5 min svensk historia!

Johan Romin

Svensk historia i kortformat. Lär dig allt om våra kungar, kulturhistoria och de viktigaste skedena i svensk historia. johanromin.substack.com

Episodes

  1. Moving gun powder horns at the Cultural History museum

    12/05/2024

    Moving gun powder horns at the Cultural History museum

    I work with history and communication at one of Sweden's largest museums, the Cultural History Museum in Lund in southern Sweden. One of Sweden's largest? Calculated in terms of exhibition space and number of objects in the collection, it is one of the biggest, even though Kulturen is a regional museum. In a museum, the museum's various historical objects are always being moved. As an employee, I have the opportunity to go behind the scenes and film some of the unique items and show you. Here is a video of the items moved right now: Gun powder horns from the 1600s and 1700s. Right now, a weapons transfer is underway. Out of several hundred rifles, pistols, bayonets, armour, yes even a mine from the Second World War are to be moved to better premises that are climate-adapted for museum purposes. The objects to be moved are photographed and cataloged and then packed into special boxes to preserve them for the future. Now is the chance to take pictures of the weapons before they are packed away! The other day it was time for the museum's gun powder horns to be packed down and I was there to film this. Powder horns were used to keep the gun powder for the rifle dry. From the beginning, hollowed-out horns from deer or cows were used, then you also got a practical spout that could be used when the gunpowder was poured into the muzzle-loaded rifle. Over time, powder horns began to be manufactured in ivory or some other exclusive material, to eventually also become mass-produced in metal. The powder horns were often very richly decorated, and since it was the highest social class that engaged in hunting, they were expensive and fine powder horns that also showed material status, much like wearing an expensive watch today. The museum has hundreds of powder horns like this. Here is a video with some examples. It begins with the powder horn that Karl XII's soldiers during the Great Nordic War had in the field between 1700 and 1718. Interesting to see that they used the kings name as a “brand” for the army not a national flag. It was the king you were loyal to, the king who also participated in the fighting. Here is the video! Thank you for being a paid subscriber! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit johanromin.substack.com

    1 min
  2. Expedition: Historia – Avsnitt 7: När kungen skulle mördas

    04/14/2024

    Expedition: Historia – Avsnitt 7: När kungen skulle mördas

    Året är 1573.  En grupp skotska yrkessoldater har marscherat genom Sverige, från västkusten mot Stockholm. Klädda i traditionella skotska rutiga kläder och huvudbonader, och med säckpipa, trummor o dragna vapen i hand, vandrar de nu in i Stockholm.  Stadsborna kantar gatorna och står häpna och hänförda. Ingen har sett en sådan syn tidigare. Skottarnas mål med resan är kriget i Baltikum där de ska delta på svensk sida, köpta som de är för att kriga för den svenske monarken, mot Ivan den förskräcklige, de ryske härskaren. Skottarna ses därför som ett välkommet tillskott, stridsvana soldater som kan krossa Ivans horder av män. På vägen till kriget har de alltså stannat till i Stockholm, den viktigaste och största staden i kung Johan III:s rike. Här ska de möta några av de mäktigaste militärerna, kungen själv, samt hålla en uppvisning med sin traditionella svärdsdans, till den speciella skotska musiken.  Det kommer bli en spektakulär uppvisning. Med brinnande eldar, glimrande svärd, en dans till rytmisk musik, det delas ut gratis mat och vin till folket. Det kommer bli ett skådespel som både kungen och folket i Stockholm skulle komma att tala om i åratal framöver.  Men det finns en befallning från skottarnas officerare som kretsar runt i de dansandes huvuden, en order som om den skulle iscensättas och bli verklighet skulle komma att förändra Sveriges historia för all framtid.  I samband med svärdsdansen skulle nämligen kung Johan III mördas. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit johanromin.substack.com

