-
nationalisation of the
Norwegian law-code,
after which he is
known as
Magnus the
Lawmender. He was the
first Norwegian monarch known to have used an
ordinal number...
-
single jurisdiction during the late 13th century, when King
Magnus the
Lawmender had the
existing body of law put into writing. Tinghaugen, from the Old...
- Perth,
signed 2 July 1266,
ended military conflict between Magnus the
Lawmender of
Norway and
Alexander III of
Scotland over
possession of the Hebrides...
- from 1299
until 1319.
Haakon was the
younger surviving son of
Magnus the
Lawmender, King of Norway, and his wife
Ingeborg of Denmark.
Through his mother...
- 1280
until 1299.
Eirik was the
eldest surviving son of King
Magnus the
Lawmender of Norway, and his wife, Ingeborg,
daughter of King Eric IV of Denmark...
-
single jurisdiction during the late 13th century, when King
Magnus the
Lawmender had the
existing body of law put into writing. The
Gulating was an annual...
- of
Norwegian law
being the work of
Magnus the
Lawmender (1263–1280), for
which he was
nicknamed '
lawmender'. The Håkon Håkonsson
version is also
known as...
- made up of a
medieval tower built during the
reign of King
Magnus the
Lawmender in the 1270s as part of the
royal castle in Bergen. The keep was slightly...
- 1217–1263 co-king
Haakon Haakonsson the
Young Magnus VI of
Norway Magnus Lawmender (Magnus Lagabøte) : 1263–1280 Eric II of
Norway Eric Magnusson : 1280–1299...
- Scandinavian-North
Germanic civil law,
based on
North Germanic law. King
Magnus VI the
Lawmender unified the
regional laws into a
single code of law for the
whole kingdom...