Eric
the Holy or Erik the Saint was acknowledged king in most provinces of
Sweden in 1150, and his family line subsisted for a hundred years. He
did much to establish Christianity in Upper Sweden and built or
completed at Old Uppsala the first large church to be erected in the
country. It is said that all the ancient laws and constitutions of the
kingdom were, by his orders, collected into one volume, which came to be
known as King Eric’s Law or The Code of Uppland.
The
king soon had to take up arms against the heathen Finns. He vanquished
them in battle, and at his desire, St. Henry, Bishop of Uppsala, who had
accompanied him on the expedition, remained in Finland to evangelize
the people.
The king’s zeal for the Catholic Faith was far from
pleasing to his nobles, and we are told that they entered into a
conspiracy against him with Magnus, the son of the king of Denmark. King
Eric was hearing Mass on the day after the feast of the Ascension when
news was brought that a Danish army, swollen with Swedish rebels, was
marching against him and was close at hand. With unwavering calm he
answered, “Let us at least finish the sacrifice; the rest of the feast I
shall keep elsewhere”. After Mass was over, he recommended his soul to
God, and marched forth in advance of his guards. The conspirators rushed
upon him, beat him down from his horse, and beheaded him. His death
occurred on May 18 in 1161.
The relics of St. Eric IX of Sweden
are preserved in the Cathedral of Uppsala, and the saintly king's effigy
appears on the coat of arms of the city of Stockholm.
Tuesday, May 18, 2021
St. Eric IX of Sweden
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