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Nicolaus Ragvaldi

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Swedish bishop For a medieval Swedish churchman of the same name, see Nicolaus Ragvaldi (monk). For a medieval Norwegian rebel leader of the same name, see Nils Ravaldsson.
Nils Ragvaldsson
Archbishop of Uppsala
Primate of Sweden
ChurchRoman Catholic
ArchdioceseUppsala
Appointed1438
In office1438–1448
PredecessorOlaus Laurentii
SuccessorJöns Bengtsson Oxenstierna
Previous post(s)Bishop of Växjö (1426-1438)
Orders
RankMetropolitan Archbishop
Personal details
Born1380s
Floda, Södermanland, Sweden
Died17 February 1448
NationalitySwede

Nicolaus Ragvaldi (Latinized form of Swedish Nils Ragvaldsson) (born in the early 1380s and died on 17 February 1448) was bishop of Växjö and from 1438–1448 archbishop of Uppsala, Sweden. He is known as an early representative of the Gothicist tradition.

On 12 November 1434 he held a speech at the council of Basel, where he argued that the Swedish monarch, Eric of Pomerania, was a successor to the Gothic kings, and that the Swedish delegation deserved senior rank. The Spanish delegation responded with a claim of seniority because of the Visigoths. Notes of these speeches were written down and preserved, and included by Johannes Magnus when he wrote the influential History of the Nordic People about 150 years later. His research results resulted in Gustav Vasa's son styling himself as Eric XIV, although his father disapproved.

References

Archbishops of Uppsala
Pre-Reformation Catholic Church in Sweden (1164–1557), Protestant Church of Sweden (1531–present)
12th century
Insignia of Archbishop Stefan
Insignia of Archbishop Stefan
13th century
14th century
15th–16th centuries
Catholic titular Archbishops
in exile in Rome during the
Reformation in Sweden
Reformation
Archbishops during the Liturgical Struggle
17th century
18th century
19th century
20th century
21st century


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