Frederick III King of Denmark 1609-1670

Paternal Family Tree: Oldenburg

On 18th March 1609 Frederick III King of Denmark was born to Christian IV King of Denmark [aged 31].

In 1643 Frederick III King of Denmark [aged 33] and Sophie Amalie Hanover Queen Consort Denmark [aged 14] were married. She the daughter of George Hanover Duke Brunswick-Lüneburg and Anne Eleonore Hesse Darmstadt Duchess Brunswick-Lüneburg [aged 41]. He the son of Christian IV King of Denmark [aged 65]. They were sixth cousins.

On 15th April 1646 [his son] Christian V King of Denmark and Norway was born to Frederick III King of Denmark [aged 37] and [his wife] Sophie Amalie Hanover Queen Consort Denmark [aged 18]. He married 15th June 1667 his fourth cousin Charlotte Amalie Hesse-Kassel Queen Consort Denmark and Norway, daughter of Wilhelm "The Just" VI Hesse-Kassel and Hedwig Sophia Hohenzollern, and had issue.

On 1st September 1647 [his daughter] Anna Sophie Oldenburg was born to Frederick III King of Denmark [aged 38] and [his wife] Sophie Amalie Hanover Queen Consort Denmark [aged 19]. She married 9th October 1666 her third cousin once removed John George Wettin III Elector Saxony and had issue.

On 28th February 1648 [his father] Christian IV King of Denmark [aged 70] died. His son Frederick [aged 38] succeeded III King of Denmark. [his wife] Sophie Amalie Hanover Queen Consort Denmark [aged 19] by marriage Queen Consort Denmark.

On 11th April 1649 [his daughter] Frederica Amalia Oldenburg was born to Frederick III King of Denmark [aged 40] and [his wife] Sophie Amalie Hanover Queen Consort Denmark [aged 21].

On 21st June 1650 [his daughter] Wilhelmina Ernestina Oldenburg was born to Frederick III King of Denmark [aged 41] and [his wife] Sophie Amalie Hanover Queen Consort Denmark [aged 22].

On 11th October 1651 [his son] Frederick Oldenburg was born to Frederick III King of Denmark [aged 42] and [his wife] Sophie Amalie Hanover Queen Consort Denmark [aged 23]. He died aged less than one years old.

On 14th March 1652 [his son] Frederick Oldenburg died.

On 2nd April 1653 [his son] Prince George of Denmark 1st Duke Cumberland was born to Frederick III King of Denmark [aged 44] and [his wife] Sophie Amalie Hanover Queen Consort Denmark [aged 25] at Copenhagen Castle. He married 28th July 1683 his second cousin once removed Queen Anne of England Scotland and Ireland, daughter of King James II of England Scotland and Ireland and Anne Hyde Duchess of York, and had issue.

William of Worcester's Chronicle of England

William of Worcester, born around 1415, and died around 1482 was secretary to John Fastolf, the renowned soldier of the Hundred Years War, during which time he collected documents, letters, and wrote a record of events. Following their return to England in 1440 William was witness to major events. Twice in his chronicle he uses the first person: 1. when writing about the murder of Thomas, 7th Baron Scales, in 1460, he writes '… and I saw him lying naked in the cemetery near the porch of the church of St. Mary Overie in Southwark …' and 2. describing King Edward IV's entry into London in 1461 he writes '… proclaimed that all the people themselves were to recognize and acknowledge Edward as king. I was present and heard this, and immediately went down with them into the city'. William’s Chronicle is rich in detail. It is the source of much information about the Wars of the Roses, including the term 'Diabolical Marriage' to describe the marriage of Queen Elizabeth Woodville’s brother John’s marriage to Katherine, Dowager Duchess of Norfolk, he aged twenty, she sixty-five or more, and the story about a paper crown being placed in mockery on the severed head of Richard, 3rd Duke of York.

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On 11th September 1656 [his daughter] Ulrika Eleonora Oldenburg was born to Frederick III King of Denmark [aged 47] and [his wife] Sophie Amalie Hanover Queen Consort Denmark [aged 28]. She married 6th May 1680 her third cousin twice removed Charles XI King Sweden, son of Charles Gustav X King Sweden and Hedwig Eleonora Queen Consort Sweden, and had issue.

