Christina (Kristina) (December 8, 1626 – April 19, 1689), later known as Maria Christina Alexandra and sometimes Count Dohna, was Queen regnant of Sweden from 1632 to 1654. She was the only legitimate child of King Gustav II Adolf. As the heiress presumptive she succeeded her father to the throne of Sweden upon his death at the Battle of Lützen (November 6, 1632) during Sweden's intervention in Germany in the Thirty Years' War. After having converted to Catholicism and abdicated her throne, spend her latter years in France and Rome, where she was buried in St. Peter's Basilica.
Queen Christina's mother, Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg, came from the Hohenzollern family. She was a woman of quite distraught temperament, and her attempts to bestow guilt on Christina for her difficult birth, or just the horror story itself, may have prejudiced Christina against the prospect of having to produce an heir to the throne.
Her father gave orders that Christina should be brought up as a prince. Even as a child she displayed great precociousness. In 1649, when she was twenty-three, she invited the philosopher Descartes to Sweden to tutor her.
National policy was directed during the first half of Christina's reign by her guardian, regent and adviser Axel Oxenstierna, chancellor to her father and until her majority in 1644 the principal member of the governing regency council. As ruler, Christina resisted demands from the other estates (clergy, burgesses and peasants) in the Riksdag of the Estates of 1650 for the reduction of tax-exempt noble landholdings.
Her conversion was however not the only reason for her abdication, as there was increasing discontent with, in the words of her critics, her arbitrary and wasteful ways. Within ten years she had created 17 counts, 46 barons and 428 lesser nobles; to provide these new peers with adequate appanages, she had sold or mortgaged crown property representing an annual income of 1,200,000 riksdaler. There were clear signs that Christina was growing weary of the cares of what remained a provincial government; even if with large conquered territory.
Growing wearied of acting behind the scenes in her later years, she made several attempts to gain the crown of a country, even launching an abortive attempt to reclaim the Swedish throne.
She left her large and important library to the Papacy on her death (April 19, 1689).
She is one of only four women to be given the honour of being buried in the crypt of St. Peter's Basilica, alongside the remains of the popes. A monument to her was carved later on and adorns a column close to the permanent display of Michelangelo's Pietà. At the opposite pillar across the nave is the Monument to the Royal Stuarts, commemorating the other 17th century monarchs who lost their thrones due to their Catholicism.
The complex character of Christina has inspired numerous plays, books, and operatic works. August Strindberg's 1901 Christina depicts her as a protean, impulsive creature. "Each one gets the Christina he deserves" she remarks. The most famous fictional treatment is the classic feature film Queen Christina in 1933. It starred another complex female Swedish character who was herself suspected of being lesbian – Greta Garbo. Another feature film, The Abdication starred the Norwegian actress Liv Ullmann, and was based on a play by Ruth Wolff.
1626 births | 1689 deaths | House of Vasa | Swedish monarchs | Swedish queens | Rulers of Finland | Female rulers of Finland | Queens regnant | Roman Catholic monarchs
Cristin o Sweden | Kristina af Sverige | Christina I. (Schweden) | Kristiina | Cristina de Suecia | Christine de Suède | Kristín Svíadrottning | Cristina di Svezia | כריסטינה מלכת שבדיה | Christina van Zweden (1626–1689) | クリスティーナ (スウェーデン女王) | Christina av Sverige | Kristina av Sverige | Krystyna Waza | Cristina da Suécia | Кристина Аугуста | Kristiina | Drottning Kristina
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