Olaf's reign has been plagued by several…
August 1095 CE
Olaf's reign has been plagued by several consecutive years of crop failure and famine.
According to Arild Hvitfeldt's "Danmarks Riges Krønike", in those years springtime was so dry that the fields looked as if they had been burned, and in the fall the skies opened up and rain fell so often that people floated about on pieces of wood to cut the heads off the grain that rose above the water.
The hunger of the people grew so great that they dug the earth looking for roots.
The wealthy grew thin, and the poor died of starvation.
Sickness and starvation soon visited great and small.
In the first early attempts of getting Canute canonized, Oluf was given the nickname "Hunger" in order to magnify the splendor of Canute.
At the time it was claimed that the famine was sent by God as divine punishment for the sacrilege killing of Canute.
Chronicler Saxo Grammaticus described the hunger as a strictly Danish phenomenon, though it has later been described as a general problem of Europe in those years.
Olaf probably cut the Danish ties to the Papal Gregorian reform movement, supporting Antipope Wibert of Ravenna instead.
During Olaf's reign, some of Canute's laws were repealed, and the power of the clergy and royalty receded in favor of the magnates.
When Skjalm Hvide sought the support of Olaf in avenging the death of his brother by campaigning against the Wends, Olaf could not muster the power to help him.The magnates became more involved in the works of the Church, and Jutlandish magnat Asser Svendsen was appointed Archbishop of Lund by Olaf in 1089.
Olaf dies on August 18, 1095, under mysterious circumstances.
Some speculate that he may have killed himself or that he was sacrificed on behalf of his luckless people.
Saxo Grammaticus writes that he "willingly gave himself to loose the land of its bad luck and begged that all of it (guilt) would fall upon his head alone. So offered he his life for his countrymen."
He is the only Danish monarch whose burial site is not known.
It has been postulated that his body was divided among the regions of Denmark as a kind of scapegoat which was to take away the blood guilt of Denmark and restore it to its previous fortunes.
He is succeeded by his brother Eric I Evergood, elected as a king at the several landsting assemblies.