Beyond The Swedish Postcard
In 1542, the most powerful king Sweden had ever seen met a problem he couldn't solve from Stockholm, a peasant with a crossbow and a forest he knew better than any map. Nils Dacke wasn't a noble or a general. He was a farmer from the Småland borderlands who watched Gustav Vasa rewrite the rules again and again. Higher taxes. Foreign bailiffs. Churches stripped of their saints. Families torn apart by a hard border that cut through their relatives, their trade, their lives. When Dacke finally took to the woods, he didn't just fight—he built an army of farmers and woodsmen who used the trees as their shield and their weapon, ambushing royal soldiers who never saw them coming. For one extraordinary summer, he won. Gustav Vasa, the father of modern Sweden who had broken the Kalmar Union and seized the church and built a centralized state from nothing, was forced to sign a truce with a rebel. The king blinked. It didn't last, truces with Gustav Vasa never did, and Dacke's end was brutal. But the crack he opened in the idea that power is untouchable never fully closed. In this episode I also share a personal week: All of it made me think about tests—the ones we sign up for, the ones our bodies give us, and the kind Nils Dacke gave a king. We don't need crossbows now. We have a vote. And that difference is everything. If you've ever wondered what happens when ordinary people decide the rules aren't fair anymore, this is the episode. Keep looking beyond the Swedish postcard. Tack.
25 episodios
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