On 16th November 1657 [his daughter] Dorothea Oldenburg was born to Frederick III King of Denmark [aged 48] and [his wife] Sophie Amalie Hanover Queen Consort Denmark [aged 29]. She died aged less than one years old.

On 15th May 1658 [his daughter] Dorothea Oldenburg died.

In 1665 [his brother-in-law] Christian Ludwig Hanover Duke Brunswick-Lüneburg [aged 43] died. His brother George [aged 40] succeeded Duke Brunswick Lüneburg.

Samuel Pepys' Diary. 18th September 1665. By break of day we come to within sight of the fleete, which was a very fine thing to behold, being above 100 ships, great and small; with the flag-ships of each squadron, distinguished by their several flags on their main, fore, or mizen masts. Among others, the Soveraigne, Charles, and Prince; in the last of which my Lord Sandwich [aged 40] was. When we called by her side his Lordshipp was not stirring, so we come to anchor a little below his ship, thinking to have rowed on board him, but the wind and tide was so strong against us that we could not get up to him, no, though rowed by a boat of the Prince's that come to us to tow us up; at last however he brought us within a little way, and then they flung out a rope to us from the Prince and so come on board, but with great trouble and tune and patience, it being very cold; we find my Lord newly up in his night-gown very well. He received us kindly; telling us the state of the fleet, lacking provisions, having no beer at all, nor have had most of them these three weeks or month, and but few days' dry provisions. And indeed he tells us that he believes no fleete was ever set to sea in so ill condition of provision, as this was when it went out last. He did inform us in the business of Bergen1, so as to let us see how the judgment of the world is not to be depended on in things they know not; it being a place just wide enough, and not so much hardly, for ships to go through to it, the yardarmes sticking in the very rocks. He do not, upon his best enquiry, find reason to except against any part of the management of the business by Teddiman; he having staid treating no longer than during the night, whiles he was fitting himself to fight, bringing his ship a-breast, and not a quarter of an hour longer (as is said); nor could more ships have been brought to play, as is thought. Nor could men be landed, there being 10,000 men effectively always in armes of the Danes; nor, says he, could we expect more from the Dane than he did, it being impossible to set fire on the ships but it must burn the towne. But that wherein the Dane did amisse is, that he did assist them, the Dutch, all the while, while he was treating with us, while he should have been neutrall to us both. But, however, he did demand but the treaty of us; which is, that we should not come with more than five ships. A flag of truce is said, and confessed by my Lord, that he believes it was hung out; but while they did hang it out, they did shoot at us; so that it was not either seen perhaps, or fit to cease upon sight of it, while they continued actually in action against us. But the main thing my Lord wonders at, and condemns the Dane for, is, that the blockhead [aged 56], who is so much in debt to the Hollander, having now a treasure more by much than all his Crowne was worth, and that which would for ever have beggared the Hollanders, should not take this time to break with the Hollander, and, thereby paid his debt which must have been forgiven him, and got the greatest treasure into his hands that ever was together in the world.

Note 1. Lord Sandwich was not so successful in convincing other people as to the propriety of his conduct at Bergen as he was with Pepys.

Samuel Pepys' Diary. 1st November 1665. This night coming with Sir W. Batten [aged 64] into Greenwich, Kent [Map] we called upon Coll. Cleggatt, who tells us for certaine that the King of Denmark [aged 56] hath declared to stand for the King of England [aged 35], but since I hear it is wholly false.

Calendar of State Papers Charles II 19 Sep 1666. 19th September 1666. Whitehall. 45. Order in Council for the printing and publishing a declaration of war against Denmark. [Printed.] Annexing: 45. 1. "A true deduction of all transactions between His Majesty of Great Britain and the King of Denmark [aged 57], with a declaration of war against the said King, and the motives that obliged His Majesty thereunto." [22 pages, printed.]

