Showing posts with label Ragnvald I 'the Wise of More' Eysteinsson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ragnvald I 'the Wise of More' Eysteinsson. Show all posts

Sunday, December 14, 2014

My Descent from Ragnar Lothbrok Lodbrokar and The Dukes of Normandy

Last year's The Vikings, which aired on The History Channel, was very interesting to me. I love history. But it was also interesting to me because I descend from Ragnar Lodbrok.

+Aslang Sigurdsdottir


Heluna Bleja

Thora Sigurdsdottir(806-)

Aseda Ascrida Ragnvaldsdottir
+Glumra 'eystein The Noisy' (788-) see other ancestrys on this blog, ancesty from William Marshal




+Gunnor of Crepon











+Catherine Moleyns 

+Agnes Tilney  

+Margaret Gamage

+Francis Gouldwell

+Jane Monson

+Margaret Clarke

+Elizabeth Moss

Ann Howard(1710-1814)

+George Russell Ball( 1752-1825)



+Elizabeth Tennessee Harris  



Mary Elizabeth Lilly(1921-2012)
+Frank Clifton Taylor Sr.    My Paternal Grandparents

Halfdan "The Old"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halfdan_the_Old

Halfdan and his sons[edit]
The Ættartolur, the genealogies appended to the Hversu Noregr byggdist in the Flatey Book introduce Halfdan the Old as the ruler of Ringiríki (a territory including modern Ringerike and Valdres in Oppland). Halfdan is here the son of King Hring (eponym of Ringeríki) by the daughter of a sea-king named Vífil (Vífill). Hring was son of Raum the Old (eponym of Raumaríki) by Hild (Hildr) the daughter Gudröd the Old (Guðrǫðr inn gamli). Raum the Old was son of Nór (Nórr) (the eponym of Norway). See Nór for further details about Nór and his ancestry and descendants.
In his sacrifice Halfdan requested a lifetime of 300 years like that of his ancestor Snær. The form Tiggi appears instead of Tyggi in the list of the first nine sons. The list of the second nine sons has Skelfir instead of Yngvi and the form Næfil (Næfill) instead of Nefir. The order of the names is the same and it is explained that Hildir, Sigar, and Lofdi were war-kings; Audi, Budli, and Næfil were sea-kings, while Dag, Skelfir, and Bragi remained on their lands.
Döglings[edit]
Dag married Thóra Heroes-mother (Thóra drengjamóður) who bore him nine sons, but only four are named: Óli, Ám (Ámr), Jöfur, and Arngrím (Arngrímr).
Óli was father of Dag, father of Óleif (Óleifr), father of Hring, father of Helgi, father of Sigurd Hart (Sigurðr Hjǫrtr), father of Ragnhild (Ragnhildr) the mother of Harald Fairhair.
Arngrím married Eyfura who bore him Angantýr the Berserk (Angantýr berserkr). Angantýr's story is most fully treated in the Hervarar saga. It also appears in part in book five of Saxo Grammaticus' Gesta Danorumand an account only the deaths of Angantýr and his eleven brothers appears in Arrow-Odd's saga.
Stanza 18 of the Hyndluljód reads:
The mate of Dag     was a mother of heroes [drengja móður],
Thóra, who bore him     the bravest of fighters,
Fradmar [Fraðmarr] and Gyrd [Gyrðr]     and the Frekis [Frekar] twain,
Ám and Jöfurmar [Jǫfurmar],     Álf the Old;
It is much to know,—     wilt thou hear yet more?
The name Ám agrees with that of a son of Dag in the Ættartolur and Jöfurmar is probably identical with Jöfur of the Ættartolur. Fradmar, Gyrd, Álf the Old, and the two Frekis bring the total to seven. Adding the names Óli and Arngrím to this list from the Ættartolur brings the tally to nine, as the Ættartolur promised. This may be conincidental. It is odd that the Hyndluljód here leaves out the only two names for which theHversu provides descendants. It is possible that the following stanzas of the Hyndluljód down to stanza 24 cover otherwise unknown members of the Dögling lineage since stanza 23 at least returns to the Dödlings, providing the names of the twelve sons of Arngrím and the following stanza tells of their birth to Arngrím and Eyfura. Áli mentioned in stanza 14 of the Hyndluljód (quoted near the beginning of this article) may be identical to Óli son of Dag mentioned in the Ættartolur.
Bragnings[edit]
Bragi the Old [Bragi gamli] was king of Valdres and father of Agnar, father of Álf, father of Eirík (Eiríkr), father of Hild (Hildr) the mother of Halfdan the Generous, the father of Gudröd (Guðrǫðr) the Hunter, father of Halfdan the Black, father of Harald Fairhair.
Skilfings or Skjöldungs[edit]
Skilfir was king of Vörs (Vǫrs, modern Voss in northern Hordaland in southwestern Norway. Skelfir was father of Skjöld (Skjǫldr), father of Eirík, father of Alrek (Alrekr), father of Eirík the Eloquent, father of Alrek the Bold (Alrekr inn frækni), father of Víkar (Víkarr), father of Vatnar (Vatnarr), father of two sons: Ímald (Ímaldr) and Eirík, this Eirik being father of Gyda (Gyða) who was one of the wives of Harald Fairhair. They were called the Skilfing lineage or Skjöldung lineage. For commentary on this lineage and variant traditions on those listed here as belonging to it see Scylfing and Víkar.
Hildings[edit]
Hildir was father of Hildibrand (Hildibrandr), father of Vígbrand (Vígbrandr), father of Hildir and Herbrand (Herbrandr). Herbrand was father of Harald Red-beard, father of Ása who was the mother of Halfdan the Black, the father of Harald Fairhair.
(The text actually reads "Harald Grenski" (Haraldr inn grenski) instead of Harald Red-beard, but that must be an error. Harald Grenski was the name of a later figure, the father of King Olaf II of Norway, and theYnglinga saga and many other sources name Harald Red-beard as Ása's father.
Siklings[edit]
Sigar is provided with two sons Siggeir and Sigmund (Sigmundr). Siggeir is prominent in Volsunga saga as the villanous husband of Signý the daughter of Völsung. Sigmund son of Sigar married Hild, daughter of King Grjótgard (Grjótgarðr) of Mœr. (See Gard Agdi for Grjótgard's genealogy.) Their son was Sigar, father of Signý, that Sigar who caused Hagbard (Hagbarðr) to be hanged.
One of the sources where the story of Hagbard appears is in Gesta Danorum, Book 7, which relates the love between Hagbarthus son of Hamundus and Signe daughter of King Sigarus despite Hagbarthus having slain her brothers. When Sigarus discovered the affair, he had Hagbarthus hanged. Then Hagbarthus' brother Haco/Hako/Haki avenged Hagbarthus. In this version Sigar/Sigarus is a king of Denmark, son of Sivaldus, son of King Ungvinus who was originally king of Götaland (see Hagbard and Signy for more).
There are places all over Scandinavia, associated with this legend such as Asige in the former Danish (presently Swedish) province of Halland, which borders Götaland, where there are two large menhirs calledHagbard's gallows.
Hagbard and his brother Haki are mentioned as great sea-kings in the Ynglinga saga where Haki wrests the Swedish throne from king Hugleik (this event also appears in Gesta Danorum where Haco kills the Irish king Huglethus) only to be killed later in battle with Hugleik's cousin Jorund.
