Canute's ambitions are not purely domestic: he …
Years: 1085 - 1085
Canute's ambitions are not purely domestic: he considers the crown of England to be rightfully his.
As the grandnephew of Canute the Great, who ruled England, Denmark and Norway until 1035, he regards William I of England as a usurper.
With the support of his father-in-law Count Robert and Olaf III of Norway, Canute plans an invasion of England in 1085 and calls his fleet in leding at the Limfjord.
The fleet never sets sail, as Canute is preoccupied in Schleswig due to the potential threat of Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor, with whom both Denmark and Flanders are on unfriendly terms.
Canute fears the invasion of Henry, whose late enemy Rudolf of Rheinfelden had sought refuge in Denmark.
The warriors of the fleet, mostly made up of peasants who need to be home for the harvest season, grow weary of waiting, and elect Canute's brother Olaf to argue their case.
This raise the suspicion of Canute, who has Olaf arrested and banished to Flanders.
The leding is eventually dispersed and the peasants tend to their harvests, but Canute intends to reassemble within a year.
Locations
People
- Canute IV of Denmark
- Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor
- Olaf I of Denmark
- Olaf III of Norway
- Robert I, Count of Flanders
- William the Conqueror
Groups
- Polytheism (“paganism”)
- Denmark, Kingdom of
- Danes (Scandinavians)
- Flanders, County of
- Normans
- German, or Ottonian (Roman) Empire
- Norway, independent Kingdom of
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- Schleswig, Duchy of
- England, (Norman) Kingdom of
