1530 in Sweden

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Years in Sweden: 1527   1528   1529   1530   1531   1532   1533
Centuries: 15th century  ·  16th century  ·  17th century
Decades: 1500s   1510s   1520s   1530s   1540s   1550s   1560s
Years: 1527   1528   1529   1530   1531   1532   1533

Events from the year 1530 in Sweden

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laurentius Petri</span> Swedish clergyman (1499–1573)

Laurentius PetriNericius was a Swedish clergyman and the first Evangelical Lutheran Archbishop of Sweden. He and his brother Olaus Petri are, together with the King Gustav Vasa, regarded as the main Lutheran reformers of Sweden. They are commemorated by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America on 19 April.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Olaus Petri</span> Swedish clergyman and reformer (1493–1552)

Olof Persson, sometimes Petersson, better known under the Latin form of his name, Olaus Petri, was a clergyman, writer, judge, and major contributor to the Protestant Reformation in Sweden. His brother, Laurentius Petri, became the first Evangelical Lutheran Archbishop of Sweden.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Johannes Magnus</span> Swedish historian

Johannes Magnus was the last functioning Catholic Archbishop in Sweden, and also a theologian, genealogist, and historian.

Laurentius Andreae was a Swedish Lutheran clergyman and scholar who is acknowledged as one of his country's preeminent intellectual figures during the first half of the 16th century. In his time he was most renowned as one of the main proponents of the Swedish reformation of 1523-31.

Petri is a surname derived from Latin Petrus, and may refer to:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carl Almquist</span>

Carl Almquist was a Swedish-born stained-glass artist whose professional life was spent entirely in Britain. He was a pupil of Henry Holiday and became one of the two chief designers for the well-known Lancaster firm of Shrigley and Hunt. He was in large measure responsible for establishing their late Pre-Raphaelite or Aesthetic style. Though largely neglected by 20th-century art historians he has more recently been acclaimed as a genius, and as one of the leading late-Victorian stained-glass designers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Olaus Petri Church</span> Church in Örebro, Sweden

Olaus Petri Church is a church building in Örebro in Sweden. Belonging to the Örebro Olaus Petri Parish of the Church of Sweden, it was opened on Fourth Advent Sunday 1912.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1751 in Sweden</span> Sweden-related events during the year of 1751

Events from the year 1751 in Sweden

Events from the year 1524 in Sweden

Events from the year 1533 in Sweden

Events from the year 1538 in Sweden

Events from the year 1540 in Sweden

Events from the year 1531 in Sweden.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1537 in Sweden</span> Sweden-related events during the year of 1537

Events from the year 1537 in Sweden

Events from the year 1528 in Sweden

Events from the year 1526 in Sweden

Events from the year 1525 in Sweden

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1552 in Sweden</span> Sweden-related events during the year of 1552

Events from the year 1552 in Sweden

The Liturgical Struggle was the name for the period from 1574 until 1593 in Sweden, when there was a struggle about the confession of faith and liturgy of the Church of Sweden, brought about by the attempts of King John III of Sweden to make the Swedish church take a mediating position between Catholicism and Protestantism by holding only certain doctrines and practices which could be established immediately in either the Word of God or patristic writings, similar to what had once been imposed on the Lutheran areas in Germany during the Augsburg Interim. The struggle began in 1574, when the king introduced some new rules in the liturgy which were not in accordance with Lutheran doctrine and practice, followed by his publication of the Liturgia Svecanæ Ecclesiæ catholicæ & orthodoxæ conformia commonly called the "Red Book", which re-introduced a number of Catholic customs. The Liturgical Struggle ended with the Lutheran confession of faith at the Uppsala Synod in 1593.

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