Stones of Mora was the place where the Swedish kings were elected. The origin of the tradition is unknown.
The law of Uppland and Södermanland state: The three folklands, i.e. Tiundaland, Attundaland and Fjädrundaland, shall first elect king. Then the election will be sanctioned by the lawspeaker of Uppland and then by all his subordinate lawspeakers in the rest of the kingdom, one by one. This process was done during the so called Eriksgata.
In the Westrogothic law, bishop Brynolf Algotsson (1279-1290) of Skara reminded the Geats that they had to accept this election by adding the following line on the top of the first page: Sveær egho konung at taka ok sva vrækæ meaning It is the Swedes who have the right of choosing and deposing the king.
The detail that the Swedes were not only entitled to elect their king, but that they also had the right to depose him was institutionalized a long before, to which testify Snorri Sturluson's (dead 1241) accounts of Swedish history (the speech of Þorgnýr the Lawspeaker, and the deaths of Domalde and Egil in the Heimskringla). The location was on the border of a wetland, and according to Snorri, five kings had been drowned in this wetland, when the people had been displeased.
One of the fragments is known as the stone Three Crowns since it is the earliest known example of the use of Sweden's national symbol. The fragment is what remains of the election of Albert of Mecklenburg.
Uppland | Swedish monarchy | History of Sweden | Germanic paganism
Mora Sten | Stein von Mora | Piedra de Mora | Mora köve | Morasteinen | Moran kivet | Mora sten
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It uses material from the
"Stones of Mora".
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