King of the Goths

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The title of King of the Goths was for many centuries borne by both the Kings of Sweden and the Kings of Denmark, denoting sovereignty or claimed sovereignty over the antique people of the Goths, which is sort of poetic explanation.

To kings of Denmark, it chiefly meant the island of Gotland, traditionally regarded as the original home of the Goths, and to kings of Sweden, it meant the other of the two constituent parts of that kingdom (see Landsof Sweden), the Gothenland, southern "half" of Sweden. In Germanic languages, the name was Götes konung and in Latin, gothorum rex. The title also was a continuation of the independent early medieval kingdom of the Geats.

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It is actually believed that a note in a papal letter copy in about 1100 means Inge and Halsten, Kings of the Goths—they had recently lost the upper svear part of their kingdom.

In a papal letter dated 5 September 1164, king Charles VII of Sweden (Karl Sverkersson) (c 1130–67; reigned 1161–1167) already was addressed as "rex Sweorum et Gothorum".

The first Swedish king to regularly use the title was King Magnus III of Sweden, particularly after he had in c 1278 had his final win over his deposed brother Valdemar who had hitherto held lands of Westrogothia. First Sveriges och Götes Konung up to later decades of Gustaf I of Sweden, then Sveriges, Götes och Vendes Konung, was used in official documentation up to the accession of Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden in 1973, who was the first monarch officially proclaimed Sveriges Konung ("King of Sweden") and nothing else.

The first Danish king to use the title was King Valdemar IV (reigned 1340 to 1375), who adopted it in 1361 after he conquered Gotland. The Danish Kings continued to use the title over the next six hundred years until 1972, when Queen Margrethe II succeeded. She abandoned the use of all the royal titles except for that of Denmark's King, which is the royal style today.

The Danish Coat of Arms contained, until 1972, a quarter of the title of Goths: it depicts blue heraldical leopard with nine sea-leaves—originating from the ducal escutcheon of Halland, not from the lamb insignia of Gotland (although Gotland's Agnus Dei was used as another field occasionally, in the extended versions of the Danish royal Coat of Arms).

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