A third reference to Hagbard and his brother Haki appears in the Völsunga saga, chapter 25. It is there said that Hagbard and Haki not yet avenged themselves for Sigar's abduction of one sister and the slaying of another. Either the reference is garbled or it refers to a lost variant with a more extended account of Sigar's feud with Hagbard and his brothers.
See Hagbard and Haki for more.
Lofdungs[edit]
Lofdi was a great king who raided Reidgotaland (Reiðgotaland) and became king there. Lofdi's sons were Skekkil Sea-king (Skekkill sækonungr) and Skyli. Skyli was father of Egdir (Egðir), the father of Hjálmthér (Hjálmþér), the father of Eylimi, the father of Hjördís (Hjǫrdís), the mother of Sigurd Fáfnir's-bane, father of Áslaug (Áslaugr) by Brynhild whose ancestry appears below in the Budling discussion. This Áslaug was a wife of Ragnar Lodbrok and by him the mother of Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye (Sigurðr ormr í auga) who was father of a second Áslaug who was mother of Sigurd Hart. Sigurd Hart was father of Ragnhild (Ragnhildr), mother of Harald Fairhair as already stated.
But stanza 26 of the Hyndluljód identifies Eylimi the father of Hjördís as an Ödling.
Ödlings[edit]
Audi and his brother Budli were sea-kings who raided together and settled in Valland (France) and Saxland (Saxony). Audi ruled in Valland. He was father of Fródi (Fróði), father of Kjár (Kjárr), father of Ölrún (Ǫlrún).
Ölrún, daughter of King Kjár of Valland, appears in the prose introduction to the Völundarkvida, as a Valkyrie swan-maiden who became the wife of Völund's brother Egil. The name Kjárr can be etymologically derived from Latin Caesar. But here the connection with France suggests it might be an adaptation of French Charles.
Budlungs[edit]
Budli the sea-king settled down in Saxland. He was father of Attil (Attill), father of Vífil (Vífill), father of Læfi, father of Budli. This second Budli was father of Sörli (Sǫrli) or Serli, of Atli, and of Brynhild. Brynhild was mother of Áslaug, ancestress of Harald Fairhair as described in the previous Lofdungs discussion.
Atli is a legendary version of Attila the Hun and the name Budli comes from Bleda who was the historical Attila's elder brother. The name Sörli is given to a brother of Atli only in this text. But in the eddic poemAtlamál hin grœnlenzku (stanza 50), Atli declares that he was one of four living brothers when his father Budli died and that half of them are now dead, slain by his wife Gudrún. In the German Nibelungenlied Attila is called Etzel and said to be son of Botelung, obviously Budlung interpreted as a name. In this account Etzel has a younger brother named Bloedelin who was slain by Dancwart, Hagen's brother. Blowdelin is probably another memory of the historical Bleda. The eddic poem Oddrúnargrátr tells of Atli's sister Oddrún and her forbidden love affair with Gunnar, which was, according to this poem, one of the motivations for Atli's later treachery. Oddrún is also mentioned in Sigurðarkviða[disambiguation needed], in the prose introduction to Dráp Niflunga, and in the Völsunga saga.
Niflungs[edit]
King Næfil was father of Heimar, father of Eynef (Eynefr), father of Rakni, father of Gjúki. Gjúki was father of two sons named Gunnar (Gunnarr) and Högni (Hǫgni) and of two daughters named Gudrún (Guðrún) andGudný (Guðný). For commentary and variant traditions see Nibelung.
Halfdan the Old of Gór's lineage[edit]
The Orkneying saga does not speak at all of Nór's descendants, but introduces instead a figure named Halfdan the Old as the son of Sveidi (Sveiði) the Sea-king, who is called Svadi (Svaði) in the Ættartolur. Sveidi/Svadi in both texts was son of Heiti, son of Gór who was Nór's brother.
This second Halfdan the Old is father of Jarl Ívar of the Uplands who married a daughter of a certain Eistein and so became father of Eystein the Clatterer (Eysteinn Glumra) who was father of Jarl Rögnvald of Møreand of Rögnvald's brother Sigurd Eysteinsson, and also of two daughters: Svanhild who was one of King Harald Fairhair's wives and another daughter named Malahule. According to various sources, Jarl Rögnvald had three illegitimate sons: Hallad (Hallaðr), Hrollaug (Hrollaugr), and Torf-Einarr. Later, by his wife Ragnhild (Ragnhildr) daughter of Hrólf Nose (Hrólf Nefja), Rögnvald was father of three legitimate sons: Hrólf, Ívar, and Thórir (Þórir) the Silent. Thórir inherited his father's lands. The first four Jarls of Orkney were successively Rögnvald's brother Sigurd, Sigurd's son Guthorm (Guttormr), Rögnvald's son Hallad, and Rögnvald's son Turf-Einar. From Turf-Einar the later Jarls descended. Hrollaug and his wife and sons settled in Iceland.
Hrólf, also called Ganger-Hrólf (Gǫngu-Hrólfr 'Hrólf the walker'), is identified by Icelandic/Norwegian historians as the Rollo who conquered Neustria which was then renamed as Normandy, making him the great grandfather of William the Conqueror and the progenitor of every royal family in present-day Europe and Britain.
http://armidalesoftware.com/issue/full/Thaler_841_main.html



http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORWEGIAN%20NOBILITY.htm#_Toc189913825

The opening chapters of Orkneyinga Saga, probably written not long after 1200 and predating Snorre´s Heimskringla although the precise evolution of each work is complicated because the later reviser of Orkneyinga Saga made use of Snorre´s text[122], trace the descent of “Earl Rognwald the Powerful” from “the Sea-Kings” in Norway[123].  As with all the Sagas, it is impossible to distinguish the precise point where folk-legend gives way to historical fact in the narrative.  This document sets out the descent from Halfdan the Old, but the individuals in the first few generations are shown in square brackets as no corroboration for their historical existence, or their relationship to each other, has been found in any primary sources, other than Sagas, so far consulted.  The emphasis on social continuity in the narratives of the Sagas also suggests that relationships between historical figures could have been simplified or even fabricated in the text to give the impression that succession remained within the same family.  For example, Orkneyinga Saga names “Hrolf who conquered Normandy” as son of “Earl Rognwald” and his wife “Ragnhild the daughter of Hrolf Nose”[124].  Snorre repeats the same statement.  However, the Historia Norwegie records that, after Orkney was conquered by "principi Rogwaldi" and his followers, "de quorum collegio…Rodulfus" captured Rouen in Normandy[125], making no reference to any blood relationship between "Rodulfus" [Rolf/Rollo] and "principi Rogwaldi".  Precise chronology is also difficult to assess from the Sagas.  In particular, a close analysis of the chronology of the reported events in the lives of Ragnvald and his sons, in particular his youngest reported illegitimate son Turf-Einar, shows considerable difficulties, as explained further below.  The conclusion must be that the tight family network described in the Sagas is unlikely to be correct and that the relationships shown below should be treated with considerable caution.