    11 min
  3. 03/17/2024

    Expedition: Historia – Avsnitt 4: Den försvunna borgen som förändrade Sverige

    Strax utanför Svedala i Skåne ligger platsen där den försvunna borgen Lindholmen låg på 1300-talet. Lindholmen byggdes i början av 1300-talet och dess strategiska läge och att borgen var starkt befäst gjorde att den blev betydelsefull i slutet av århundradet. Lindholmen var så viktig att den faktiskt ändrade svensk historia, även om den idag är så gott som bortglömd. Bakgrunden var denna: Mellan år 1332 och 1360 tillhörde Skåne den svensk-norske kungen Magnus Eriksson. Men år 1360 erövrade den danske kungen Valdemar Atterdag landskapet och återförde det till Danmark. Olika maktkamper i början av 1360-talet inom Sverige ledde till att Magnus Eriksson och hans son Håkan, som gjorts till kung av Norge, bytte sida och gick i allians med Valdemar. Håkan gifte sig med kung Valdemars dotter Margareta. Mäktiga män i Sverige beslutade sig för att avsätta Magnus Eriksson som kung och vände sig till starka krafter i dagens Tyskland. 1363 skedde en invasion av Sverige från tyska Mecklenburg, som idag ligger strax sydost om Danmark. Sverige fick en ny kung vid namn Albrekt av Mecklenburg, som var son till Magnus Erikssons syster Eufemia. Den nye kungen Albrekt av Mecklenburg insåg att han borde ta tillbaka Skåne från Valdemar Atterdag i Danmark och 1368 kom han hit till Lindholmen i ett försök att återta provinsen. Han belägrade borgen i ett helt år, men misslyckades svälta ut och erövra den. Han fick istället återvända till Sverige med oförrättat ärende. 1370 beslutades att Skåne skulle fortsätta att vara en del av Danmark, mot att tyskarna fick stora rättigheter i Skåne. Den stora förloraren var den svenske kungen. Hans eget öde skulle också bli Lindholmen, skulle det visa sig. För 30 år senare, i slutet av 1380-talet hade Albrekt av Mecklenburg gjort sig ovän med samma krafter som han en gång haft hjälp av då han blev kung. Nu hade en stor landägare som hette Bo Jonsson Grip avlidit och ett bråk om han testamentet ledde till att de mäktiga männen i Sverige vände sig till Valdemar Atterdags dotter Margareta med en fråga om inte hon var villig att härska även i Sverige. Margareta hade blivit änka samt även blivit av med sin son Olof, och hade därför ärvt både Danmark och Norge. Margareta tackade ja till erbjudandet och landsatte 1388 en trupp i Varberg i Halland och utanför Falköping mötte hon Albrekts trupper året efter, 1389. Albrekt förlorade slaget vid Åsle och greps och fängslades tillsammans med sin son Erik, och satt sedan inspärrad här på Lindholmen. Albrekt och Erik var fängslade på Lindholmen i sex år innan det hölls ett stort möte – ett toppmöte – på Lindholmen där det beslutades att Albrekt skulle frisläppas mot att han lovade att avgå som kung och gå med på att Margareta skulle få styra i Sverige. Överenskommelsen bildade en bas för Kalmarunionen som sjösattes två år senare 1397, en personalunion mellan Sverige, Danmark och Norge med Margaretas adoptivson Erik av Pommern (som egentligen hette Bogislav) på tronen. Så här viktig var alltså Lindholmen i svensk historia, för utan denna borg och händelserna som utspelade sig här, skulle svensk historia se helt annorlunda ut, med tanke på att Kalmarunionens vara eller icke vara var något som Danmark och Sverige sedan stred om, fram och tillbaka, i över hundra år. Men borgen finns inte kvar. Idag återstår bara en hög med övergivna tegelstenar som legat här i hundratals år. Besökt gärna Lindholmen men låt tegelstenarna ligga där för kommande generationer. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit johanromin.substack.com

