After the death of Archbishop
Aslak Bolt in 1450 it came down between the
Cathedral Chapter, the King and the Pope in a dispute over the right of succession to the throne of the Archbishop in
Nidaros. The Chapter had immediately chosen the
canon, Olav Trondsson, as the successor. The King of Denmark and Norway,
Christian I of Denmark, protested the election. He wanted his follower
Marcellus of Skálholt as the archbishop. He and the Cathedral Chapter took their dispute to an arbitration court and the court invalidated the election of Olav Trondsson. Under the pressure from the King, the chapter then voted for Marcellus. But the choice was rejected by
Pope Nicholas V because Marcellus was considered to be a swindler and adventurer. On 27 February 1452, the Pope settled the matter with the appointment of Henrik Kalteisen to keep his own man in the Church of Norway. Kalteisen paid for this appointment 800
florins and a few other smaller amounts to the Papal Chamber. In the summer of 1452 Kalteisen travelled to first
Copenhagen and then Bergen. In Copenhagen, he was welcomed by the King. But, as soon as Kalteisen was gone, Christian I declared in his letters that he would not accept him as the Archbishop of Nidaros. Calling him "
irreligious", he considered the rumors of his holiness and education to be exaggerated. Meanwhile, in Bergen, Kalteisen spent the winter of 1452 and 1453 administrating his new archbisphoric. Most of his time was spent on numerous legal issues of the church in Norway and the parish business from
Iceland, where he was known as
Hinrik Kaldajárn in Icelandic. On the morning of
Pentecost Sunday, 20 May 1453, he was solemnly consecrated in Nidaros. He was well received by the Cathedral Chapter there but a couple of Norwegian monasteries did not wish to be under his jurisdiction. As it happened, the new archbishop lasted for only a few months in Nidaros; he neglected his new home, calling it a "barn". At that time, a war between Denmark and
Sweden was brewing. On his way to
Trondheim for the consecration, the Archbishop and his companions were attacked on 25 April 1453 by the Swededish-Norwegian,
Ørjan Karlson, and his troops. The Archbishop and his men were able to fight them off. Ørjan and his men fled afterwards to his native
Jämtland. It is believed that the King of Sweden,
Knut Knutsson, was behind this attack. Therefore, after the consecration, Kalteisen moved to Bergen for safety. Nevertheless, Kalteisen tried to take the initiative with plans to inspect not just the Cathedral Chapter but the whole Archdiocese. His copybooks showed that he invested a lot of effort in familiarizing himself with the circumstances of his Archdiocese. He made a number of decisions in ecclesiastical law but he found the time to write a little history of the diocese of the
Faroe Islands. He was also planning to build the new cathedral in Nidaros. == The Opposition ==