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・ Magnus II of Norway
・ Magnus II of Sweden
・ Magnus II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg
・ Magnus II, Duke of Mecklenburg
・ Magnus II, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg
・ Magnus II, Earl of Orkney
・ Magnus III
・ Magnus III of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
・ Magnus III of Orkney
・ Magnus III of Sweden
・ Magnus Ilmjärv
・ Magnus Ingesson
・ Magnus Isacsson
・ Magnus Isaksson
・ Magnus IV
Magnus IV of Norway
・ Magnus IV of Sweden
・ Magnus J. Carnahan House
・ Magnus Jacob Crusenstolpe
・ Magnus Jansson
・ Magnus Jensen
・ Magnus Jensen (Queensland politician)
・ Magnus Jernemyr
・ Magnus Johansen
・ Magnus Johansson
・ Magnus Johansson (footballer)
・ Magnus Johansson (footballer, born 1971)
・ Magnus Johansson (ice hockey)
・ Magnus Johnson
・ Magnus Joneby


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Magnus IV of Norway : ウィキペディア英語版
Magnus IV of Norway

Magnus IV Sigurdsson (ca. 1115 – 12 November 1139), also known as Magnus the Blind, was King of Norway from 1130 to 1135 and again from 1137 to 1139. His period as king marked the beginning of the civil war era in Norway, which lasted until 1240.
〔(''Magnus 4 Sigurdsson Blinde'' (Helge Salvesen. Store norske leksikon) )〕
==Biography==
Magnus was the son of King Sigurd I of Norway and Borghild Olavsdotter. When King Sigurd died in 1130, Magnus became king of Norway together with his uncle Harald Gille. After four years of uneasy peace, Magnus began to openly prepare for war on Harald. On August 9, 1134, he defeated Harald in the decisive Battle at Färlev near Färlev in Stångenäs herred in Båhuslen. Harald fled to Denmark.
Against the advice of his councilors, Magnus disbanded his army and traveled to Bergen to spend the winter there. Harald then returned to Norway with a new army and the support of the Danish King Erik Emune. Meeting little opposition, he reached Bergen before Christmas. Magnus had few men, and the city fell easily to Harald's army on January 7, 1135. Magnus was captured and dethroned. He was blinded, castrated and had one leg cut off. After this he was known as Magnus the Blind (''Magnus Sigurdsson den blinde'').
Magnus was put in Nidarholm Abbey on the island of Munkholmen in the Trondheimfjord where he spent some time as a monk. Harald Gille was killed in 1136 by Sigurd Slembe, another royal pretender who had himself proclaimed king in 1135. To back his claim, Sigurd Slembe brought Magnus back from the abbey and made him co-king. They decided to split up their forces, and Magnus headed for eastern Norway, where he had most popular support. There, he was defeated at the Battle of Minne by the forces of King Inge I. He then fled to Götaland and subsequently to Denmark, where he tried to get support for his cause. An attempted invasion of Norway by King Erik Emune of Denmark failed miserably.〔(''Sigurd Slembe'' (Store norske leksikon) )〕
Magnus then rejoined Sigurd Slembe's men, but they continued to have little support in Norway. After some time spent more like bandits than kings, they met the forces of King Inge I and King Sigurd II in a final battle on November 12, 1139. Magnus fell during the naval Battle of Holmengrå south of Hvaler in the Oslofjord. The loyal guard Reidar Grjotgardsson lifted his king at the final battle, but a spear impales them both. Magnus was buried in the Church of St. Hallvard in Oslo. There is a monument erected in memory of King Magnus the Blind at the Storedal farm in Skjeberg in Østfold county.〔(''Magnus 4 Sigurdsson Blinde – utdypning'' ( Nils Petter Thuesen. Store norske leksikon) )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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