On 9th October 1666 [his son-in-law] John George Wettin III Elector Saxony [aged 19] and Anna Sophie Oldenburg [aged 19] were married. She the daughter of Frederick III King of Denmark [aged 57] and Sophie Amalie Hanover Queen Consort Denmark [aged 38]. He the son of John George Wettin Elector Saxony [aged 53]. They were third cousin once removed.

Samuel Pepys' Diary. 19th October 1666. After a little more discourse, I left them, and to White Hall, where I met with Sir Robert Viner [aged 35], who told me a little of what, in going home, I had seen; also a little of the disorder and mutiny among the seamen at the Treasurer's office, which did trouble me then and all day since, considering how many more seamen will come to towne every day, and no money for them. A Parliament sitting, and the Exchange [Map] close by, and an enemy to hear of, and laugh at it1. Viner too, and Backewell, were sent for this afternoon; and was before the King [aged 36] and his Cabinet about money; they declaring they would advance no more, it being discoursed of in the House of Parliament for the King to issue out his privy-seals to them to command them to trust him, which gives them reason to decline trusting. But more money they are persuaded to lend, but so little that (with horrour I speake it), coming after the Council was up, with Sir G. Carteret [aged 56], Sir W. Coventry [aged 38], Lord Bruncker [aged 46], and myself, I did lay the state of our condition before the Duke of York [aged 33], that the fleete could not go out without several things it wanted, and we could not have without money, particularly rum and bread, which we have promised the man Swan to helpe him to £200 of his debt, and a few other small sums of £200 a piece to some others, and that I do foresee the Duke of York would call us to an account why the fleete is not abroad, and we cannot answer otherwise than our want of money; and that indeed we do not do the King any service now, but do rather abuse and betray his service by being there, and seeming to do something, while we do not. Sir G. Carteret asked me (just in these words, for in this and all the rest I set down the very words for memory sake, if there should be occasion) whether £50 or £60 would do us any good; and when I told him the very rum man must have £200, he held up his eyes as if we had asked a million. Sir W. Coventry told the Duke of York plainly he did rather desire to have his commission called in than serve in so ill a place, where he cannot do the King service, and I did concur in saying the same. This was all very plain, and the Duke of York did confess that he did not see how we could do anything without a present supply of £20,000, and that he would speak to the King next Council day, and I promised to wait on him to put him in mind of it. This I set down for my future justification, if need be, and so we broke up, and all parted, Sir W. Coventry being not very well, but I believe made much worse by this night's sad discourse. So I home by coach, considering what the consequence of all this must be in a little time. Nothing but distraction and confusion; which makes me wish with all my heart that I were well and quietly settled with what little I have got at Brampton, where I might live peaceably, and study, and pray for the good of the King and my country.

Note 1. The King of Denmark [aged 57] was induced to conclude a treaty with the United Provinces, a secret article of which bound him to declare war against England. The order in council for the printing and publishing a declaration of war against Denmark is dated "Whitehall, Sept. 19, 1666"; annexed is "A True Declaration of all transactions between his Majesty of Great Britain and the King of Denmark, with a declaration of war against the said king, and the motives that obliged his Majesty thereunto" (Calendar of State Papers, 1666-67, p. 140).

Chronicle of Abbot Ralph of Coggeshall

The Chronicle of Abbot Ralph of Coggeshall (Chronicon Anglicanum) is an indispensable medieval history that brings to life centuries of English and European affairs through the eyes of a learned Cistercian monk. Ralph of Coggeshall, abbot of the Abbey of Coggeshall in Essex in the early 13th century, continued and expanded his community’s chronicle, documenting events from the Norman Conquest of 1066 into the tumultuous reign of King Henry III. Blending eyewitness testimony, careful compilation, and the monastic commitment to record-keeping, this chronicle offers a rare narrative of political intrigue, royal power struggles, and social upheaval in England and beyond. Ralph’s work captures the reigns of pivotal figures such as Richard I and King John, providing invaluable insights into their characters, decisions, and the forces that shaped medieval rule. More than a simple annal, Chronicon Anglicanum conveys the texture of medieval life and governance, making it a rich source for scholars and readers fascinated by English history, monastic authorship, and the shaping of the medieval world.

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Samuel Pepys' Diary. 20th October 1666. Thence, with Sir G. Carteret [aged 56], home to dinner, with him, my Lady and Mr. Ashburnham [aged 62], the Cofferer. Here they talk that the Queene [aged 56] hath a great mind to alter her fashion, and to have the feet seen, which she loves mightily; and they do believe that it [will] come into it in a little time. Here I met with the King's declaration about his proceedings with the King of Denmarke [aged 57], and particularly the business of Bergen; but it is so well writ, that, if it be true, the King of Denmarke is one of the most absolute wickednesse in the world for a person of his quality.

On 15th June 1667 Christian V King of Denmark and Norway [aged 21] and Charlotte Amalie Hesse-Kassel Queen Consort Denmark and Norway [aged 17] were married. She the daughter of Wilhelm "The Just" VI Hesse-Kassel and Hedwig Sophia Hohenzollern [aged 43]. He the son of Frederick III King of Denmark [aged 58] and Sophie Amalie Hanover Queen Consort Denmark [aged 39]. They were fourth cousins.

Samuel Pepys' Diary. 8th September 1667. I went to the King's Chapel to the closet, and there I hear Cresset sing a tenor part along with the Church musick very handsomely, but so loud that people did laugh at him, as a thing done for ostentation. Here I met Sir G. Downing [aged 42], who would speak with me, and first to inquire what I paid for my kid's leather gloves I had on my hand, and shewed me others on his, as handsome, as good in all points, cost him but 12d. a pair, and mine me 2s. He told me he had been seven years finding out a man that could dress English sheepskin as it should be-and, indeed, it is now as good, in all respects, as kid, and he says will save £100,000 a-year, that goes out to France for kid's skins. Thus he labours very worthily to advance our own trade, but do it with mighty vanity and talking. But then he told me of our base condition, in the treaty with Holland and France, about our prisoners, that whereas before we did clear one another's prisoners, man for man, and we upon the publication of the peace did release all our's, 300 at Leith, and others in other places for nothing, the Dutch do keep theirs, and will not discharge them with[out] paying their debts according to the Treaty. That his instruments in Holland, writing to our Embassadors about this to Bredagh, they answer them that they do not know of any thing that they have done therein, but left it just as it was before. To which, when they answer, that by the treaty their Lordships had [not] bound our countrymen to pay their debts in prison, they answer they cannot help it, and we must get them off as cheap as we can. On this score, they demand £1100 for Sir G. Ascue [aged 51], and £5000 for the one province of Zealand, for the prisoners that we have therein. He says that this is a piece of shame that never any nation committed, and that our very Lords here of the Council, when he related this matter to them, did not remember that they had agreed to this article; and swears that all their articles are alike, as the giving away Polleroon, and Surinam, and Nova Scotia, which hath a river 300 miles up the country, with copper mines more than Swedeland, and Newcastle [Map] coals, the only place in America that hath coals that we know of; and that Cromwell did value those places, and would for ever have made much of them; but we have given them away for nothing, besides a debt to the King of Denmarke [aged 58]. But, which is most of all, they have discharged those very particular demands of merchants of the Guinny company and others, which he, when he was there, had adjusted with the Dutch, and come to an agreement in writing, and they undertaken to satisfy, and that this was done in black and white under their hands; and yet we have forgiven all these, and not so much as sent to Sir G. Downing to know what he had done, or to confer with him about any one point of the treaty, but signed to what they would have, and we here signed to whatever in grosse was brought over by Mr. Coventry [aged 39]. And [Sir G. Downing] tells me, just in these words, "My Chancellor [aged 58] had a mind to keep himself from being questioned by clapping up a peace upon any terms". When I answered that there was other privy-councillors to be advised with besides him, and that, therefore, this whole peace could not be laid to his charge, he answered that nobody durst say any thing at the council-table but himself, and that the King [aged 37] was as much afeard of saying any thing there as the meanest privy-councillor; and says more, that at this day the King, in familiar talk, do call the Chancellor "the insolent man", and says that he would not let him speak himself in Council: which is very high, and do shew that the Chancellor is like to be in a bad state, unless he can defend himself better than people think. And yet Creed tells me that he do hear that my Lord Cornbury do say that his father do long for the coming of the Parliament, in order to his own vindication, more than any one of his enemies.

