England Cnut was the younger son of the Danish king
Sweyn Forkbeard. In early 1014 Sweyn and the Danes were in the midst of invading England. Cnut joined the expedition, and was given command of the fleet in the
River Trent during one of Sweyn's visit to the south. Sweyn died on 3 February, and Cnut had the early support of his Danish troops. But the invasion fell apart as the men of the
Kingdom of Lindsey failed to supply horses they had promised. English nobles then reinstalled King
Æthelred—whom they had previously deposed and exiled—after he promised reforms, and Cnut returned to Denmark. Cnut's brother
Harald succeeded Sweyn as King of Denmark. With the Danish throne out of his grasp, Cnut decided to invade England in his own right. He raised a fleet by promising shares of spoils and embarked for England in the summer of 1015;
Eric Haakonsson of Norway provided. The English were divided by intrigue among Æthelred the king, his sons, and other nobles, and the moment was opportune for Cnut to invade. Æthelred died on 23 April 1016—before Cnut could begin his attack in earnest—and a succession crisis ensued. Londoners chose Æthelred's son
Edmund as his replacement, but the nobility swore fealty to Cnut at
Southampton. Cnut began his campaign with a blockade of London, but was beaten by Edmund at the Battle of Otford. The Danes then moved into
Essex where they defeated Edmund's forces at the
Battle of Assandun. Edmund and Cnut struck an agreement under which Edmund would retain
Wessex and Cnut would rule all of England north of the
River Thames. Edmund's rule was to be short; he died on 30 November 1016, which left Cnut as the sole King of England. Cnut cemented his power by marrying Æthelred's widow
Emma in the summer of 1017. (He was already married to another English noblewoman,
Ælfgifu of Northampton, at this time). In 1018, he paid off his invasion fleet—with money contributed largely from the citizens of London—and was fully recognised as King of England.
Denmark King Harald died childless in 1018 or 1019, leaving the country without a king. Cnut was his brother's heir and went to Denmark in 1019 to claim the throne. While in Denmark he sent his subjects in England a letter saying he was abroad to avert an unspecified "danger", and he only returned to quell incipient rebellions. One Danish chronicle states that the Danes had previously deposed Harald in favour of Cnut, then brought back Harald because of Cnut's frequent absences. King
Olaf II of Norway and King
Anund Jacob of Sweden viewed the combined Anglo-Danish kingdom as a threat—Cnut's father Sweyn had asserted power over both their countries. Olaf attacked Denmark in 1025 or 1026 during one of Cnut's frequent absences.
Ulf Jarl, Cnut's brother-in-law and former Danish regent, and Ulf's brother, joined the battle. Cnut surprised Olaf and defeated the Swedish fleet at the
Battle of the Helgeå. Olaf fled, thus abandoning his designs on Cnut's rule in Denmark. Ulf's assistance at Helgeå did not allay Cnut's suspicions of Ulf's treachery. Chronicles say that on
Christmas of 1026, Cnut ordered a
housecarl to murder Ulf in , later
Roskilde Cathedral, on the Danish island of
Zealand. Cnut went to
Rome in 1027; the visit would have been both personal—
penance for his sin of ordering Ulf's murder—and political—to assert himself as an equal to any other European monarch at the coronation of
Conrad II as
Holy Roman Emperor. The visit was fruitful. Cnut negotiated a reduction on tolls levied on
Northern European pilgrims to Rome, and on the Papal tax on the
pallium granted to English archbishops. He persuaded the Emperor to cede back to Denmark
Schleswig and a strip of ancient Danish territory between Hedeby and the Eider that the Germans had been occupying. And the Emperor agreed to have his son
Henry marry Cnut's daughter
Gunnhild, further strengthening ties.
Norway Olaf II had extended his power throughout Norway while Jarl Erik was with Cnut in England. Cnut's enmity with him extended further back: Æthelred had returned to England in a fleet provided by Olaf. In 1024, Cnut had offered to let Olaf govern Norway as his vassal; but after Helgeå, he set about undermining his unpopular rule with bribes, and in 1028 set out with 50 ships to subjugate Norway. A large contingent of Danish ships joined him, and Olaf withdrew into the
Oslo Fjord while Cnut sailed along the coast, landing at various points and receiving oaths of allegiance from the local chieftains. Finally at
Nidaros, now
Trondheim, he was acclaimed king at the Eyrathing, and in a few months Olaf fled to Sweden. In 1030, Olaf attempted to return, but the people of the Trondheim area did not want him back and he was defeated and killed at the
Battle of Stiklestad.
Sweden After Helgeå, Cnut also claimed to rule "part of Sweden" together with England, Denmark, and Norway. There is evidence for his having had coins minted either in the capital
Sigtuna or in
Lund—then part of Denmark—with the inscription
CNVT REX SW ("Cnut King of the Swedes"). (
Western Geatland or
Blekinge have also been suggested as production locales). The inscription may have been propaganda or boasting, as Cnut did not actually have to be present in Sweden for these coins to be produced—he also had coins minted which proclaimed him ruler of Ireland. These coins are however usually regarded as copies of coins minted in Denmark (curiously, coins stating that the Swedish king
Olof Skötkonung was King of England have also been found in Sigtuna). Irish coinage and Swedish history at this early date is very uncertain.
Ouster Anglo-Saxon sources state
Anund Jakob won the
Battle of Helgeå. The Danes controlled Svealand for at most three years. Anund ousted Cnut; Swedish sources assert that Anund controlled the country by 1030, and the 11th-century chronicler
Adam of Bremen described Anund choosing the bishops for all of Sweden. In that same year, Olaf attempted to retake the Norwegian throne from Cnut, his second such attempt; Anund supported Olaf and sent Swedish troops to aid his campaign.
Tributary areas Cnut allied with the
Poles and received tribute from the
Wends. In 1022, together with
Godwin and Ulf Jarl, he took a fleet east into the
Baltic to consolidate his rule over the coastal areas which the Danish kings had dominated from
Jomsborg. Upon returning to Britain from his 1027 visit to Rome, Cnut led an army into
Scotland and made
vassals of three of its kings; one of these was High King
Malcolm. Another was
Echmarcach mac Ragnaill, a sea-king whose lands included
Galloway and the
Isle of Man and who would become
king of Dublin in 1036. It is likely that the Welsh paid Cnut tribute on the model of the
Danegeld that Æthelred had instituted to pay off the Danes. Cnut's rule re-inaugurated Anglo-Danish dominion over the Celtic kingdoms that had weakened under English kings; he punished those who had supported Olaf against him. == Religion ==