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December Crisis (1768)

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In December 1768, the king refused to sign state documents in protest to his limited power and on 15 December, the king formally resigned his throne in order to bring about the gathering of a new Riksdag, during which a reform to increase his capacity could be introduced. This created a difficult
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On 20 December the government agreed to assemble the Riksdag and promised new reforms, and the king thereby agreed to retake the throne, and thereby, the crisis was averted and the government could function again.
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The December Crisis is described as the only occasion when the king himself attempted to assert his power; previous attempts had always been staged by his queen,
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The Riksdag was however not assembled until 1769, and it did not give the royal house more than an increased allowance.
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rather than the queen; however, the crisis could not be used for a coup because the Caps party broke an agreement.
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political situation, as he had thereby technically abdicated and the nation was in interregnum. The
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Olof Jägerskiöld (1945). Lovisa Ulrika. Stockholm: Wahlström & Widstrand. ISBN
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Gustaf Lundberg - Portrait of Adolf Frederick, King of Sweden - WGA13779
139:, Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (art av L. Stavenow.), hämtad 2015-10-03. 64: 136: 81:
suggested that the crisis could be used to stage a coup to establish
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Index


Swedish
Adolf Frederick, King of Sweden
Riksdag of the Estates
Louisa Ulrika of Prussia
Louis Auguste Le Tonnelier de Breteuil
Hovpartiet
absolute monarchy
Hats (party)
Caps (party)
the Crown Prince
Coup of 1756
Revolution of 1772
urn:sbl:5574
Categories
18th-century coups d'état
18th century in Sweden
Conflicts in 1768
1768 in Sweden
18th century in Stockholm
Attempted coups in Sweden
Sweden during the Age of Liberty
Conspiracies

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