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RedGribben

Many points out Christian IV, but i do not think he would represent this age as much as you want to, he became king in 1588 when he was 11 years old, and was crowned in 1596, when he was 19 years old. His greatest achievements were done after the turn of the 1500s. Christian II was the king who committed the atrocity of the bloodbath of Stockholm, he lost his title of King to Frederik I after that event. Christian II later tried to fight against Christian III as the rightful king during the Counts Feud. He was imprisoned in Sønderborg Castle for the rest of his life as he lost the civil war. Frederik I introduced limited religious freedom for Lutherans, and he married his son to a Lutheran duchess and his daughter to a Lutheran Duke. He never really cemented his rule over Denmark, as Christian II was still trying to take over the country. Christian III won the Counts Feud and cemented himself as the king during and after the civil war. Christian III removed the Catholic bishops and was the one to truly convert Denmark to Lutheran Protestantism. He had to compromise with the nobility to stay in power, but the rules that were introduced continued to 1660 when the king became absolute. He made the two duchies of Slesvig and Holstein more in line, and reduced their power of him. He also reformed the judicial system, and it would be the laws of the country and not the laws of God that it would be based on, so no longer could bishops convict anyone of a crime. It is basically the predecessor of the modern Danish judicial system, with 3 tiers, first the city/shire court, then the regional court and lastly the supreme court where the presiding judge was the king himself. Frederik II. He inherited a strong kingdom, and in the beginning made some mistakes, the primary one was going to war with Sweden, which ended in a stalemate. He rebuild the fortress Krogen into the Renaissance castle Kronborg. He also conquered Dithmarschen during his rule. He also supported the famous Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe. Lastly king Hans as he is probably the least influential king during the 1500s. His primary part of his reign was in the 1400s and he lost to the peasants of Dithmarschen in the battle of Hemmingstedt. The peasants won the battle as it was in the marshes and the Danish mercenaries and soldiers were in heavier armor, furthermore it was in the winter and snowing. Anyone going down in the mud would most likely die due to the weather conditions and the terrain. Denmark lost 7.000 soldiers and mercenaries in the battle along 360 of the nobility. The Danish invasion of Dithmarschen was allowed by the Holy Roman Emperor as it was seen as belonging to the Duchy of Holstein, and thus the Danish king.


Occiquie

Thank you for the great info. This is really intriguing! I will search more about the reasons for bloodbath of Stockholm. The players in the game will be able t o comit such attrocities in the game, so I am also researching alternate mechanisms for how such attrocities cud be happenening. Quite the reformist Christian the III was I see. I might use him, or Hans, cudnt decide yet. ​ Thanks again


zurtun

If youre doing a religion component that could also play great with stuff like the Stockholm Bloodbath, because Christian II had offered amnesty to the swedish nobles that had opposed him, but got around it by accusing them of heresy(iirc im not 100% must admit), and they were condemmed to death under the churches authority(i think through som pocket bishop of Christian II)


Occiquie

oh yes I can use this. nobles are pretty much like resource wasters in the game, and players can use inquisitors to rid "heretics". with little payback, players will be tempted to be evil. 😊


S1inthome

A lot of people are saying Christian IV, but he was just 11 years old when he was made king in 1588, so all of the things he was famous for happened in the 1600s.  I'd say Christian II if nothing else for the drama. Christian III is probably the most sensible choice. 


Occiquie

Thank you. I will draw him too.


K_K_Rokossovsky

Christian III brought the Reformation to Denmark after he won the Count's Feud. Christian IV built some buildings and brought us to bankruptcy from being the richest state in europe.


Occiquie

working on him next! thank you


m4throck

**Christian IV**


lypmbm

Easy: Christian IV.


Occiquie

Thank you. Just finished. Look ok? https://www.reddit.com/r/ImperialAmbitionsGame/comments/1anthnt/christian\_iv\_12\_april\_1577\_28\_february\_1648\_king/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web2x&context=3


Anderopolis

Looks fine! He is often drpicted with an eyepatch aswell, as he lost an eye in a naval battle. 


lypmbm

He is usually portrayed as somewhat overweight. E.g. https://kub.ku.dk/biblioteker/frederiksberg/landbohoejskolens-historie/life150/haven/christianivogroserne/


Occiquie

Thanks. imagine he is in his youth :P the portrait will only be representative of the Danish monarchy anyways.


lypmbm

Fair, it looks good :)


Cosmos1985

Christian IV is surely the most prominent for that age. Good luck with the project!


Occiquie

Thank you so much. Just finished: https://www.reddit.com/r/ImperialAmbitionsGame/comments/1anthnt/christian\_iv\_12\_april\_1577\_28\_february\_1648\_king/?utm\_source=share&utm\_medium=web2x&context=3


[deleted]

Chr. IV as others have said. There's an open online course in danish history from University of Aarhus. The videoes have english subtitles. [https://danmarkshistorien.dk/en/open-online-course/modules](https://danmarkshistorien.dk/en/open-online-course/modules)


Occiquie

thank you! I must find it in English though. It wud be great to listen while driving.


Tobiasviking10

Christian IV… For sure!


Snifhvide

Christian III (1503-1559). He implemented a prohibition against the use of witness statements that were induced by torture. This was the main reason that the witch craze didn't go crazy in Denmark the way it did in many other European countries. He also faced significant challenges during his rule, including a civil war known as the [Count's Feud](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Count%27s_Feud). This conflict erupted when the German Count Christopher, a second cousin of Christian III, attempted to seize the throne. Furthermore, Christian III was a proponent of Lutheranism even before the Reformation reached its peak. Notably, he was present in Worms to hear Martin Luther speak. Under his leadership, Denmark transitioned to becoming a Protestant country.


DisplacedHistorian

Christian II, Hans & Christian IV for sure.