Prince Carl Gustav, Duke of Småland

Prince Carl Gustav, Duke of Småland (25 August 1782 23 March 1783) was a prince of Sweden.

Prince Carl Gustav
Duke of Småland
Carl Gustav as painted by Gustaf Lundberg
Born(1782-08-25)25 August 1782
Drottningholm Palace
Died(1783-03-23)23 March 1783 (6 months 26 days)
Stockholm Palace, Stockholm, Sweden
HouseOldenburg
FatherKing Gustav III
MotherSophia Magdalena of Denmark

Early life

Born at Drottningholm, Gustav was the second son in the marriage of King Gustav III (1746–1792) and Queen Sophia Magdalena (1746–1813) of Sweden. He had one elder sibling, Gustav Adolph who would become King of Sweden. The baby was described as strong, healthy and big, and born as he was shortly after the death of King Gustav's mother, Carl Gustav's father was especially fond of him.

Death

In March 1783 the young prince suddenly took ill, probably from inappropriate food[1] and died when he was little over a half year old. He was interred in Riddarholm Church in Stockholm.

His father took the death very hard and had never been seen so grief stricken, unable even to attend the little boy's funeral. After Carl Gustav's death Gustav III began new phases in his own life, travelling far away from Sweden, gradually increasing his power and starting war. Several writers have attributed the change in his personality and activity at least in part to his strong reaction at the death of his second son.[2][3]

Arms

gollark: Amplitude shift keying.
gollark: Hmm, maybe this e-graph thing could be applied to my longstanding dream of automating trigonometric identities.
gollark: We can see approximately what the brain is doing via something something MRI.
gollark: There is no "too much" messing with timelines.
gollark: You have to quote the time. I can support a myriad SI prefix.

References

  1. Erik Lönnroth in Den stora rollen ISBN 91-1-863652-7 p. 84
  2. Oswald Kuylenstierna in Gustav III; Hans Liv, Person och Gärning, Stockholm 1921 p 138
  3. Leif Landén in Gustaf III en biografi ISBN 91-46-21000-8 p. 61
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