The fifty-nine-year-old Haakon, called the Old, retreats …

Years: 1263 - 1263

The fifty-nine-year-old Haakon, called the Old, retreats to the Orkney Islands and, electing to winter in the Bishop's Palace at Kirkwall, falls ill. On his deathbed, Haakon declares that he only knows of one son who is still alive, Magnus, who subsequently succeeds him as King Magnus VI following Haakon’s death on December 17.

Magnus, if he does not already, will soon come to consider peace with the Scots more important than holding on to the Norwegian possessions off western Scotland and in the Irish Sea.

Eventually to be known as the Lawmender, Magnus had two years earlier married the Danish princess Ingeborg, the daughter of the late Danish king Erik Plogpenning, after she was practically abducted by Haakon's men from the monastery in which she was living.

The struggle to claim Ingeborg's inheritance from her murdered father will soon involve Norway in intermittent conflicts with Denmark for decades to come.

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