Difference between revisions of "Stone of Mora"
(Created page with "The '''Stone of Mora''' was one of the names of the Stone of Destiny. ''("Rock of Ages")'' ==Real World Background== The Stone of Mora was used as part of the coronati...") |
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− | The '''Stone of Mora''' was one of the names of the [[Stone of Destiny]]. ''( | + | The '''Stone of Mora''' was one of the names of the [[Stone of Destiny]]. ''([[Rock of Ages|"Rock of Ages"]])'' |
==Real World Background== | ==Real World Background== | ||
+ | The Stones of Mora (''Mora Stenar'' in Swedish) was used as part of the coronation ritual for the Kings of Sweden, up to the sixteenth century, as a parallel to the Stone of Destiny's role in crowning kings in [[Ireland]], [[Scotland]], and [[England]]. Unlike those coronations, the King of Sweden was elected and a tribute stone was placed on the coronation stone until the election of the next monarch. While the primary coronation stone and corresponding tribute stones were destroyed in 1515 in a civil war with Denmark, fragments of the tribute stones have been collected and preserved to the modern day. [https://denstoredanske.lex.dk/Morastenene] | ||
− | + | ==See Also== | |
+ | *{{wikipedia|Stones_of_Mora}} | ||
[[Category:Canon]] | [[Category:Canon]] | ||
[[Category:Objects]] | [[Category:Objects]] | ||
[[Category:Real world]] | [[Category:Real world]] |
Latest revision as of 21:56, 1 July 2024
The Stone of Mora was one of the names of the Stone of Destiny. ("Rock of Ages")
Real World Background
The Stones of Mora (Mora Stenar in Swedish) was used as part of the coronation ritual for the Kings of Sweden, up to the sixteenth century, as a parallel to the Stone of Destiny's role in crowning kings in Ireland, Scotland, and England. Unlike those coronations, the King of Sweden was elected and a tribute stone was placed on the coronation stone until the election of the next monarch. While the primary coronation stone and corresponding tribute stones were destroyed in 1515 in a civil war with Denmark, fragments of the tribute stones have been collected and preserved to the modern day. [1]
See Also
- Stone of Mora at Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia