Orm Eriksson

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Orm Eriksson (also Orm Eiriksson, c. 1476 – 1521) was a Norwegian nobleman living in Stavanger and the alleged leader of the tax revolt in Rogaland, which ended with his execution in 1521.

Contents

Background

It is uncertain whether Orm Erikson of Voss in 1482 was the same as the citizen and later væpner (squire) Orm Erikson of Stavanger. Asgaut Steinnes wrote in 1961 that the Orm Erikson of 1484 and the Orm Erikson of 1497 were the same man. [1]

In Stavanger

Orm Erikson is known to have been in the city records of Stavanger before 1518. The earliest mention of him was dated 17 June 1490, when he was one of the witnesses of a legal document. [2] He did not have at that time a title of nobility. But sometime between 1490 and 1509, he gained the title of væpner (squire). He was first mentioned as a væpner in 1509. [3] A year later, in 1510, Orm Eriksson av våpen (with his coat-of-arms) and wife Astrid Ormsdotter bought the Hana farm in Sandnes. [4] The document was created at Skagen in Stavanger. This is the only document linking Orm Erikson to any particular place in the Stavanger area. It is possible that Orm Erikson was then living at Skagen. In two documents, which were definitely from Stavanger, Orm Erikson was described as a væpner. [5]

The Tax Revolt

The war between Denmark-Norway and Sweden ended in March 1520 when, as one of the conditions of the settlement, the Swedes accepted Christian II as the King of Sweden. But the settlement came with a price. Rogaland, like the other areas of Norway, had been obliged to supply extra taxes and men to support the war. In 1518 the king levied an additional tax of two marks but in 1519, a punitive tax of two marks was assessed in Rogaland for the rebellion against the two-mark tax. In 1521 another 10% wealth tax was added.

Sometime in the fall of 1519, Jon Eilivsson  [ no ] was imprisoned in Bergen. [6] The illegitimate son of the former bishop of Stavanger, Eiliv Jonsson  [ no ], he had been asked by the commoners in Ryfylke to deliver their letter to the king to have their taxes reduced but was arrested before he could accomplish his mission. From prison, he wrote a letter of complaint to the King. He wrote that there was violence in the conflict between the commoners and the lensherre (governor) of Bergenhus len, Jørgen Hansson. [7] [8] [9] Eilivsson believed, however, that many used more violence than he himself did. He wrote that Orm Erikson was a traitor. He knew Orm, who had been one of the witnesses of the will of Jon's father. [10] Jon claimed that Orm had kept things, chased away the priest Torkild with guns and would have killed him. Orm was a nobleman but, at that time, he was neither a lagmann (judge) nor a fogd (bailiff) so he did not have the legal authority. [11] But Eilivsson never revealed the reasons for any of Eriksson's actions as well as the identity of Father Torkild. Torkild may be the priest who had left the Diocese of London in England for the University of Rostock in Germany in 1519 to further his studies. He was known to have been ordained in the summer of 1519 so the altercation with Orm Eriksson might have happened at that time. It is possible that Hoskuld Hoskuldsson, who succeeded Eiliv Jonson as the Bishop of Stavanger, sent Torkild abroad for the studies to keep him away from Orm and the authorities for a while. Sending possible witnesses out of the diocese was one of the bishop's usual tactics of dealing with problems; he had done it before in his dispute with the abbot of Utstein Abbey. Rostock was one of his favored hiding places; he had studied at the university there.

Because of the letter from Jon Eilivsson, Christian II and Jørgen Hansson began their own investigations, but these investigations were slow. Orm was a member of the nobility and a relative of the Bishop of Stavanger. Torkild was out of the country and could not be questioned, and the farmers in Ryfylke and Rogaland were not cooperative. Unni Kurseth believed that Jon Eilivsson's letter was actually penned by one of the bailiffs of Bergenhus, possibly with either the blessing or support of the governor, to frame Orm Eriksson for the tax revolt in Rylfylke. [9] [12]

In response, Orm Eriksson tried to smoothen his relationships with Jørgen Hansson and the others with gifts and money. Around 20 September 1519, he gave Hansson a buck. [13] A year later, on 7 September 1520 Orm Erikson paid his taxes with 83 lodd (2.9 ounces or 83 grams) of silver and 83 marks, 10% of his entire income. [14] He sent two marks to the city of Stavanger and six marks, as well as butter, to the Bergenhus. Hansson accepted all the gifts but he put all of them in the public accounts of the Bergenhus.

But gifts and money were still not enough for Eriksson to avoid arrest. In 1521, he was arrested in Stavanger. [15] The city records of Stavanger showed that he was subsequently hanged. The actual date of his execution is not known but it was apparently done just before 8 May 1521. [16] The king confiscated 50% of Orm Erikson's properties and the widow was allowed to keep the rest of them. [17] As for Jon Eilivsson, he was not spared. He was also executed in Bergen as a tax rebel in late 1519, sometime between October and December, and his properties were also confiscated. [11] [18]

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References

  1. Steinnes, "Nokre Galtung-problem", page 26 ff.
  2. Diplomatarium Norvegicum (DN), Volume IV, No. 1008.
  3. DN, Volume 1, No. 1027.
  4. Norske Herredags dombøger, Dombog for 1622, page 160.
  5. DN, Volume VI, No. 1058; DN, Volume I, No. 1035.
  6. DN, Volume XXII, No. 123.
  7. Jørgen Hansson, the son of a shipwright from Ribe in Denmark, was the 11th Governor of Bergenhus len from 1516 to 1523. He was with Christian II in exile and the War of the Two Kings ( 1531 - 1532 ) but he died in 1543 in the Netherlands, his wife's homeland. His biography by Halvard Bjørkvik can be found at the online Norsk Biografisk Leksikon [ Norwegian Biographical Dictionary ] website.
  8. DN, Volume XXII, No. 123, note.
  9. 1 2 Kurseth, Hoskuld Hoskuldsson.
  10. The will was written and signed on 15 July 1512. DN, Volume I, No. 1035.
  11. 1 2 Kvitrud, " Orm på Vestlandet .
  12. DN, Volume XXII, No. 123, note. Kvitrud implies in his essay, " Orm på Vestlandet , that the handwriting of the letter did not match the known handwriting of Jon Eilifson.
  13. Norske regnskaber og jordebøger fra det 16de aarhundrede (NRJ), Volume 1, page 395.
  14. NRJ, Volume I, page 558.
  15. NRJ, Volume III, page 107.
  16. NRJ, Volume II, page 633.
  17. NRJ, Volume II, pages 564-565.
  18. (in Norwegian) Lars Hamre, Norsk politisk historie 1513–1537 [ "Norwegian Political History 1513–1537" ] ( Oslo: Det Norske Samlaget, 1998 ), ISBN   978-8252152104, page 156. Lars Hamre believed that Eilifson was being executed for organizing an assembly of farmers without permission from the authorities.

Literature