[HALFDAN “the Old” .  Orkneyinga Saga names “…the sea-king Sveidi, father of Halfdan the Old…”[126].]  [One child:]
1.         [IVAR .  Orkneyinga Saga names “Halfdan the Old, father of Earl Ivar of the Uplands…”[127].]  [One child:]  
a)         [EYSTEIN “Glumra/Clatterer” .  Orkneyinga Saga names “Earl Ivar of the Uplands, father of Eystein the Clatterer…”[128].  Jarl of the Uplanders in Norway [in Kristian and Hedemarken, the area around Oslo].  [Four children:]
i)          [RAGNVALD "the Wise" (-[894]).  Orkneyinga Saga names “Eystein the Clatterer, father of the wise counsellor Earl Rognwald the Powerful…”[129].  Snorre names Ragnvald Earl of More, a son of Eystein "Glumra" when recording that he had become a supporter of King Harald who had invested him with the districts of North More and Raumsdal[130].  Jarl of North and South Möre and of Raumsdal in Norway.]  
-         see below.
ii)         [SIGURD "Riki/the Mighty" (-[892], bur Sydero, Dornoch Firth).  Orkneyinga Saga records that Ragnvald gave “all the islands” (indicating Shetland and Orkney from the context) to “his brother Sigurd, the forecastleman on King Harald´s ship” and that Harald I "Hårfagre" King of Norway gave “the title of earl” to Sigurd who remained in the islands after the king returned to Norway[131].  Orkneyinga Saga records that Sigurd “joined forces with Thorstein the Red, the son of Olaf the White and Aud the Deep-Minded” and together conquered “the whole of Caithness and a large part of Argyll, Moray and Ross”, Sigurd building “a stronghold…in the south of Moray”[132].  Orkneyinga Saga records that Sigurd defeated and beheaded “Mælbrigte Earl of the Scots” but that he died from an infected wound because a tooth in Mælbrigte´s head, strapped to Sigurd´s saddle, scratched his leg, and was buried “in a mound on the bank of the River Oykel”[133].  The Complete Peerage identifies the place as “Sydero on the Dornoch Firth at the estuary of the Ekkialsbakki[134].  The Complete Peerage dates Sigurd´s appointment as Jarl to [875] and his death to [892][135], but there seems no basis for either date apart from internal consistency with its reconstruction of events in the lives of this family.  Both dates should therefore be considered as extremely approximate, and as noted below the earlier date leads to difficult chonological difficulties with the reported career of Sigurd´s nephew Turf-Einar.]  [One child:]
(a)       [GUTHORM (-[893]).  Orkneyinga Saga records that Sigurd was succeeded by his son “Guthorm who ruled the earldom for a year but died childless”[136].  According to Snorre´s Harald Harfager´s Saga, Sigurd died “without children” but his Saga of Olaf Haraldson names Guthorm as son of Sigurd, recording that he succeeded his father as earl for one year[137].]
iii)        [MALAHULC .  His family origin is confirmed by Guillaume of Jumièges who names “Rogerius Toenites de stirpe Malahulcii qui Rollonis ducis patruus fuerat”[138], suggesting that Malahulc was ancestor of the later Tosny family.  Orderic Vitalis (writing in [1113]) names Malahulc as an uncle of Rollo and ancestor of the Tosny family[139].  He is not mentioned in the Sagas and no other primary source has been found which either names him or links him with the later members of the Tosny family.]
-         TOSNY.
iv)       [SVANHILD.  Snorre names "Snahild, a daughter of Earl Eystein" as one of the wives of King Harald[140].  m as his third wife, HARALD I King of Norway, son of HALFDAN "Swarti/the Black" King of Vestfold & his second wife [Ragnhild Sigurdsdatter] ([853/54] or 860-Hogaland 933[141], 934 or 940, bur "under a mound at Haugar in Karmtsund, near the church in Haugesund").]


