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Bylandt
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I have come across references in English popular culture to a "King Canute" who went into the sea and gave the waves the royal command to retreat or something.
Did this king actually exist? Or is it a legend? If so, what is the actual legend?
 

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It is an expression which implies someone who is trying to do the impossible. He ruled the English, Danes, and Norwegians c. 1000 AD. A king "so great, he could command the tides of the sea to go back".

--It wasn't really true, but he liked to think as much.
 

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I think it was the other way around. To demonstrate that he wasn't all-powerful, which perhaps some of his nobles were claiming, he ordered that his throne be put on the beach at low tide. He sat in it, and commanded the tide not to come in. It came in and he thus proved some point about limited government, or something.
 

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It is worth stating, however, that Canute (Or Cnut or Knut or Kanute or Knute) is a real historical figure. His empire, in terms of scope and importances of its day, rivals that of Charlemagne 200 years earlier. Canute did, at one time, nearly every land that had coast on the North Sea, including England, Scotland, Ireland, Norway, Denmark, the Hebridies, The Orkneys, Man, The Faeroes, Iceland, Greenland (what had been settled of it) and if you count Leif Erickson's exploits, Vinland (Newfoundland) as well. Canute also had to administer such an empire, which he did quite effectively; he is somewhat fondly remembered by English historians, even where most English historians had a fond distaste for danes and all things scandinavian.

Credit should be given to Canute's father Swein (or Sven or Svein or Swen) Forkbeard and his grandfather Harold (or Harald) Bluetooth for establishing much of the empire, though Canute held it together for 30 something years. Alas, like most medieval empires, it was shortlived, as his sons were much less able to hold the empire together. After his son Canute II the Hardy (Hardicanute) proved to be much less than Hardy, England returned shortly to Anglo-saxon rule before the Norman invasion changed all of that.
 

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I'm not sure, but as I recall, Kanut was Polish princess' grandson. She was related to Mieszko I (first Polish prince, his son Boleslaw Chrobry was the first king of Poland).

Poles, Poles everywhere :)) :)) :)) !!!
 
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Originally posted by Bylandt
I have come across references in English popular culture to a "King Canute" who went into the sea and gave the waves the royal command to retreat or something.
Did this king actually exist? Or is it a legend? If so, what is the actual legend?

Canute
(Or CNUT: THE GREAT, THE MIGHTY)

King of the English, Danes, and Norwegians, b. about 994; d. at Shaftesbury, 12 November 1035. He was the son of Sweyn, King of Denmark, and Sigrid, widow of Eric of Sweden. Though baptized while a child, there is no evidence of Christianity in his life until after he ascended the English throne. He accompanied his father on the invasion of England, and after the repulse at London and Sweyn's sudden death near Bury (3 February, 1014) was declared King of England by the Danish fleet. The witan, however, recalled Æthelred, their "born lord", who had fled at Sweyn's approach, and Canute, unable to withstand the restored monarch, set sail for the North. At Sandwich, after cutting off the noses, ears, and hands of the hostages taken by his father, he put them ashore — a dire omen of a more terrible return. Returned to Denmark, Canute proclaimed himself king and set about gathering a powerful fleet. England, instead of being prepared for his return, was torn by internal dissensions, and when Canute appeared off the coast with a fleet, said to have numbered two hundred sail, each boat containing eighty men, Eadrie deserted Eadmund Ironside and joined the Danish standard. Upon the death of Æthelred, Eadmund was made king by the people of London, and, with all Wessex in submission, Canute laid siege to the city. This was the beginning of a series of bloody conflicts, interrupted only by pillage of the country-side, culminating at Assandun, where, after battle which was waged all day and into the night, the English were routed, and "all the nobility of the English race was there destroyed" (Anglo-Saxon Chron., ed. Giles, London, 1847, p. 409). Eadmund was still formidable. Canute followed him into Gloucestershire and made terms of peace on the Isle of Olney. Mercia and Northumbria were Canute's portion, and a tax known as the "danegeld" was levied on both armies to defray the expenses of the Danish fleet. Eadmund died a month later after a heroic reign of seven months; Eadric was murdered at the king's order; Eadwig, Eadmund's brother was similarly removed; and in July, 1017, Canute married Ælfgifu, or Emma, Eadmund's widow, a strange union which some writers attribute to political motives. Canute already had two sons, Harold and Sweyn, by another wife, but the right of succession was to be with the offspring of the new union.

