(Redirected from Nyklot)'Niklot' or 'Nyklot' (1090 – August 1160) was a pagan chief of the Slavic
Obodrites and an ancester of the
House of Mecklenburg. From 1131 until his death he was chief of the Obodrite confederacy, the
Kissini, and the
Circipani. At the same time he was Lord of
Schwerin,
Quetzin, and
Malchow. For nearly 30 years he resisted
Saxon princes, especially
Henry the Lion, during the
German Drang nach Osten. He also opposed the conversion of the
pagan Polabian Slavs to
Roman Catholic Christianity.
Niklot's place of birth is unknown. After the death of the Obodrite prince Henry, a Christian, Niklot renounced Christianity in support of the traditional pagan beliefs.
Niklot began his open resistance when
Lothar III, Holy Roman Emperor, granted the Obodrite realm to his Danish vassal
Canute Lavard. Together with Pribislaw, the son of Henry of Alt-Lübeck, Niklot fought against Lothar and Canute. After the murder of Canute in 1131, Niklot and Pribislav partitioned the Obodrite territory, with Niklot receiving the eastern lands. In order to weaken Pribislav in the following years, Niklot allied himself with Saxon lords, especially Count
Adolf II of Holstein, allowing Slavic pirates to attack the Danes.
[1]
The prince's Saxon allies turned against him during the 1147
Wendish Crusade. Although Niklot resisted the siege of his fortress at
Dobin, he was forced to pay tribute to the Christian crusaders. He subsequently was on peaceful terms with Adolf of Holstein, Duke
Henry the Lion of
Saxony, and
Henry of Ratzeburg.
By 1158, King
Valdemar the Great of
Denmark had begun to pay Henry the Lion for assistance, leading Niklot to reliate. The Danish king and the Saxon duke then allied in 1160. While the Danes harried the coast and distracted the
Rani, the Saxons killed Niklot in battle deep in Obodrite territory, which was largely partitioned by the Christians.
[2] Niklot's death ended Slavic control in
Mecklenburg up to the
Peene River. His son
Pribislav recovered the inheritance of Niklot as Prince of Mecklenburg in 1167 as a Saxon vassal.
Footnotes
1. Christiansen, p. 65
2. Christiansen, p. 66
References
★
The Northern Crusades, , Eric, Christiansen, Penguin Books, 1997,