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Norwegian monarchs

Source: Wikipedia

Norwegian monarchs

Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 112. Chapters: Harald Hardrada, List of Norwegian monarchs, Cnut the Great, Harald Bluetooth, Olav V of Norway, Sweyn Forkbeard, Harald V of Norway, Oscar I of Sweden, Charles XIV John of Sweden, Haakon VII of Norway, Margaret I of Denmark, Harald I of Norway, Charles XV of Sweden, Oscar II of Sweden, Frederick II of Denmark, Harald II of Norway, Olaf I of Norway, Magnus I of Norway, Eric Bloodaxe, Haakon I of Norway, Charles XIII of Sweden, Christian II of Denmark, Olaf II of Denmark, Olaf II of Norway, Harald IV of Norway, Christian VII of Denmark, Frederick III of Denmark, Christian III of Denmark, Christian IV of Denmark, Haakon IV of Norway, Christian V of Denmark, Eric of Pomerania, John, King of Denmark, Christian I of Denmark, Sverre of Norway, Royal coronations in Norway, Sigurd I of Norway, Magnus III of Norway, Haakon VI of Norway, Frederick IV of Denmark, Magnus IV of Sweden, Frederick VI of Denmark, Charles VIII of Sweden, Kings of Norway family tree, Magnus VI of Norway, Christopher of Bavaria, Frederick I of Denmark, Sigurd II of Norway, Frederick V of Denmark, Inge I of Norway, Christian VI of Denmark, Inge II of Norway, Olaf III of Norway, Eystein II of Norway, Gard Agdi, Magnus IV of Norway, Magnus V of Norway, Philip Simonsson, Haakon III of Norway, Svein, King of Norway, Haakon V of Norway, Magnus II of Norway, Eric II of Norway, Haakon the Young, Eystein I of Norway, Haakon II of Norway, Guttorm of Norway, Haakon Magnusson of Norway, Olaf Magnusson of Norway, Sveinn Hákonarson, Sverris saga, Olaf Haraldsson Geirstadalf. Excerpt: Eric Haraldsson (Erik, anglicised form of Old Norse: , died 954), nicknamed 'Bloodaxe' (blóðøx), was a 10th-century Scandinavian ruler. He is thought to have had short-lived terms as the second king of Norway and possibly as the last independent ruler of the kingdom of Northumbria (c. 947/8-948 and 952-5). Distinct from the king of Norway of the Norse sagas, a member of the Fairhair dynasty, the historical Eric of Northumbria has recently been argued to have actually belonged to the Uí Ímair (House of Ivar), a distinct dynasty long established in the British Isles by the time of his rule. The little historical data which is available has been used by historians to reconstruct a narrative of his life and career. There is a distinction between contemporary or near contemporary sources for Eric's period as ruler of Northumbria, and the entirely saga-based sources that detail the life of Erik of Norway, a chieftain who ruled the Norwegian Westland in the 930s. Norse sources have identified the two as the same since the late 12th century, and while the subject was controversial among early modern historians, most historians have identified the two figures as the same since W. G. Collingwood's article in 1901. This identification has been rejected recently by the historian Claire Downham, who argued that later Norse writers synthesized the two Erics, possibly using English sources. This argument, though respected by other historians in the area, has not produced consensus. Contemporary or near-contemporary sources include different recensions of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Erik's coinage, the Life of St Cathróe and possibly skaldic poetry. Such sources reproduce only a hazy image of Eric's activities in Anglo-Saxon England. Strikingly, Erik's historical obscurity stands in sharp contrast to the wealth of legendary depictions in the kings' sagas, where he takes part in the ...

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ISBN 9781157411314
Sprache eng
Cover Kartonierter Einband (Kt)
Verlag Books LLC, Reference Series
Jahr 2011

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