Charles II of the United Kingdoms of Scandinavia: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 119: Line 119:


==Crown Prince of Sweden-Norway==
==Crown Prince of Sweden-Norway==
Following his father's ascension to the throne on February 5th 1818, the young Charles quickly found himself in a more powerful, and politically active position. Thus, as crown prince, he began spearheading various military reforms, particularly in the army, in which most of his reforms were of the {{wp|Napoleonic}} model, whilst also encouraging the expansion and improvement of both the {{wp|Swedish}} and {{wp|Norwegian}} navies. Interestingly enough, despite his general preference for the army in most hypothetical military situations, Charles himself never abandoned, nor neglected the importance of the navy, a fact made evident by a notable quote he uttered to a {{wp|Swedish}} naval officer, ''"The men will have the forts and the winter, while the ships will have the finest sailors in all of {{wp|Europe}}''.
Following his father's ascension to the throne on February 5th 1818, the young Charles quickly found himself in a more powerful, and politically active position. Thus, as crown prince, he began spearheading various military reforms, particularly in the army, in which most of his reforms were of the {{wp|Napoleonic}} model, whilst also encouraging the expansion and improvement of both the {{wp|Swedish}} and {{wp|Norwegian}} navies. Interestingly enough, despite his general preference for the army in most hypothetical military situations, Charles himself never abandoned, nor neglected the importance of the navy, a fact made evident by a notable quote he uttered to a {{wp|Swedish}} naval officer, ''"The men will have the forts and the winter, while the ships will have the finest sailors in all of {{wp|Europe}}"''.


===''The Mercenary Prince''===
===''The Mercenary Prince''===

Revision as of 09:53, 18 August 2021

Charles II
George Dawe, Field Marshal August Neidhardt, Count of Gneisenau (1760–1831), 1818.jpg
King of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden
Reign11 February 1845 - 30 April 1866
Coronation20 May 1845
PredecessorCharles I
SuccessorCharles III
Governor-general of Norway
Tenure16 February 1814 - 5 February 1818
PredecessorPrince Christian Frederick of Denmark
SuccessorJohan August Sandels
BornCharles Christian August Frederick
(1796-11-05)5 November 1796
Augustenborg Palace, Augustenborg, Denmark
Died30 April 1866(1866-04-30) (aged 69)
Amalienborg, Copenhagen, Denmark
Burial
Spouse
Anna Pavlovna of Russia
(m. 1815; died 1865)
Issue
Full name
Charles Christian August Frederick
HouseSchleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg
FatherCharles I
MotherPrincess Louise Augusta of Denmark
ReligionChurch of Denmark
Church of Norway
Church of Sweden

Charles II, or Carl II (5 November 1796 - 30 April 1866), was the King of the United Kingdoms of Scandinavia. Originally born in November 1796 as a minor Danish prince, he instead subsequently became a Swedish prince and second in line to the Swedish throne at the age of thirteen, when his father was adopted by the childless King Charles XIII of Sweden amidst a succession crisis facing the kingdom.

At the age of eighteen, the younger Charles first took part in the campaign of unifying the kingdoms of Sweden and Norway, then previously under Danish suzerainty, after which, he was made Crown Prince of Sweden and Norway following his father's ascension to the throne. Subsequently, during his tenure as crown prince, he notably oversaw various reforms to the traditionally decentralised Scandinavian militaries, whilst also serving as an advisor, and on several occasions, a field officer for several European armies, thereby earning him the nickname, The Mercenary Prince. Furthermore, Charles was also notable in sponsoring the efforts of a renewed Scandinavian colonialism, particularly in both Africa and the Middle East.

Charles II, along with his father, Charles I and his eldest son, Charles III, are collectively known and remembered as "The Three Great Charles", with the period from the beginning of his father's reign as king of a unified Scandinavia until the end of the reign of his son, Charles III, being named as the Great Carolean Era, or the Golden Carolean Century.

Early Life

Charles was born on November 5th 1796 as the only son of the then Prince Christian August of Augustenborg and Princess Louise Augusta of Denmark. Born Charles Christian August Frederick, he shared his father's later adopted Swedish name, Charles, and the latter's own middle name, August, whilst also being given the names commonly used by previous Danish monarchs, Christian and Frederick.