Thus at the age of twenty-three, by right of might, Canute stood master of the realm; and if he was received unanimously by the people, it was because none durst oppose him. From this forward, however, his one desire seemed to be to wipe out the memory of the bloodshed and horror in which his kingship had been secured. The Danish host, a fruitful source of animosity, was dismissed after a danegeld of £72,000 had been raised, London alone contributing £15,000. Canute retained the crews of forty ships as a body-guard, known as the huscarls or thingmanna. "Eadgar's Law", the old constitution of the realm, was revived and Dane and Englishman stood on a level footing. The Church had suffered heavily at Canute's hands, but he sought her friendship and built a church at Assandun to commemorate the victory; rebuilt the church of St. Eadmund at Bury and established the monks there; and was a benefactor in many other places, contributing even to the erection of the cathedral of Chartres. On his visits to Denmark he took many missionaries with him, among whom were Ranier, Bernhard, and Gerbrand, Bishops of Fionia, Sconen, and Zealand. In 1026 Canute made a pilgrimage to Rome, his path being marked by his charities. He records in a letter his joy at visiting the tombs of the Apostles; his meeting with Pope John and Emperor Conrad; his plea for security for English and Danish travellers to Rome; the pope's promise to lighten the tax for the pallium; and he adds his own vow to rule justly and regrets the misdeeds of his youth.

Canute's greatest gift to his people was peace, says Green. Eighteen years unbroken by domestic strife laid the foundations of a national tranquillity. The kingdom was divided into four earldoms, and little by little Danish names disappear and are replaced by English (Freeman, Norman Conquest, I, 289). The people are to "love and worship one God and love King Cnut with right truthfulness". The ferocity which mutilated the hostages was not burnt out, for the king struck down one of his huscarls with his own hand. But he pronounced heavy sentence upon his deed and, on another occasion, is said to have rebuked his flatterers by placing his crown upon the crucifix of the cathedral of Winchester. From the time his sceptre is secure, a sincere zeal for his people's good shines out in his life. The yoke is lightened and his benefactions are widespread. He is a patron of poets and a lover of minstrelsy, and upon hearing the monks of Ely chant on Candlemas, he breaks out into the famous song:—


Merie sungen ðe muneches binnen Ely,
Ða Cnut Ching reu ðer by;
Roweð, Cnihtes, noer ðe land,
And here we þes muneches sæng.
(Merrily sang the monks of Ely when Cnut King rowed by. Row, boatmen, near the land, and hear we these monks sing.)

Intriguing, ambitious, and violent, Canute yet atoned for his early cruelty by a Christianity that was not unworthy. He came as an invader and ruthless destroyer, and by a change of temperament as remarkable as it was far-reaching in its effects, remained to rule, in justice and peace, a people whose part he wholly espoused. He was buried in the old minster at Winchester.

E.F. SAXTON
Transcribed by Gerald M. Knight
 

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It was Hardacanute who died because he ate too much, right?
 

King of Men

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What you say is true, but if you're going to go about criticising people's spelling on this forum, you will not only annoy one hell of a lot of posters, you will also have a job at which Hercules would have quailed. The regrowing heads of the hydra were nothing compared to the immense hardiness of bad spelling.
More generally, I think that as long as the post is in English, Canute is indeed the correct spelling, just as München becomes Munich, Wien is Vienna, and so on. (God knows how the Polish spell Warsaw - I'm not going to try). At least this is so by the standard of accepted usage in the English-speaking countries. Whether this says something about our standards of correct language, or the immense arrogance of English-speakers, I am not certain.
 

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Lt. General
Mar 18, 2001
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Originally posted by King of Men
Whether this says something about our standards of correct language, or the immense arrogance of English-speakers, I am not certain. [/B]


Well, there is a long tradition of "translating" the name of kings, and I wouldn't call it arrogant. We do exactly the same in Norwegian:

Louis=Ludvig
Charles=Karl
Henry=Henrik
etc
 

Styrbiorn

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And besides it doesn't really matter as we (or Danish/Norwegian) do not spell the names of Vikings age Scandinavians as they did.
Or do you still spell Harald Fairhair like HarvaldR? ;)
 

Styrbiorn

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And the reason is a non-existing spelling standard. Everyone spelled names and words after their own liking, thus causing head-ache and discussion between people living 50 generations after them.
 

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Lt. General
Mar 18, 2001
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Originally posted by Styrbiorn
And besides it doesn't really matter as we (or Danish/Norwegian) do not spell the names of Vikings age Scandinavians as they did.
Or do you still spell Harald Fairhair like HarvaldR? ;)


Only after 8-10 bottles of beer... ;)