Children
with Heluna Ellasdatter |
|||
Tora Sigurdsdottir* |
m. Gudrodsson, Ragnvald of Agder* |
||
Aslaug Sigurdsdottir* |
m. Helgi the Keen* |
||
Harde Knud /
Harthacnut Sigurdsson * |
b. about 814 Hord, Jutland, Denmark |
d. about 884 Hord, Jutland, Denmark
|
m. unknown |
The amount of bullion that the Viking raiders accumulated was
incredible, no wonder they kept coming back. In 845 on
Hamburg, Fresia and Paris started with 600 ships. They came
back from Paris alone with 7000lbs of gold and silver. In 858 from
St. Denis, Fr. they took 686 lbs of gold and 3000lbs of silver. In
860 from Somme they took 3000 - 5000lbs of silver plus livestock.
In 862 from the Seine they took 6000lbs in silver. In 884 from
East Frankia they took 12,000 lbs of silver and gold.
[Sawyer 37]
An early Medieval monk was at an audience on the return of Ragnar
and recorded this.
Wikipedia sumerizes some of the Medieval writings."Ragnar presented himself at the court of King Horik, and displayed to the king, the great men and visiting notables the gold and silver which he had brought back from Frankia. He told them he had gained control of Paris, got into the abbey of St-Germain, and subdued the whole kingdom of King Charles. He laid before them part of a beam from the church, and a bolt from the gate of Paris. There he boasted of the incredible riches of Frankia, and how easy it had been to acquire them. Never had he seen, he said, lands so fertile and so rich, nor a people so cowardly. "
[Sawyer 40]
________________________________________________________________
When king Ælla of Northumbria learns of the pillaging army, he musters an overwhelming force and defeats Ragnar's army. Ragnar is dressed in a silken jacket which Aslaug had made and nothing can pierce it. Finally, he is taken prisoner and thrown into a snake pit. However, as the snakes do not bite him, the Englishmen take off his clothes and then the snakes kill him for good.
Ragnar's sons attack England but Ivar does not want to fight as the English army is too large; he fears they will lose and will have to go home again. Ivar, however, stays in England and asks Ælla for wergild, claiming that he can not go home without some compensation to show his brothers. Ivar only asks for as much land as he can cover with an ox's hide. He cuts it into such a fine long string of hide that he can encircle an area large enough for a city. When this is done, he lays the foundations for a city which becomes York. He allies himself with all of England and finally all the chieftains in the region become loyal to Ivar and his brothers.
Then, Ivar tells his brothers to attack England. During the battle Ivar sides with his brothers and so do many of the English chieftains with their people, out of loyalty to Ivar. Ælla is taken captive and in revenge Ragnar's sons carve the blood eagle from him. (ritualized form of torture pulling his lungs through his back - wikipedia) [Saxo bk 9 - 380]
Ivar becomes king over north-eastern England which his forefathers owned (i.e. Ivar Vidfamne and Sigurd Ring), and he has two sons, Yngvar and Husto. They obey their father Ivar and torture king Edmund the Martyr and take his realm.
Ragnar's sons pillage in England, Wales, France and Italy, until they come to the town of Luna in Italy. When they come back to Scandinavia, they divide the kingdom so that Björn Ironside has Uppsala and Sweden, Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye has Zealand, Scania, Halland, Viken, Agder, all the way to Lindesnes and most of Oppland, and
receives Reidgotaland (Jutland) and Wendland. Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye marries king Ælla's daughter Blaeja and they have a son named, Harthacnut, who succeeds his father as the king of Zealand, Scania and Halland, but Viken rebels and breaks loose. Harthacanute has a son named Gorm, who is big and strong but not as wise as his ancestors. [wikipedia.org/wiki/Tale_of_Ragnar%27s_Sons]
Source:
Danish Kings - Foundation for Medieval Genealogy-
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/DENMARK.htm#_Toc196361191
Nationalmuseet, Jellingprojektet
Royal Genealogy Database. http://www.hull.ac.uk
Sawyer, Peter. The Oxford Illustrated Histoy of the Vikings. Oxford University Press. 1997
Saxo Grammaticus Heimskringla, translated by Oliver Elton. The Nine Books of the Danish History of Saxo Grammaticus in two vol. Norroena Society, London, 1905 - Hathi Trust Digital Library - https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89065537417;view=2up;seq=46;size=75
Weaton, Henry. History of the Northmen: Or, Danes and Normans, from the earliest times to the Conquest of England by William of Normandy. John wikipedia.org
Murray, London, 1831
wikitree.com
Elroy's Brief Jutland History || Elroy's Family Index || Ancestor Chart #23
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