Nevertheless, the young Charles had been born in his father's absence, the latter whom, prior to his birth, had enlisted for the recently beginning Napoleonic Wars. Consequently, for roughly the first five years of his life, the young prince rarely saw his father around, and instead grew close to his mother, Princess Louise Augusta. At the same time, he grew up considerably well himself in the family residence of Augustenborg Palace, located in the southern region of Denmark. On several occasions, he was able to visit his Oldenburg cousins in Copenhagen, whom generally received the young prince warmly, as his own mother was of the dynasty itself.

At the age of thirteen, when his father was made Governor-general of Norway, the family of three subsequently moved to Oslo, where the young prince was said to had been wholly fond of the city's coastal scenery. For instance, at the age of fourteen, he had his father employ a personal tutor to teach him in the ways of sailing, which would in turn allow him to freely sail around the Baltic Sea by himself. Then, upon completing his sailing training, he successively acquired a modest sailing ship, which he nicknamed Nelson after the deceased British admiral, Horatio Nelson whom, prior to his demise, had ironically led the Royal Navy in the First Battle of Copenhagen in 1801 against Denmark-Norway.

Prince of Sweden

When the young Charles was sixteen years old, his family's fortunes rapidly turned when his father, then the Governor-general of Norway, was adopted by the childless King Charles XIII of Sweden, thereby placing himself second in line to the throne as his father's eldest child. Following the family of three's arrival, with the personal approval of the King of Sweden himself, Charles and his parents were allowed to take up residence at Drottningholm Palace, located at the outskirts of the Swedish capital of Stockholm.

While living in his new residence, as a result of his own father's demands, the younger Charles was extensively subjected to almost daily trainings in the arts of warfare, although his education in other subjects, such as history, mathematics, and others were also "equally" prioritised. Eventually, his first chance at earning some degree of military experience came soon enough when he was tasked with accompanying his father, the Crown Prince of Sweden, in a supposedly peaceful expedition to subjugate and wrestle Norway from Denmark, an ally of Napoleon in the War of the Sixth Coalition. Thus, at the head of an approximately hundred strong band with his own father at hand, the two marched for several days from the Swedish-Norwegian border before finally entering the Norwegian capital of Oslo on April 6th that year, during which they were tremendously by the local populace, while the then governor-general promptly surrendered the city without a fight, thus ceding the Norwegian realm to the Swedes without a fight. Several days later, Charles, along with his father, Charles August, promptly received the reigning Swedish monarch, King Charles XIII, whom promptly made the prince the new Governor-general of Norway under Swedish suzerainty, a position once held by his own father. He subsequently held the position until his father's own ascension as monarch, from which point, he later became actively involved as the new Crown Prince of Sweden-Norway.

Crown Prince of Sweden-Norway

Following his father's ascension to the throne on February 5th 1818, the young Charles quickly found himself in a more powerful, and politically active position. Thus, as crown prince, he began spearheading various military reforms, particularly in the army, in which most of his reforms were of the Napoleonic model, whilst also encouraging the expansion and improvement of both the Swedish and Norwegian navies. Interestingly enough, despite his general preference for the army in most hypothetical military situations, Charles himself never abandoned, nor neglected the importance of the navy, a fact made evident by a notable quote he uttered to a Swedish naval officer, "The men will have the forts and the winter, while the ships will have the finest sailors in all of Europe".

The Mercenary Prince

King of Scandinavia

Marriage

Death

Titles & Honours

  • 5 November 1796 - 15 July 1809 His Royal Highness Prince Charles Christian of Augustenborg
  • 15 July 1809 - 30 May 1814 His Royal Highness Prince Charles of Sweden
  • 30 May 1814 - 5 February 1818 His Royal Highness Prince Charles of Sweden-Norway
  • 5 February 1818 - 11 February 1845 His Royal Highness The Crown Prince of Scandinavia
  • 11 February 1845 - 30 April 1866 His Majesty The King

Ancestry