An Entity of Type: Lover109622745, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

Dyveke Sigbritsdatter or Dyveke Willomsdatter, (1490 – 21 September 1517), in Denmark normally known as "Dyveke" (in modern Dutch "duifje" means "little dove"), was the mistress to Christian II of Denmark.

Property Value
dbo:abstract
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter (* um 1490 in Amsterdam; † 21. September 1517 in Kopenhagen) war die Geliebte des Königs Christian II. von Dänemark, Norwegen und Schweden. (de)
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter or Dyveke Willomsdatter, (1490 – 21 September 1517), in Denmark normally known as "Dyveke" (in modern Dutch "duifje" means "little dove"), was the mistress to Christian II of Denmark. Dyveke was a commoner, the daughter of the Dutch merchant Sigbrit Willoms, who lived in Bergen in Norway. Dyveke became the mistress to Christian II in 1507 or 1509. They met in Bergen, and Christian took Dyveke with him to Oslo, where he was regent, and to Copenhagen, when he became king in 1513. Their relationship has been the inspiration of many poets but in fact little is known about it. The mother of Dyveke, Sigbrit, acted as an advisor to the king, which was much disliked, especially by the nobility, and every effort was therefore made to separate Dyveke and Christian, which would ensure the departure also of Sigbrit from the court. Whether Dyveke herself had any political influence is unknown. Though Christian married Isabella of Austria and had her crowned in 1515, he refused to end his relationship with Dyveke. This created tension between him and his brother-in-law, the future Emperor Charles V. In 1516, the Emperor demanded that Dyveke and her mother would be sent away, but Christian refused. Dyveke died in the summer of 1517, possibly by eating poisoned cherries. Her death led to the execution of nobleman Torben Oxe but his guilt has never been proved, and both an initiative by the court of the Emperor Maximilian I or even an accidental poisoning have been suggested as an explanation. Her mother Sigbrit went on to become Christian II's financial advisor. Nothing is recorded for Sigbrit after 1523 although one assumption has her imprisoned for witchcraft, dying in 1532. (en)
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter (née vers 1490 à Amsterdam et morte le 21 septembre 1517 à Copenhague) est la maîtresse de Christian II de Danemark. (fr)
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter, nota in Danimarca con il nomignolo di Dyveke, ossia piccioncino (Amsterdam, 1490 circa – Copenaghen, 21 settembre 1517), figlia della mercante Sigbrit Willoms, era una ragazza comune di particolare bellezza che assunse dimensione storica per essere diventata l'amante di Cristiano II di Danimarca attorno al 1507. (it)
  • Dyveke of Duveke Sigbritsdochter (Deens: Dyveke Sigbrittsdatter) (Amsterdam ca. 1490 – Kopenhagen 21 september 1517) was de maîtresse van koning Christiaan II van Denemarken, Noorwegen en Zweden. (nl)
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter (holländska: Liten duva), född cirka 1490 i Amsterdam, död 21 september 1517, var den danske kungen Kristian II:s mätress. Hennes mor var holländska, Sigbrit Willoms (kallad Mor Sigbrit) som kommit till staden Bergen i Norge, där hon öppnade ett värdshus. 1507 träffade Dyveke prins Kristian, den blivande kung Kristian II, på en fest i rådhuset. Han tog henne omgående till sin frilla. Mor Sigbrit blev hans politiska rådgivare och "högra hand" och kom att utöva stort inflytande på honom. Dyveke och mor Sigbrit följde sedan med Kristian till Köpenhamn, där de bosatte sig i ett hus nära slottet. Kärleksförhållandet fortsatte även sedan Kristian gift sig med Elisabet av Österrike. Dyveke dog plötsligt under mystiska omständigheter i september 1517. Det ryktades att hon hade ätit förgiftade körsbär. Kristian II anklagade slottshövitsmannen vid Köpenhamns slott, Torben Oxe, för giftmord, och denne dömdes till döden och halshöggs. Dyveke ligger begravd i Karmeliterklostret i Helsingör. (sv)
dbo:thumbnail
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
dbo:wikiPageID
  • 496985 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength
  • 2473 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
  • 1120773474 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dcterms:subject
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter (* um 1490 in Amsterdam; † 21. September 1517 in Kopenhagen) war die Geliebte des Königs Christian II. von Dänemark, Norwegen und Schweden. (de)
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter (née vers 1490 à Amsterdam et morte le 21 septembre 1517 à Copenhague) est la maîtresse de Christian II de Danemark. (fr)
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter, nota in Danimarca con il nomignolo di Dyveke, ossia piccioncino (Amsterdam, 1490 circa – Copenaghen, 21 settembre 1517), figlia della mercante Sigbrit Willoms, era una ragazza comune di particolare bellezza che assunse dimensione storica per essere diventata l'amante di Cristiano II di Danimarca attorno al 1507. (it)
  • Dyveke of Duveke Sigbritsdochter (Deens: Dyveke Sigbrittsdatter) (Amsterdam ca. 1490 – Kopenhagen 21 september 1517) was de maîtresse van koning Christiaan II van Denemarken, Noorwegen en Zweden. (nl)
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter or Dyveke Willomsdatter, (1490 – 21 September 1517), in Denmark normally known as "Dyveke" (in modern Dutch "duifje" means "little dove"), was the mistress to Christian II of Denmark. (en)
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter (holländska: Liten duva), född cirka 1490 i Amsterdam, död 21 september 1517, var den danske kungen Kristian II:s mätress. Hennes mor var holländska, Sigbrit Willoms (kallad Mor Sigbrit) som kommit till staden Bergen i Norge, där hon öppnade ett värdshus. 1507 träffade Dyveke prins Kristian, den blivande kung Kristian II, på en fest i rådhuset. Han tog henne omgående till sin frilla. Mor Sigbrit blev hans politiska rådgivare och "högra hand" och kom att utöva stort inflytande på honom. Dyveke ligger begravd i Karmeliterklostret i Helsingör. (sv)
rdfs:label
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter (de)
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter (en)
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter (fr)
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter (it)
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdochter (nl)
  • Dyveke Sigbritsdatter (sv)
owl:sameAs
prov:wasDerivedFrom
foaf:depiction
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of
is foaf:primaryTopic of
Powered by OpenLink Virtuoso    This material is Open Knowledge     W3C Semantic Web Technology     This material is Open Knowledge    Valid XHTML + RDFa
This content was extracted from Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License