Only a year after its promulgation, the 1719 Instrument of Government was replaced by a new constitution, the Instrument of Government (1720), although the two were largely identical in content.[5] The 1720 Instrument subsequently remained in force for the rest of the Age of Liberty, until absolutism was restored by King Gustav III's self-coup in 1772.
References
^Lundh-Eriksson, Nanna (1976). Den glömda drottningen: Karl XII:s syster Ulrika Eleonora d.y. och henes tid [The Forgotten Queen: The Sister of Charles XII. The Age of Ulrika Eleonora the Younger] (in Swedish). [Stockholm]: [Förf.] ISBN91-970128-1-5. SELIBR7790483.
^Lundh-Eriksson, Nanna (1976). Den glömda drottningen: Karl XII:s syster Ulrika Eleonora d.y. och henes tid [The Forgotten Queen: The Sister of Charles XII. The Age of Ulrika Eleonora the Younger] (in Swedish). [Stockholm]: [Förf.] ISBN91-970128-1-5. SELIBR7790483.
Lundh-Eriksson, Nanna (1976). Den glömda drottningen: Karl XII:s syster Ulrika Eleonora d.y. och henes tid [The Forgotten Queen: The Sister of Charles XII. The Age of Ulrika Eleonora the Younger] (in Swedish). [Stockholm]: [Förf.] ISBN91-970128-1-5. SELIBR7790483.
Hedenborg, Susanna; Kvarnström, Lars, eds. (2009). Det svenska samhället 1720-2006: böndernas och arbetarnas tid (in Swedish) (3rd ed.). Lund: Studentlitteratur. ISBN9789144053295. SELIBR11360799.