Erik Johansson Vasa | |
---|---|
Painting of Erik Johansson Vasa by Lorens Pasch the Younger from 1782, based on an earlier painting by another artist, who in turned had based his painting on a much earlier one. Consequently, Erik may have looked totally different.
|
|
Spouse(s) | Cecilia Månsdotter Eka |
Noble family | Vasa |
Father | Johan Kristiernsson Vasa |
Mother | Birgitta Gustafsdotter Sture |
Born |
c. 1470 Örbyhus |
Died | 8 November 1520 |
Erik Johansson Vasa (1470 – 8 November 1520) was the Lord of Rydboholm Castle in the Roslagen. He was born around the year 1470 to Johan Kristiernsson Vasa and Birgitta Gustafsdotter Sture in a village named Örby in the province of Uppland, Sweden. He was one of four children from Johan and Birgitta; Johan was first cousin of Charles VIII of Sweden's father, Knut.
Erik Johansson Vasa was a faithful adherent of the Stures, a powerful and influential family in Sweden from the late 15th century to the early 16th century, and was notorious for his irritable and arbitrary temper. He assisted the Stures in fighting against the Danes, who controlled most of Sweden during the early 16th century. When the Danes, led by Christian II, conquered Sweden and seized the capital city Stockholm in 1520, several members of the Sture party were executed in the in November of that year. Among those executed was Erik Johansson.
His first son, Gustav Eriksson Vasa, had escaped from Denmark some time before this event, and survived. As Gustav I, he became the King of Sweden in 1523 and founder of the House of Vasa.
He married Cecilia Månsdotter Eka and had eight children with her. All of their children were born in either Orkesta or Rydboholm Castle, in the present-day county of . Their children were: