Sweden, too, was now in open revolt; and both Norway and Denmark were taxed to the utmost to raise an army for the subjection of their sister kingdom. Foreign complications were now added to these domestic troubles. With the laudable objective of releasing Danish trade from the grinding yoke of the
Hanseatic League, and making
Copenhagen the great emporium of the north, Christian had arbitrarily raised the Sound tolls and seized a number of Dutch ships that presumed to evade the tax.
Thus, his relations with the Netherlands were strained, while he was openly at war with
Lübeck and her allies.
Jutland finally rose against him, renounced its allegiance, and offered the Danish crown to Christian's uncle, Duke
Frederick of Holstein, January 20, 1523. So overwhelming did Christian's difficulties appear that he took ship to seek help abroad, and on
May 1 landed at
Veere in Zeeland.
During the years of his exile, the king led a relatively humble life in the city of
Lier in
the Netherlands, waiting for the military help of his reluctant imperial brother-in-law. In the meantime, he became regarded a social saviour in Denmark, where both the peasants and the commoners began to wish for his restoration. For some time, he even became a Protestant, but had to re-convert in order to gain the support of the Emperor.
Eight years later, on
October 24, 1531, he attempted to recover his kingdoms, but a tempest scattered his fleet off the Norwegian coast, and on
July 1, 1532, by the convention of Oslo, he surrendered to his rival, King Frederick, in exchange for a promise of safe conduct.
But King Frederick did not keep his promise, and King Christian was kept prisoner for the next 27 years, first in
Sønderborg Castle until 1549, and afterwards at the castle of
Kalundborg.
Stories of solitary confinement in small dark chambers are inaccurate; King Christian was treated like a nobleman, particularly in his old age, and he was allowed to host parties, go hunting, and wander freely as long as he did not go beyond the boundaries of the town of Kalundborg. But he was still a prisoner, albeit a royal one, and his 27-year captivity is a major blemish upon the reputation of king Frederick I and his son. Christian II was never convicted of any crime.
His cousin, King
Christian III of Denmark, son of Frederick I, died in early 1559, and it was said that even then, with the old king nearing 80, people in Copenhagen looked warily towards Kalundborg.
But king Christian II died peacefully just a few days later, and the new king,
Frederick II, ordered that a royal funeral be held in memory of his unhappy kinsman, who lies buried in
Odense next to his wife and his parents.
Among the six children of Christian II, three must be mentioned. Prince Hans (John) died a boy in exile in 1532. The two daughters Dorothea, Electress Palatine and
Christina, Duchess of Lorraine, both in turn, for many years, demanded in vain the Danish throne as their inheritance. Christian II's blood returned to the Swedish and Norwegian thrones in person of
Charles XV of Sweden, descendant of
Renata of Lorraine {Ironically Charles XV was also a descendant of the rival
House of Vasa}; and to the Danish throne in the person of
Christian X of Denmark. {Ironicaly Christian X brother King
Haakon VII of Norway was also a descendant of Royal Houses of
Sweden and
Denmark}.