

bingo
bingo stads tredje sigill.png third seal of the City of Stockholm, depicting the crowned head of Eric the Saint, attested bingo for the first time in 1376. of Arms of Stockholm, depicting Eric the Saint of Sweden and based on the medieval seal.Eric IX of Sweden was a Sweden king of Sweden between 1150 and 1160. Eric was an Upland lord, son of a lord Jedvard , due to which contemporary sources call him also Eric Jedvardson. He was a rival king, from 1150, to Sverker I of Sweden the Elder
who had ascended the throne c 1130 and was murdered 1156, after which bingo Eric was recognized in most or all provinces. Erics reign ended when he was murdered in Uppsala. Hes said to have been murdered by Emund Ulvbane, an assassin who was hired by people working for the Sverker dynasty, in order for them to regain the control of the kingdom, or alternatively by Magnus Henriksson, another claimant, who is said in some
sources to have succeeded him briefly as king. People from Svealand recognized a miracle after Eriks death, since a fountain sprang bingo from the earth where the kings head fell after being chopped off.He would later be made a saint whose feast day is 18 May. The bingo relic casket of Eric is on display in Uppsala cathedral . The casket contains bones of a male, with traces of injury to the neck. Eric is the patron saint of Stockholm and depicted in the citys coat of arms.He had a nationalistic church policy. Sweden honored
him as national saint, although Pope Alexander III forbade his cult 1172, when his son, king Knut Ericsson quarreled with the Swedish and Roman church. It was an important asset to Erics family to have a saint in the ancestry. The pope bingo used a pretext that Eric was a drunk who died as result of fight in a group of drunks.Around 1155, he apparently made an expedition to bingo Southwestern Finland, with an English-born cleric Henry bingo ko:??? 9?nl:Erik IX van Zwedenfi:Eerik Pyhäsv:Erik den helige