, who in 1680 persuaded the
Riksdag to repudiate the Instrument of Government and accept an
absolute monarchy. The Instrument of Government was endorsed by the
Riksdag of the Estates in July 1634 and subsequently applied across Sweden, although technically it did not have legal force as it was never formally confirmed by either Queen Christina or her successor
King Charles X Gustav. Indeed, the latter strongly resented the restrictions it imposed upon his role in the government, and he used the Swedish defeat in the
Dano-Swedish War (1658-1660) to argue that the current arrangement was inadequate. He therefore proposed to the 1660 session of the Riksdag that the Instrument be rewritten to give him greater freedom of action, but his efforts came to naught due to his sudden death in February of that year. The Instrument thus remained in force
de facto down to 1680, when Charles Gustav’s son
Charles XI used the poor Swedish performance in another conflict, the
Scanian War (1675-9), to revive his father’s argument that the only way to ensure the security of the
Swedish Empire was by centralising power in the person of the monarch. The Riksdag was convinced, declaring on 1680 that the king "was not to be bound by any instrument of government, only by the laws of Sweden", thereby rendering the Instrument of Government
void and establishing an
absolute monarchy in Sweden for the first time. Despite the introduction of absolutism, Charles XI continued to implicitly accept many of the limits on royal power laid out in the Instrument of Government. His son and successor
Charles XII was less sensitive, especially toward the end of his reign, when the strains imposed by the
Great Northern War led him to rule in an increasingly high-handed and
autocratic fashion. His arbitrary interference in the business of government and his refusal to take advice from his officials led to mounting frustration with the absolutist system, and after the king's death in 1718 it was overthrown and replaced by a
constitutional monarchy. The document drawn up to articulate the new system was inspired by the 1634 Instrument of Government, and was given the same title (see
Instrument of Government (1719)), although it differed from its predecessor in that it was explicitly intended to function as a
constitution. ==See also==