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Revision as of 20:05, 16 July 2009 editSergeWoodzing (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers24,255 editsm rm POV, restored info and category now sourced, fixed Swenglish← Previous edit Revision as of 07:35, 17 July 2009 edit undoAndejons (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users1,904 edits referencing ahttp://en.wikin (old) paper which describes the mixup, remove the part of "objecting", as that will be hard to source: most historians doesn't take notice of Sune Sik as a prince anymoreNext edit →
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'''Sune Sik Sverkersson''', (born c. 1154), in older historical accounts, was a Swedish prince. According to ], he would have been a younger son of King ] and father of ]. '''Sune Sik Sverkersson''', (born c. 1154), in older historical accounts, was a Swedish prince. According to ], he would have been a younger son of King ] and father of ].


In surviving medieval documents, the only ''Sune Sik'' that can be found{{Citation needed|date=July 2009}} lived in the late 13th century, which has caused some modern historians to view Olaus Petris account of him as unreliable. Sune Sik, as a son of King Sverker, is still counted by some reliable Swedish historians as a possible person of history,<ref>Lars O. Lagerqvist and Nils Åberg in ''Kings and Rulers of Sweden'' ISBN 91-87064-35-9 p. 15</ref> while others strongly object{{Citation needed|date=July 2009}}. In surviving medieval documents, the only ''Sune Sik'' that can be found{{Citation needed|date=July 2009}} lived in the late 13th century, which has caused some modern historians to view Olaus Petris account of him as unreliable. This Sune Sik made a donation to ] in 1297 and might have ordered a restauration of a chapel in which he was later interred, and cisternician tradition later seems to have turned him into a prince.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://fornvannen.se/pdf/1920talet/1921_022.pdf|author=Natanael Beckman|title=Kungagravar och medeltidshistoria.|journal=Fornvännen|year=1921|issue=16|pages=46|accessdate=2009-07-17|quote=Jag har nämnt ovan, att cisterciensernas tradition tilldelat Sverker en son, Sune Sik, som icke rimligtvis kan vara historisk i denna egenskap. Jag har också antytt, att han antagligen fått sin prinsvärdighet genom missförstånd och vore att identifiera med en donator till klostret, som möter i ett diplom av 1297}}</ref>
Sune Sik, as a son of King Sverker, is still counted by some reliable Swedish historians as a possible person of history.<ref>Lars O. Lagerqvist and Nils Åberg in ''Kings and Rulers of Sweden'' ISBN 91-87064-35-9 p. 15</ref>


== References == == References ==

Revision as of 07:35, 17 July 2009

Sune Sik Sverkersson, (born c. 1154), in older historical accounts, was a Swedish prince. According to Olaus Petri, he would have been a younger son of King Sverker I of Sweden and father of Ingrid Ylva.

In surviving medieval documents, the only Sune Sik that can be found lived in the late 13th century, which has caused some modern historians to view Olaus Petris account of him as unreliable. This Sune Sik made a donation to Vreta Abbey in 1297 and might have ordered a restauration of a chapel in which he was later interred, and cisternician tradition later seems to have turned him into a prince. Sune Sik, as a son of King Sverker, is still counted by some reliable Swedish historians as a possible person of history.

References

  1. Natanael Beckman (1921). "Kungagravar och medeltidshistoria" (PDF). Fornvännen (16): 46. Retrieved 2009-07-17. Jag har nämnt ovan, att cisterciensernas tradition tilldelat Sverker en son, Sune Sik, som icke rimligtvis kan vara historisk i denna egenskap. Jag har också antytt, att han antagligen fått sin prinsvärdighet genom missförstånd och vore att identifiera med en donator till klostret, som möter i ett diplom av 1297
  2. Lars O. Lagerqvist and Nils Åberg in Kings and Rulers of Sweden ISBN 91-87064-35-9 p. 15
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