Sune Sverkersson Sik
1132-
Born: Småland, Jamtland, Sweden
Died: Y, Somme, Picardie, France
Sune Sik Sverkersson<div>From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia<p><font color="#000000"><strong>Sune Sik Sverkersson</strong> (born c. 1154) was a Swedish nobleman of contested historicity. Very few written documents have survived from the 12th century in Sweden, and so it is a matter of opinion whether he is purely legendary or not.</font></p><p><font color="#000000">According to </font><font color="#000000">Olaus Petri</font><font color="#000000">, he would have been a younger son of King </font><font color="#000000">Sverker I of Sweden</font><font color="#000000">, possibly from his marriage with </font><font color="#000000">Rikissa of Poland</font><font color="#000000">. The same sources position Sune Sik as father of </font><font color="#000000">Ingrid Ylva</font><font color="#000000">.</font></p></div>
<p>Sune Sik, (aka-Simon)(born c. 1154), was allegedly a Swedish prince. </p><p>According to Olaus Petri, he would have been a younger son of King Sverker I of Sweden and father of Ingrid Ylva. </p><p>In surviving contemporary documents, the only Sune Sik that can be found lived much later. That Sune Sik made a donation to Vreta Abbey as late as in 1297. </p><p>He might have ordered a restauration of a chapel in which he eventually was interred, and later Cistercian tradition may then have turned him into a prince. </p><p>This has caused some historians to view Olaus Petri`s account of him as unreliable. </p><strong><p>Sune Sik,a son of King Sverker, is counted by other Swedish historians as a person of history and the man buried at Vreta (see photo).</p></strong>