RAGNVALD "the Wise", son of [EYSTEIN "Glumra/Clatterer" Jarl in Norway & his wife ---] (-[894]).  Orkneyinga Saga names “Eystein the Clatterer, father of the wise counsellor Earl Rognwald the Powerful…”, adding that “Earl Rognwald campaigned with King Harald Fine-Hair who gave him charge of North More, South More and Romsdale”[142].  Snorre names "Ragnvald Earl of More, a son of Eystein Glumra" when recording that he had become a supporter of King Harald who had invested him with the districts of North More and Raumsdal[143].  Snorre records that he was created Jarl of North and South Möre and of Raumsdal in Norway by Harald I "Hårfagre" King of Norway after his victory at Solskiel [869] against Hunthiof King of Möre and Nokve King of Raumsdal[144].  Orkneyinga Saga and Snorre both record that King Harald granted Shetland and Orkney to Ragnvald in compensation for the death of his son Ivar[145].  The Historia Norwegie records that "principi Rogwaldi" crossed the Solund Sea, destroyed the peoples of the Orkney islands, in the days of "Haraldi Comati regis…Norwegie"[146].  Orkneyinga Saga records that “Halfdan Long-Leg and Gudrod Gleam, King Harald´s sons by Snæfrid” attacked “Earl Rognvald of More, killed him and assumed his authority”[147].  Snorre records that Ragnvald was ambushed in his hall and burned alive by Halfdan Haaleg and Gudred Liomi, two of King Harald's sons[148].
m [RAGNHILD, daughter of HROLF “Nevja/Nose” & his wife ---.  Orkneyinga Saga records that “Earl Rognwald” married “Ragnhild the daughter of Hrolf Nose”[149].  Snorre names "Hild, a daughter of Rolf Nefia" as the wife of "Earl Ragnvald"[150].]
[Ragnvald & his wife had four children:]
1.         [IVAR (-killed in battle either Hafrsfiord [872] or Orkney [874]).  Orkneyinga Saga names “Ivar and Thorer the Silent” as the two other sons of “Earl Rognwald” and his wife “Ragnhild the daughter of Hrolf Nose”, adding that Ivar was killed in battle fighting with Harald I "Hårfagre" King of Norway in Scotland[151].  Are´s Landnama-book names "Iwar that fell in the Southreys" as the son of "Regin-Wald Earl of More" and his wife "Ragin-hild the daughter of Hrod-wolf Nefia"[152].  Snorre names "Ivar, a son of Ragnvald Earl of More" when recording his death in battle during a Viking campaign against the Scottish islands[153].  The Complete Peerage dates the appointment of Sigurd (Ivar´s reported paternal uncle) as Jarl of Orkney to [875][154], which means that Ivar must have been killed shortly before this date.  However, as explained below this causes considerable chronological difficulties with the reported events in the career of Turf-Einar, Ivar´s youngest illegitimate half-brother, so should be considered as extremely approximate.
2.         [ROLLO [Hrolf "Ganger/the Walker"] (-Rouen [928/33], bur ---, transferred [1064] to Rouen Cathedral).  Orkneyinga Saga names “Hrolf who conquered Normandy” as son of “Earl Rognwald” and his wife “Ragnhild the daughter of Hrolf Nose”, adding that he was so big that no horse could carry him, giving rise to his name “Göngu-Hrolf”[155].  Snorre names "Rolf and Thorer" as the two sons of "Earl Ragnvald" and his wife Hild, recording that Rolf was banished from Norway by King Harald and travelled to the Hebrides, settling first in Orkney before moving southwards through Scotland, and eventually conquering Normandy[156].  The Historia Norwegie records that, after Orkney was conquered by "principi Rogwaldi" and his followers, "de quorum collegio…Rodulfus" captured Rouen in Normandy, commenting that he was known as "Gongurolfr" because he was obliged to walk as he was too large to travel on horseback[157].  This source makes no reference to any blood relationship between Rollo and "principi Rogwaldi".  Guillaume de Jumièges refers to an unnamed Danish warrior “dux” who left two sons “maior natu Rollo, alter...iunior Gurim”[158].  He is known to history as ROBERT I Comte [de Normandie], although no early source has been identified which refers to him by this name.]  
-        DUKES of NORMANDY.
3.         [THORE Ragnvaldsson "Tause/the Silent".  Orkneyinga Saga names “Ivar and Thorer the Silent” as the two other sons of “Earl Rognwald” and his wife “Ragnhild the daughter of Hrolf Nose”[159].  Snorre names "Rolf and Thorer" as the two sons of "Earl Ragnvald" and his wife Hild[160].  He succeeded his father in [894] as Jarl of Möre, having dispossessed Gudrod "Ljome", son of King Harald, who had seized Möre on the death of Jarl Ragnvald[161].  m ([890]) ALOF "Aarbod/Season-bettering", daughter of HARALD I "Hårfagre/Harfagri/Fairhair" King of Norway & his second wife Gyda of Hordaland.  Snorre records that King Harald gave Jarl Thore his daughter "Alof, called Arbot" after the king confirmed him as Jarl of Möre[162].]  [Thore & his wife had one child:]
a)         [BERGLJOT Thoresdatter.  The Historia Norwegie names "Bergliota filia Thoris Tacentis", from "nobilissima Morensium ac Halogensium comitum prosapia", as the wife of "Siwardo"[163].  Snorre names "Bergljot, a daughter of Earl Thorer the Silent" & his wife as the wife of Sigurd[164].  m SIGURD Jarl,  son of HAAKON Grjotgardson Jarl of Haalogaland & his wife -- (-murdered Oglo 962).]

http://www.northvegr.org/sagas%20annd%20epics/legendary%20heroic%20and%20imaginative%20sagas/old%20heithinn%20tales%20from%20the%20north/079.html

Ivar Oplaendinge Of Uplands

Ivar Oplaendinge Of Uplands 


[WmtheConqueror.GED]  [mccoydick.FTW]  !NOTE: Royal & Noble Genealogical Data On the Ivar of the Uplands, Earl of the Uplands

Child 1: Glumra, Eystein the Noisy, Jarl of the Uplanders, b. 788 (Redirected from Ivar Halfdan)

'Halfdan the Old' (Old Norse ''Hálfdanr gamli'' and ''Hálfdanr inn gamli'') was an ancient, legendary king from whom descended many of the most notable lineages of legend. A second Halfdan the Old is the purported great-grandfather of Ragnvald Eysteinsson. Contents Halfdan the Old, ancestor of many lineages ''Hyndluljód'' ''Skáldskaparmál'' ''Ættartolur'' Halfdan and his sons Bragnings Skilfings or Skjöldungs Hildings Lofdungs Ödlings Budlungs Niflungs Halfdan the Old of Gór's lineage Variant spellings See also Halfdan the Old, ancestor of many lineages

''Hyndluljód'' The eddic poem ''Hyndluljód'' states in verses 14-16:         "Of old the noblest of all was Áli,  Before him Halfdan, foremost of Skjöldungs [''Skjǫldungar'']; Famed were the battles the hero fought, To the corners of heaven his deeds were carried. "Strengthened by Eymund [''Eymundr''], the strongest of men, Sigtrygg [''Sigtryggr''] he slew with the ice-cold sword; His bride was Álmveig [''Álmveigr''], the best of women, And eighteen boys did Álmveig bear him. "Hence come the Skjöldungs, hence the Skilfings, Hence the Ödlings [''Ǫðlingar''], hence the Ynglings, Hence come the free-born, hence the high-born, The noblest of men that in Midgard dwell:  And all are thy kinsmen,     Óttar, thou fool!"

Though Halfdan is himself called a Skjöldung in verse 14, in verse 16 the Skjöldungs are named instead as one of the families that sprang from Halfdan's marriage with Álmveig. ''Skáldskaparmál'' Snorri Sturluson explains in the ''Skáldskaparmál'':  

There was a king named Halfdan the Old, who was most famous of all kings. He made a great sacrificial feast at mid-winter, and sacrificed to this end, that he might live three hundred years in his kingdom; but he received these answers: he should not live more than the full life of a man, but for three hundred years there should be in his line no woman and no man who was not of great repute. He was a great warrior, and went on forays far and wide in the Eastern Regions: there he slew in single combat the king who was called Sigtrygg. Then he took in marriage that woman named Alvig the Wise, daughter of King Eymund of Hólmgard [''Hólmgarðr'']: they had eighteen sons, nine born at one birth. These were their names: the first, Thengil [''Thengill''], who was called Thengil of Men;         the second, Ræsir; the third, Gram [''Gramr'']; the fourth, Gylfi; the fifth, Hilmir;         the sixth, Jöfur [''Jǫfurr'']; the seventh, Tyggi; the eighth, Skyli or Skúli; the ninth, Harri or Herra.    

