King Magnus, immediately after the death of …

Years: 1280 - 1280

King Magnus, immediately after the death of father, had commissioned the Icelander Sturla Pórdarson to write his father's saga, or biography.

He had in 1278 commissioned the same man to write his own saga.

The Saga of Magnus the lawmender (Magnúss saga lagabœtis) thus becomes the last of the medieval Norwegian kings' sagas; unfortunately only a short fragment of it has been preserved.

Magnus falls ill in Bergen in the spring of 1280 and dies on May 9.

He had already planned to have his son Eirik crowned at midsummer as co-ruler, instead Eirik now takes over as sole king at the age of twelve.

Real power falls to a circle of advisors, prominent among them Magnus' queen Ingeborg.

Magnus is remembered as a good ruler, who ruled by law rather than by the sword.

Some modern historians have considered him a weak king, for giving up the Hebrides and giving in to demands of the church, but others consider these wise policies, sparing the kingdom unnecessary and unfruitful wars abroad, while preserving stability at home.

Magnus is buried in the church of the Franciscan monastery in Bergen, which has since the sixteenth century been the Bergen Cathedral (Bergen Domkirke).

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