On 9th February 1670 Frederick III King of Denmark [aged 60] died. His son Christian [aged 23] succeeded V King of Denmark and Norway. Charlotte Amalie Hesse-Kassel Queen Consort Denmark and Norway [aged 19] by marriage Queen Consort Denmark and Norway.

In 20th February 1685 [his former wife] Sophie Amalie Hanover Queen Consort Denmark [aged 56] died.

Royal Ancestors of Frederick III King of Denmark 1609-1670

Kings Wessex: Great x 18 Grand Son of King Edmund "Ironside" I of England

Kings Godwinson: Great x 17 Grand Son of King Harold II of England

Kings England: Great x 13 Grand Son of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England

Kings Scotland: Great x 16 Grand Son of King Malcolm III of Scotland

Kings France: Great x 11 Grand Son of King Philip III of France

Kings Duke Aquitaine: Great x 22 Grand Son of Ranulf I Duke Aquitaine

Kings Spain: Great x 14 Grand Son of Alfonso II King Aragon

Royal Descendants of Frederick III King of Denmark 1609-1670
Number after indicates the number of unique routes of descent. Descendants of Kings and Queens not included.

Christian V King of Denmark and Norway [1]

John George Wettin IV Elector Saxony [1]

Ulrika Eleonora Palatinate Zweibrücken Queen Consort Sweden [1]

Charles IV King Spain [1]

Louis XVI King France [1]

Louis XVIII King France [1]

King Charles X of France [1]

Francis Lorraine II Holy Roman Emperor [1]

Maria Christina of the Two Sicilies Queen Consort Spain [1]

Maria Christina of Austria Queen Consort Spain [2]

Constantine I King Greece [1]

Alexandrine Mecklenburg-Schwerin Queen Consort Denmark [1]

Philip Mountbatten Duke Edinburgh [1]

Ancestors of Frederick III King of Denmark 1609-1670

Great x 4 Grandfather: Dietrich Count of Oldenburg

Great x 3 Grandfather: Christian I King of Denmark

Great x 4 Grandmother: Helvig of Schauenburg

Great x 2 Grandfather: King Frederick I of Denmark

Great x 3 Grandmother: Dorothea of Brandenburg

Great x 4 Grandmother: Barbara of Saxe-Wittenberg

Great x 1 Grandfather: Christian III King of Denmark 8 x Great Grandson of King Philip III of France

Great x 2 Grandmother: Anna of Brandenburg 7 x Great Granddaughter of King Philip III of France

Great x 4 Grandfather: William III Duke of Luxemburg 7 x Great Grandson of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England

Great x 3 Grandmother: Margaret of Thuringia 6 x Great Granddaughter of King Philip III of France

Great x 4 Grandmother: Anne Habsburg 5 x Great Granddaughter of King Philip III of France

Grandfather: Frederick II King of Denmark 9 x Great Grandson of King Philip III of France

Great x 1 Grandmother: Dorothea of Saxe Lauenburg Queen Consort Denmark and Norway

father: Christian IV King of Denmark 10 x Great Grandson of King Philip III of France

Great x 4 Grandfather: Henry IV Duke of Mecklenburg

Great x 3 Grandfather: Magnus II Duke of Mecklenburg

Great x 2 Grandfather: Albrecht VII Duke Mecklenburg

Great x 1 Grandfather: Ulrich Mecklenburg-Schwerin 9 x Great Grandson of King Philip III of France

Great x 3 Grandfather: Joachim "Nestor" Hohenzollern Elector Brandenburg 7 x Great Grandson of King Philip III of France

Great x 4 Grandmother: Margaret of Thuringia 6 x Great Granddaughter of King Philip III of France

Great x 2 Grandmother: Anna Hohenzollern Duchess Mecklenburg 8 x Great Granddaughter of King Philip III of France

Grandmother: Sophie Mecklenburg-Schwerin Queen Consort Denmark 10 x Great Granddaughter of King Philip III of France

Frederick III King of Denmark 11 x Great Grandson of King Philip III of France