These nine brothers became so famous in foraying that, in all records since, their names are used as titles of rank, even as the name of King or that of Jarl. They had no children, and all fell in battle.

Snorri then gives examples from skaldic verse where these names are used as general terms for 'lord' or 'ruler'. The promise of three hundred years of no women among Halfdan's descendants is paralleled in the story of Ríg-Jarl who has sons only but no daughters. See 'Ríg'. None of the titles given here duplicate titles such as ''hersir'', ''jarl'', ''konungr'', and ''dróttinn'' which appear in the Ríg account.

Snorri continues: Halfdan and his wife had nine other sons also; these were:         Hildir, from whom the Hildings are come; Nefir, from whom the Niflungs sprang;          Audi [''Auði''], from whom the Ödlings [''Ǫðlingar''] are come; Yngvi, from whom the Ynglings are descended; Dag [''Dagr''], from whom come the Döglings [''Dǫglingar'']; Bragi, from whom the Bragnings are sprung (that is the race of Halfdan the Generous (''Hálfdanr inn mildi''); Budli [''Buðli''], from whom the Budlungs [''Buðlungar''] are come (from the house of the Budlungs Atli and Brynhild [''Brynhildr''] descended); the eighth was Lofdi [''Lofði''], who was a great war-king (that host who were called Lofdar [''Lofðar''] followed him; his kindred are called Lofdungs [''Lofðungar''], whence sprang Eylimi, Sigurd Fáfnir's-bane's mother's sire); the ninth, Sigar [''Sigarr''], whence come the Siklings: that is the house of Siggeir [''Siggeirr''], who was son-in-law of Völsung [''Vǫlsungr''],-and the house of Sigar, who hanged Hagbard [''Hagbarðr''].      From the race of Hildings sprang Harald Red-beard [''Haraldr granrauði''], mother's father of Halfdan the Black [''Hálfdanr inn svarti'']. Of the Niflung's house was Gjúki. Of the house of Ödlings, Kjár [''Kjárr'']. Of the house of the Ylfings was Eirík the Eloquent [''Eiríkr inn málspaki''].

The Skjöldungs and Skilfings mentioned in the ''Hyndluljód'' are missing here. The Ylfings are suddenly introduced at the end in a reference to Eirík the Eloquent yet are also not found among the nine families. Snorri then immediately mentions what seem to be intended as four famous houses not descended from Halfdan the Old:    

These also are illustrious royal houses: from Yngvi, the Ynglings are descended;         from Skjöld in Denmark, the Skjöldungs are come; from Völsung in the land of Franks, those who are called Völsungs. One war-king was named Skelfir; and his house is called the House of Skilfings: his kindred is in the Eastern Region.

But Yngvi has been previously named as a son of Halfdan the Old and the Skjöldungs and Skilfings are counted among Halfdan's descendants in the ''Hyndluljód''. Snorri continues:    

These houses which were named but now have been used in skaldship for titles of rank.  Snorri then quotes many skaldic verses which demonstrate this. ''Ættartolur'' Halfdan and his sons The ''Ættartolur'', the genealogies appended to the ''Hversu Noregr byggdist'' in the ''Flatey Book'' introduce Halfdan the Old as the ruler of Ringiríki (a territory including modern Ringerike and Valdres in Oppland). Halfdan is here the son of King Hring (eponym of Ringeríki) by the daughter of a sea-king named Vífil (''Vífill''). Hring was son of 'Raum the Old' (eponym of Raumaríki) by Hild (''Hildr'') the daughter Gudröd the Old (''Guðrǫðr inn gamli''). Raum the Old was son of Nór (''Nórr'') (the eponym of Norway). See 'Nór' for further details about Nór and his ancestry and descendants. In his sacrifice Halfdan requested a lifetime of 300 years like that of his ancestor 'Snær'.

The form ''Tiggi'' appears instead of ''Tyggi'' in the list of the first nine sons. The list of the second nine sons has Skelfir instead of Yngvi and the form Næfil (''Næfill'') instead of Nefir. The order of the names is the same and it is explained that Hildir, Sigar, and Lofdi were war-kings; Audi, Budli, and Næfil were sea-kings, while Dag, Skelfir, and Bragi remained on their lands. Döglings Dag married Thóra Heroes-mother (''Thóra drengjamóður'') who bore him nine sons, but only four are named: Óli, Ám (''Ámr''), Jöfur, and Arngrím (''Arngrímr''). Óli was father of Dag, father of Óleif (''Óleifr''), father of Hring, father of Helgi, father of Sigurd Hart (''Sigurðr Hjǫrtr''), father of Ragnhild (''Ragnhildr'') the mother of 'Harald Fairhair'. Arngrím married Eyfura who bore him Angantýr the Berserk (''Angantýr berserkr''). Angantýr's story is most fully treated in the ''Hervarar saga''.

It also appears in part in book five of Saxo Grammaticus' ''Gesta Danorum'' and an account only the deaths of Angantýr and his eleven brothers appears in ''Arrow-Odd's saga''. Stanza 18 of the ''Hyndluljód'' reads:        

The mate of Dag was a mother of heroes [''drengja móður''], Thóra, who bore him the bravest of fighters, Fradmar [''Fraðmarr''] and Gyrd [''Gyrðr''] and the Frekis [''Frekar''] twain, Ám and Jöfurmar [''Jǫfurmar''], Álf the Old; It is much to know,-  wilt thou hear yet more?

The name Ám agrees with that of a son of Dag in the ''Ættartolur'' and Jöfurmar is probably identical with Jöfur of the ''Ættartolur''. Fradmar, Gyrd, Álf the Old, and the two Frekis bring the total to seven. Adding the names Óli and Arngrím to this list from the ''Ættartolur'' brings the tally to nine, as the ''Ættartolur'' promised. This may be conincidental. It is odd that the ''Hyndluljód'' here leaves out the only two names for which the ''Hversu'' provides descendants. It is possible that the following stanzas of the ''Hyndluljód'' down to stanza 24 cover otherwise unknown members of the Dögling lineage since stanza 23 at least returns to the Dödlings, providing the names of the twelve sons of Arngrím and the following stanza tells of their birth to Arngrím and Eyfura. Áli mentioned in stanza 14 of the ''Hyndluljód'' (quoted near the beginning of this article) may be identical to Óli son of Dag mentioned in the ''Ættartolur''. Bragnings Bragi the Old [''Bragi gamli''] was king of Valdres and father of Agnar, father of Álf, father of Eirík (''Eiríkr''), father of Hild (''Hildr'') the mother of Halfdan the Generous, the father of Gudröd (''Guðrǫðr'') the Hunter, father of Halfdan the Black, father of 'Harald Fairhair'. Skilfings or Skjöldungs Skilfir was king of Vörs (''Vǫrs'', modern Voss in northern Hordaland in southwestern Norway. Skelfir was father of Skjöld (''Skjǫldr''), father of Eirík, father of Alrek (''Alrekr''), father of Eirík the Eloquent, father of Alrek the Bold (''Alrekr inn frækni''), father of Víkar (''Víkarr''), father of Vatnar (''Vatnarr''), father of two sons: Ímald (''Ímaldr'') and Eirík, this Eirik being father of Gyda (''Gyða'') who was one of the wives of 'Harald Fairhair'. They were called the Skilfing lineage or Skjöldung lineage.

