The island of Gotland, near Sweden, considered …

Years: 1398 - 1398

The island of Gotland, near Sweden, considered by some historians to be the original homeland of the Goths, had been governed separately from the city of Visby.

A civil war caused by conflicts between the German merchants in Visby and the trading peasants of the countryside had had to be put down by King Magnus III of Sweden in 1288.

Waldemar Atterdag of Denmark in 1361 had invaded the island.

The Victual Brothers, a companionship of privateers who later turned to piracy, had occupied the island in 1394 to set up a stronghold headquarters on their own in Visby, impartially raiding everyone's shipping.

Their famous battle cry is "God's friends and the whole world's enemies".

Queen Margaret and King Albert of Sweden concede Gotland to the allied Teutonic Order as a pledge (similar to a fiefdom), awarded to them on the condition that they expel the piratical Victual Brothers from their fortified sanctuary.

An invasion army of Teutonic Knights under Konrad von Jungingen, the Grand Master of the Order, conquers the island in 1398, destroying Visby and driving the Victual Brothers from Gotland.

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