in 1864. Sture's uncle, King Charles VIII named Sture heir to Charles' personal domains before his death in 1470, and left Sture in charge of the crown lands, including the city of Stockholm and
Stockholm Castle. On the death of King Charles on 15 May 1470, Sture immediately became the most powerful noble and political force in the country and was elected
Lord Protector and
Regent of Sweden (riksföreståndare) by the
Riksmöte in
Arboga on 1 May 1471. Sture consolidated his position through the victory of Brunkeberg. '', commonly attributed to
Bernt Notke, in
Storkyrkan,
Stockholm At the
Battle of Brunkeberg on 10 October 1471, which was fought around
Brunkebergsåsen outside the northern gates of Stockholm, his Swedish separatist army triumphed against Danish King
Christian I's Swedish unionist and
Danish forces, injuring Christian and routing the unionist army. This victory elevated Sture to the position of a national savior. The sculpture
Saint George and the Dragon in
Storkyrkan in
Stockholm, commonly attributed to the German sculptor
Bernt Notke, was raised to commemorate the battle. For a quarter of a century he ruled Sweden making the regency almost an office in its own right. He was supported by the
peasantry, the commercial interests of the mining district of
Bergslagen and the lower nobility, playing them out against the unionist high-ranked nobility and clergy and managing a difficult act of balance towards the Danish demands of reunion. In a meeting in
Kalmar in 1483, the high nobility confirmed the new Danish king
Hans as the true king of Sweden on condition of extensive privileges and guarantees granted to the high nobility, clergy and Privy Council, but Sture nevertheless managed to hold on to the political power for the time being, refusing to give up his office as Regent. Sture's reign saw the foundation of the first Swedish university,
Uppsala University, founded by Archbishop
Jakob Ulvsson in 1477 with support from Sture. In 1487, Sture fought a
successful war against the powerful Tott dynasty, forcing them to cede
Öland and
Borgholm to Sweden, while Denmark received
Gotland. As a result of the war, the power the Tott's held sharply declined. In 1493, the Danish and Norwegian king, Hans (also called John I), formed an alliance with
Ivan III of Russia against Sten Sture. From 1495 to 1497, Sten successfully repelled a
Russian invasion of Finland. However, he subsequently fell out with the majority of the Swedish nobility, most prominently
Svante Nilsson, and the Swedish
Privy Council declared him to be deposed as regent on 8 March 1497. == Second regency ==