For commentary on this lineage and variant traditions on those listed here as belonging to it see 'Scylfing' and 'Víkar'. Hildings Hildir was father of Hildibrand (''Hildibrandr''), father of Vígbrand (''Vígbrandr''), father of Hildir and Herbrand (''Herbrandr''). Herbrand was father of Harald Red-beard, father of Ása who was the mother of Halfdan the Black, the father of 'Harald Fairhair'. (The text actually reads "Harald Grenski" (''Haraldr inn grenski'') instead of Harald Red-beard, but that must be an error. Harald Grenski was the name of a later figure, the father of King Olaf II of Norway, and the ''Ynglinga saga'' and many other sources name Harald Red-beard as Ása's father. Siklings Sigar is provided with two sons Siggeir and Sigmund (''Sigmundr''). Siggeir is prominent in ''Volsunga saga'' as the villanous husband of Signý the daughter of Völsung. Sigmund son of Sigar married Hild, daughter of King Grjótgard (''Grjótgarðr'') of Mœr. (See 'Gard Agdi' for Grjótgard's genealogy.) Their son was Sigar, father of Signý, that Sigar who caused Hagbard (''Hagbarðr'') to be hanged. One of the sources where the story of Hagbard appears is in ''Gesta Danorum'', Book 7, which relates the love between Hagbarthus son of Hamundus and Signe daughter of King Sigarus despite Hagbarthus having slain her brothers. When Sigarus discovered the affair, he had Hagbarthus hanged. Then Hagbarthus' brother Haco/Hako/Haki avenged Hagbarthus. In this version Sigar/Sigarus is a king of Denmark, son of Sivaldus, son of King Ungvinus who was originally king of Götaland (see Hagbard and Signy for more). There are places all over Scandinavia, associated with this legend such as Alsige in the former Danish (presently Swedish) province of Halland, which borders Götaland, where there are two large menhirs called ''Hagbard's gallows''. Hagbard and his brother Haki are mentioned as great sea-kings in the Ynglinga saga where Haki wrests the Swedish throne from king Hugleik (this event also appears in Gesta Danorum where Haco kills the Irish king Huglethus) only to be killed later in battle with Hugleik's cousin Jorund. A third reference to Hagbard and his brother Haki appears in the ''Völsunga saga'', chapter 25. It is there said that Hagbard and Haki not yet avenged themselves for Sigar's abduction of one sister and the slaying of another. Either the reference is garbled or it refers to a lost variant with a more extended account of Sigar's feud with Hagbard and his brothers. See 'Hagbard' and 'Haki' for more. Lofdungs Lofdi was a great king who raided Reidgotaland (''Reiðgotaland'') and became king there. Lofdi's sons were Skekkil Sea-king (''Skekkill sækonungr'') and Skyli. Skyli was father of Egdir (''Egðir''), the father of Hjálmthér (''Hjálmþér''), the father of Eylimi, the father of Hjördís (''Hjǫrdís''), the mother of Sigurd Fáfnir's-bane, father of Áslaug (''Áslaugr'') by Brynhild whose ancestry appears below in the 'Budling' discussion. This Áslaug was a wife of Ragnar Lodbrok and by him the mother of Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye (''Sigurðr ormr í auga'') who was father of a second Áslaug who was mother of Sigurd Hart. Sigurd Hart was father of Ragnhild (''Ragnhildr''), mother of 'Harald Fairhair' as already stated. But stanza 26 of the ''Hyndluljód'' identifies Eylimi the father of Hjördís as an Ödling. Ödlings Audi and his brother Budli were sea-kings who raided together and settled in Valland (France) and Saxland (Saxony). Audi ruled in Valland. He was father of Fródi (''Fróði''), father of Kjár (''Kjárr''), father of Ölrún (''Ǫlrún''). Ölrún, daughter of King Kjár of Valland, appears in the prose introduction to the ''Völundarkvida'', as a Valkyrie swan-maiden who became the wife of Völund's brother Egil. The name ''Kjárr'' can be etymologically derived from Latin ''Caesar''. But here the connection with France suggests it might be an adaptation of French ''Charles''. Budlungs Budli the sea-king settled down in Saxland. He was father of Attil (''Attill''), father of Vífil (''Vífill''), father of Læfi, father of Budli. This second Budli was father of Sörli (''Sǫrli'') or Serli, of Atli, and of Brynhild. Brynhild was mother of Áslaug, ancestress of 'Harald Fairhair' as described in the previous Lofdungs discussion. Atli is a legendary version of 'Attila the Hun' and the name Budli comes from Bleda who was the historical Attila's elder brother. The name Sörli is given to a brother of Atli only in this text. But in the eddic poem ''Atlamál hin grœnlenzku'' (stanza 50), Atli declares that he was one of four living brothers when his father Budli died and that half of them are now dead, slain by his wife Gudrún. In the German ''Nibelungenlied'' Attila is called Etzel and said to be son of Botelung, obviously ''Budlung'' interpreted as a name. In this account Etzel has a younger brother named Bloedelin who was slain by Dancwart, Hagen's brother. Blowdelin is probably another memory of the historical Bleda. The eddic poem ''Oddrúnargrátr'' tells of Atli's sister Oddrún and her forbidden love affair with Gunnar, which was, according to this poem, one of the motivations for Atli's later treachery. Oddrún is also mentioned in ''Sigurðarkviða'', in the prose introduction to ''Dráp Niflunga'', and in the ''Völsunga saga''. Niflungs King Næfil was father of Heimar, father of Eynef (''Eynefr''), father of Rakni, father of Gjúki. Gjúki was father of two sons named Gunnar (''Gunnarr'') and Högni (''Hǫgni'') and of two daughters named Gudrún (''Guðrún'') and Gudný (''Guðný''). For commentary and variant traditions see 'Nibelung'. Halfdan the Old of Gór's lineage The ''Orkneying saga'' does not speak at all of Nór's descendants, but introduces instead a figure named Halfdan the Old as the son of Sveidi (''Sveiði'') the Sea-king, who is called Svadi (''Svaði'') in the ''Ættartolur''. Sveidi/Svadi in both texts was son of Heiti, son of Gór who was Nór's brother. This second Halfdan the Old is father of Jarl Ívar of the Uplands who married a daughter of a certain Eistein and so became father of Eystein the Clatterer (''Eysteinn Glumra'') who was father of Jarl Rögnvald of Møre and of Rögnvald's brother Sigurd, and also of two daughters: Svanhild who was one of King Harald Fairhair's wives and another daughter named Malahule. According to various sources, Jarl Rögnvald had three illegitimate sons: Hallad (''Hallaðr''), Hrollaug (''Hrollaugr''), and Torf-Einarr. Later, by his wife Ragnhild (''Ragnhildr'') daughter of Hrólf Nose (''Hrólf Nefja''), Rögnvald was father of three legitimate sons: Hrólf, Ívar, and Thórir (''Þórir'') the Silent. Hrólf, also called Ganger-Hrólf (''Gǫngu-Hrólfr'' 'Hrólf the walker'), Icelandic/Norwegian historians identify him as the Rollo who conquered Neustria which was then renamed as Normandy, but that identification seems very doubtful. Thórir inherited his father's lands. The first four Jarls of Orkney were successively Rögnvald's brother Sigurd, Sigurd's son Guthorm (''Guttormr''), Rögnvald's son Hallad, and Rögnvald's son Turf-Einar. From Turf-Einar the later Jarls descended. Hrollaug and his wife and sons settled in Iceland. Variant spellings ''Other anglicized forms:'' 'Álf the Old': ''Alf the Old;'' 'Áli': ''Ali'', ''Ole;'' 'Álmveig': ''Almveig;'' 'Ám': ''Am;'' 'Angantýr the Berserk': ''Angantyr the Berserk;'' 'Arngrím': ''Arngrim;'' 'Ása': ''Asa;'' 'Áslaug': ''Aslaug;'' 'Audi': ''Authi;'' 'Döglings': ''Doglings;'' 'Eirík the Eloquent': ''Eirik the Eloquent'', ''Eiríkr the Wise in Speech;'' 'Eystein the Clatterer': ''Eystein Glumra;'' 'Fradmar': ''Frathmar;'' 'Ganger-Hrólf': ''Rolf Ganger'', ''Göngu-Hrólf;'' 'Gór': ''Gorr;'' 'Gjúki': ''Gjuki'', ''Giuki;'' 'Gudröd the Hunter': ''Guthröth the Hunting-king;'' 'Gudný': ''Gudny;'' 'Gudrún': ''Gudrun'', ''Guthrún'', ''Guthrun;'' 'Gyrd': ''Gyrth;'' 'Hálf': ''Half;'' 'Halfdan the Black': ''Hálfdan the Black;'' 'Halfdan the Generous': ''Hálfdan the Generous;'' 'Halfdan the Old': ''Hálfdan the Old;'' 'Harald Fairhair': ''Harald fair-hair;'' 'Harald Red-beard': ''Harald the Redbeard'', ''Harald the Red-whiskered;'' 'Hjördís': ''Hjordís'', ''Hjordis'', ''Hiordis;'' 'Högni': ''Hogni;'' 'Hólmgard': ''Holmgard'', ''Hólmgarth;'' 'Hrólf Nose': ''Hrolf nosy'', ''Rolf Nefia;'' 'Jöfur': ''Iofur;'' 'Jöfurmar': ''Jofurmar'', ''Iosurmar;'' 'Kjár': ''Kjar'', ''Kiar;'' 'Mœr': ''More;'' 'Nór': ''Norr;'' 'Oddrún': ''Oddrun;'' 'Ödlings': ''Odlings'', ''Othlings;'' 'Ölrún': ''Olrun;'' 'Óttar': ''Ottar;'' 'Raumaríki': ''Raumarike'', ''Raumarik'', ''Raum's-ric;'' 'Ríg': ''Rig''; 'Ríg-Jarl', ''Rig-Jarl;'' 'Ringiríki': ''Ringerike;'' 'Rögnvald': ''Rognvald;'' 'Signý': ''Signy;'' 'Sigurd Fáfnir's-bane': ''Sigurd Fafnisbani;'' 'Sigurd Hart': ''Sigurth Hart;'' 'Sigurd Snake-in-Eye': ''Sigurth Serpent-in-the-Eye'', ''Sigurd the worm-eyed;'' 'Skjöld': ''Skjold'', ''Skiold;'' 'Skjöldung': ''Skjoldung'', ''Skioldung;'' 'Snær': ''Snaer'', ''Snœr'', ''Snow;'' 'Sölvi': ''Solvi'', ''Solve;'' 'Thóra': ''Thora;'' 'Thórir': ''Thorir'', ''Thorer;'' 'Víkar': ''Vikar;'' 'Völsung': ''Volsung;'' 'Völund': ''Volund;'' 'Vörs': ''Vor;'' 'Yngvi': ''Yngve''. See also  ★ Halfdan This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
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 !NOTE: Royal & Noble Genealogical Data On the
 Ivar of the Uplands, Earl of the Uplands

