The
law of Uppland and
Södermanland states:
The three folklands, that is Tiundaland, Attundaland and Fjärdhundraland, 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. The
Westrogothic law reminded the
Geats that they had to accept this election:
Sveær egho konung at taka ok sva vrækæ meaning
Swedes 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 time before, as attested by Snorri Sturlason's (died 1241) accounts of Swedish history (the speech of
Torgny the Lawspeaker, and the deaths of
Domalde,
Egil,
Aun, and
Jorund 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. The newly elected king also had to go on a traditional journey around Sweden (
Eriksgata), including the Geatish provinces. It was thus a sort of federation where the king started with his election at Mora Thing and then travelled throughout the kingdom to have the election confirmed by the local assemblies. Beginning in 1362 also representatives from Finland took part in the election. The Stone of Mora and many stones which flanked it with inscriptions commemorating the elections of earlier kings, were probably destroyed in 1515 during a civil war. Kings
Gustav Vasa and
John III are said to have tried to reconstruct the Stones of Mora without success. The building where the fragments are now contained was constructed by local military officer
Carl Wijnbladh (1705- 1768). ==Documented elections==