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King Frederick VI of Denmark and Norway (January 28, 1768 - December 3, 1839), reigned as King of Denmark from 1808 to 1839, and as king of Norway from 1808 to 1814. He also served as Regent of Denmark from 1784 to 1808 under his father's name, just like his British cousin The Prince of Wales, later King George IV. His mother, Caroline Matilda, was a sister of King George III. His father, Christian VII, had major psychological problems, including suspected schizophrenia, expressed by catatonic periods, that resulted in his standing down from power for most of his reign. During the regency, Frederick instituted widespread liberal reforms with the assistance of Chief Minister Andreas Peter Bernstorff, including the abolition of serfdom in 1788. Crises encountered during his reign include disagreement with the British over neutral shipping. This resulted in two British attacks on Danish shipping in 1801 and 1807. The former attack is known as the Battle of Copenhagen.
When the throne of Sweden showed signs of becoming unoccupied in 1809, Frederick was interested in becoming elected there, too. Frederick actually was the first monarch of Denmark and Norway to descend from Gustav I of Sweden who had secured Sweden's independence after union period with other Scandinavian countries. (Also Frederick's sister was such descendant, both through their mother and her mother. As well as Hereditary Prince Frederick of Denmark, their uncle, who descended through queen Juliane.) However, firstly Frederick's brother-in-law the prince Augustus of Augustenborg got elected, then the French Marshal Bernadotte. After his defeat in the Napoleonic Wars 1814 and the loss of Norway Frederick VI, carried through an authoritatarian and reactionary course quite giving up the liberal ideas of his years as a prince regent. Censorship and suppression of all opposition together with bad economic terms of the country made this period of his reign somewhat gloomy, though the king himself in general maintained his position of a "patriarch" and a well-meaning autocrat. From the 1830s the economic depression was eased a bit and from 1834 the king reluctantly accepted a small democratic innovation by the creation of the Assemblies of the Estate (purely consultative regional assemblies). The surviving children of King Frederick VI and Queen Marie Sophie Frederikke were their two daughters:
After discovery of Haraldskær Woman in a peat bog in Jutland in the year 1835, Frederick VI ordered a royal interment in an elaborately carved sarcophagus for the Iron Age mummy, decreeing it to be the body of Queen Gunhild. Later this identity proved incorrect, but the action suited his political agenda of the time.
cs:Frederik VI. da:Frederik 6. de:Friedrich VI. (Dänemark und Norwegen) es:Federico VI de Dinamarca fr:Frédéric VI de Danemark gl:Federico VI de Dinamarca it:Federico VI di Danimarca nl:Frederik VI van Denemarken ja:フレデリク6世 (デンマーク王) no:Frederik VI nn:Fredrik VI av Danmark-Norge pl:Fryderyk VI Oldenburg pt:Frederico VI da Dinamarca sv:Fredrik VI av Danmark
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