 Child 1: Glumra, Eystein the Noisy, Jarl of the Uplanders, b. 788

 (Redirected from Ivar Halfdan)
 'Halfdan the Old' (Old Norse ''Hálfdanr gamli'' and ''Hálfdanr inn gamli'') was an ancient, legendary king from whom descended many of the most notable lineages of legend. A second Halfdan the Old is the purported great-grandfather of Ragnvald Eysteinsson.

 Contents
 Halfdan the Old, ancestor of many lineages
 ''Hyndluljód''
 ''Skáldskaparmál''
 ''Ættartolur''
 Halfdan and his sons
 Bragnings
 Skilfings or Skjöldungs
 Hildings
 Lofdungs
 Ödlings
 Budlungs
 Niflungs
 Halfdan the Old of Gór's lineage
 Variant spellings
 See also
 Halfdan the Old, ancestor of many lineages

 ''Hyndluljód''

 The eddic poem ''Hyndluljód'' states in verses 14-16:

 "Of old the noblest     of all was Áli,

 Before him Halfdan,     foremost of Skjöldungs [''Skjoldungar''];

 Famed were the battles     the hero fought,

 To the corners of heaven     his deeds were carried.


 "Strengthened by Eymund [''Eymundr''],     the strongest of men,

 Sigtrygg [''Sigtryggr''] he slew     with the ice-cold sword;

 His bride was Álmveig [''Álmveigr''],     the best of women,

 And eighteen boys     did Álmveig bear him.


 "Hence come the Skjöldungs,     hence the Skilfings,

 Hence the Ödlings [''Oðlingar''],     hence the Ynglings,

 Hence come the free-born,     hence the high-born,

 The noblest of men     that in Midgard dwell:

 And all are thy kinsmen,     Óttar, thou fool!"