    14 min
  4. 03/09/2024

    Expedition: Historia – Avsnitt 3: Adolf Hitler i svenska tidningar

    Hade Adolf Hitler hela tiden siktet inställt på att förinta Europas judar? Eller var beslutet om Förintelsen under andra världskriget något som gradvis växte fram och att naziströrelsen radikaliserades efter 1941 års invasion av Sovjetunion?  Och hur skildrades egentligen Nazirörelsens judehat första gången Adolf Hitler nämndes i svenska tidningar, år 1922 och 1923? English summary: Expedition history episode 3 - Adolf Hitler in Swedish newspapers Did Adolf Hitler have his sights set on exterminating Europe's Jews all along? Or was the decision about the Holocaust during World War II something that gradually grew and that the Nazi movement was radicalized after the 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union? And how was the Nazi movement's Jew-hatred actually portrayed the first time Adolf Hitler was mentioned in Swedish newspapers? This is Expedition History, Episode 3. This episode is about Adolf Hitler's early period as leader of the National Socialist Party. And I want to warn already now that there are descriptions of terrible events and abhorrent statements in this episode that I personally strongly distance myself from, but which in a historical context are important to highlight because this movement marked the history of the 20th century like no other. Ever since the end of World War II, there has been a debate among historians as to whether the Holocaust of six million Jews was the result of a grand plan, or whether it was a gradual process in which the Nazi movement radicalized after 1941 into what is now known as the Holocaust. The fact that there is no written order with Adolf Hitler's name on it stating that he orders the extermination of Europe's Jews has led to speculation about Hitler's role and how planned the Holocaust really was. In this program we will take a look at the early reporting that took place around the Nazi movement and Adolf Hitler as a person, based on articles and interviews in Swedish newspapers in the early 1920s Very recently the Royal Library made available all papers from 1923 and early 1924. Then it is interesting to read how the newspapers wrote about Adolf Hitler before the journalists of the time knew anything about the Second World War, the Holocaust and all the blood, all the death and all the destruction that would follow in this man's footsteps. So how much did Adolf Hitler really reveal in 1923 about what he wanted to accomplish? Adolf Hitler himself is mentioned for the first time in a Swedish newspaper at the end of 1922. * The newspaper Sydsvenska dagbladet exclaims that "Bayern has got its Mussolini", and compares Italian fascism with the new National Socialist movement. The newspaper states that the National Socialists are strongly anti-Semitic and that they believe that no national goal can be won unless the Jews are put out of the game. * In February 1923, Aftonbladet portrays the National Socialist movement. The headline reads "anti-Semitism as a counter-movement" - that Nazism was anti-Semitic is therefore clear from the very beginning. This is what it says in Aftonbladet: "From today's storehouse of contentious issues, I want to bring out one that, for the time being, lies far away from the people of northern Europe. But for the people of Central Europe, the Jewish question is extremely relevant". * After this article comes several others during 1923 where Swedish journalists managed to get an interview with the famous leader Adolf Hitler. One who makes an attempt to get an interview with Hitler is Sydsvenska Dagbladet's correspondent who simply knocks on the door of Völkishcer beobachter, the Nazi newspaper whose newsroom Hitler used to hang out at. Hitler believes that Germany's state of emergency was created by European Jews with the intention of pushing the Jewish Marxist revolution further. The only alternative is - according to Hitler - a "dictatorship of the will" and precisely in Berlin the German revolution of 1918 will see its end, and we do not intend to show any mercy. * Another of the contemporary journalists, in Gothenburg's trade and shipping newspaper, calls Hitler an anti-Semitic leader with a program that is a most remarkable mixture of realpolitik and romantic speculative utopias, the whole imbued with a completely "brutal and pogrom-ripe anti-Semitism". * In one of the very first newspaper articles in which Bavaria's Mussolini is mentioned, it is stated that the leader of the National Socialists is called Michael Hitler, who has great agitator talent and is a demagogue to the tips of his fingers. They have decided to "remove the socialist leaders and incite the murder or at least the expulsion of all Jews". * In Gothenburg's trade and shipping newspaper it is stated that the nationalist program consisted of "extermination of everything called Jews and socialists in Bavaria". * In the Trelleborg newspaper it is stated that the National Socialists' main program item is "away with the Jews" * In Aftonbladet it says that National Socialism is furiously anti-Semitic and wants to drive the Jews out of the country with all its might. * Dagens Nyheter writes in the fall of 1923 that if Hitler comes to power, you can expect Jewish pogroms "If Hitler comes to the helm, it will be a time of haunting for the Jews," it says. That Hitler was anti-Semitic, hated Jews and that he wanted to forcibly exterminate or expel them from the German Reich must have been clear to those who read the Swedish newspapers in 1923. It is clear that Nazism is violent and aggressive, that it wants to target the Jews, expel them or exterminate them. That they are looking for a revenge war after the First World War and that all this will happen when parliamentary system and democracy have been crushed. Of course, it is not described how this would happen in practical terms, who would design, plan and implement the plans. And therefore one should not focus at this stage in the history of Nazism on how they should proceed, but instead see that it was underway and that the political goal was there. What happened in the 1920s was to prepare the way for what was to come. There would be a war of revenge, in that war the Jews would be forced out or exterminated. The ideological basis that created the conditions for Nazism to exterminate and murder millions of people during the Holocaust was thus formulated - and as we have seen also published, in Sweden, as early as 1923. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit johanromin.substack.com

    18 min

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Svensk historia i kortformat. Lär dig allt om våra kungar, kulturhistoria och de viktigaste skedena i svensk historia. johanromin.substack.com