohibiting imports of non-Swedish goods carried on foreign ships (Produktplakatet).  12
 
1731
 
Swedish East India Company founded (Ostindiska Kompaniet). It engaged in extensive trade and smuggling.  13
 
 
 
The Encyclopedia of World History, Sixth edition. Peter N. Stearns, general editor. Copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Maps by Mary Reilly, copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

CONTENTS · SUBJECT INDEX · BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
  PREVIOUS NEXT