 Though Halfdan is himself called a Skjöldung in verse 14, in verse 16 the Skjöldungs are named instead as one of the families that sprang from Halfdan's marriage with Álmveig.
 ''Skáldskaparmál''

 Snorri Sturluson explains in the ''Skáldskaparmál'':

 There was a king named Halfdan the Old, who was most famous of all kings. He made a great sacrificial feast at mid-winter, and sacrificed to this end, that he might live three hundred years in his kingdom; but he received these answers: he should not live more than the full life of a man, but for three hundred years there should be in his line no woman and no man who was not of great repute. He was a great warrior, and went on forays far and wide in the Eastern Regions: there he slew in single combat the king who was called Sigtrygg. Then he took in marriage that woman named Alvig the Wise, daughter of King Eymund of Hólmgard [''Hólmgarðr'']: they had eighteen sons, nine born at one birth. These were their names:

 the first, Thengil [''Thengill''], who was called Thengil of Men;

 the second, Ræsir;

 the third, Gram [''Gramr''];

 the fourth, Gylfi;

 the fifth, Hilmir;

 the sixth, Jöfur [''Jofurr''];

 the seventh, Tyggi;

 the eighth, Skyli or Skúli;

 the ninth, Harri or Herra.


 These nine brothers became so famous in foraying that, in all records since, their names are used as titles of rank, even as the name of King or that of Jarl. They had no children, and all fell in battle.


 Snorri then gives examples from skaldic verse where these names are used as general terms for 'lord' or 'ruler'. The promise of three hundred years of no women among Halfdan's descendants is paralleled in the story of Ríg-Jarl who has sons only but no daughters. See 'Ríg'. None of the titles given here duplicate titles such as ''hersir'', ''jarl'', ''konungr'', and ''dróttinn'' which appear in the Ríg account. Snorri continues:

 Halfdan and his wife had nine other sons also; these were:

 Hildir, from whom the Hildings are come;


 Nefir, from whom the Niflungs sprang;


 Audi [''Auði''], from whom the Ödlings [''Oðlingar''] are come;


 Yngvi, from whom the Ynglings are descended;


 Dag [''Dagr''], from whom come the Döglings [''Doglingar''];


 Bragi, from whom the Bragnings are sprung (that is the race of Halfdan the Generous (''Hálfdanr inn mildi'');


 Budli [''Buðli''], from whom the Budlungs [''Buðlungar''] are come (from the house of the Budlungs Atli and Brynhild [''Brynhildr''] descended);


 the eighth was Lofdi [''Lofði''], who was a great war-king (that host who were called Lofdar [''Lofðar''] followed him; his kindred are called Lofdungs [''Lofðungar''], whence sprang Eylimi, Sigurd Fáfnir's-bane's mother's sire);


 the ninth, Sigar [''Sigarr''], whence come the Siklings: that is the house of Siggeir [''Siggeirr''], who was son-in-law of Völsung [''Volsungr''],-and the house of Sigar, who hanged Hagbard [''Hagbarðr''].


 From the race of Hildings sprang Harald Red-beard [''Haraldr granrauði''], mother's father of Halfdan the Black [''Hálfdanr inn svarti''].


 Of the Niflung's house was Gjúki.


 Of the house of Ödlings, Kjár [''Kjárr''].


 Of the house of the Ylfings was Eirík the Eloquent [''Eiríkr inn málspaki''].


 The Skjöldungs and Skilfings mentioned in the ''Hyndluljód'' are missing here. The Ylfings are suddenly introduced at the end in a reference to Eirík the Eloquent yet are also not found among the nine families.
 Snorri then immediately mentions what seem to be intended as four famous houses not descended from Halfdan the Old:

 These also are illustrious royal houses:


 from Yngvi, the Ynglings are descended;

 from Skjöld in Denmark, the Skjöldungs are come;

 from Völsung in the land of Franks, those who are called Völsungs.


 One war-king was named Skelfir; and his house is called the House of Skilfings: his kindred is in the Eastern Region.


 But Yngvi has been previously named as a son of Halfdan the Old and the Skjöldungs and Skilfings are counted among Halfdan's descendants in the ''Hyndluljód''.
 Snorri continues:

 These houses which were named but now have been used in skaldship for titles of rank.


 Snorri then quotes many skaldic verses which demonstrate this.
 ''Ættartolur''

 Halfdan and his sons

 The ''Ættartolur'', the genealogies appended to the ''Hversu Noregr byggdist'' in the ''Flatey Book'' introduce Halfdan the Old as the ruler of Ringiríki (a territory including modern Ringerike and Valdres in Oppland). Halfdan is here the son of King Hring (eponym of Ringeríki) by the daughter of a sea-king named Vífil (''Vífill''). Hring was son of 'Raum the Old' (eponym of Raumaríki) by Hild (''Hildr'') the daughter Gudröd the Old (''Guðroðr inn gamli''). Raum the Old was son of Nór (''Nórr'') (the eponym of Norway). See 'Nór' for further details about Nór and his ancestry and descendants.
 In his sacrifice Halfdan requested a lifetime of 300 years like that of his ancestor 'Snær'.
 The form ''Tiggi'' appears instead of ''Tyggi'' in the list of the first nine sons. The list of the second nine sons has Skelfir instead of Yngvi and the form Næfil (''Næfill'') instead of Nefir. The order of the names is the same and it is explained that Hildir, Sigar, and Lofdi were war-kings; Audi, Budli, and Næfil were sea-kings, while Dag, Skelfir, and Bragi remained on their lands.
 Döglings

 Dag married Thóra Heroes-mother (''Thóra drengjamóður'') who bore him nine sons, but only four are named: Óli, Ám (''Ámr''), Jöfur, and Arngrím (''Arngrímr'').
 Óli was father of Dag, father of Óleif (''Óleifr''), father of Hring, father of Helgi, father of Sigurd Hart (''Sigurðr Hjortr''), father of Ragnhild (''Ragnhildr'') the mother of 'Harald Fairhair'.
 Arngrím married Eyfura who bore him Angantýr the Berserk (''Angantýr berserkr''). Angantýr's story is most fully treated in the ''Hervarar saga''. It also appears in part in book five of Saxo Grammaticus' ''Gesta Danorum'' and an account only the deaths of Angantýr and his eleven brothers appears in ''Arrow-Odd's saga''.
 Stanza 18 of the ''Hyndluljód'' reads:

 The mate of Dag     was a mother of heroes [''drengja móður''],

 Thóra, who bore him     the bravest of fighters,

 Fradmar [''Fraðmarr''] and Gyrd [''Gyrðr'']     and the Frekis [''Frekar''] twain,

 Ám and Jöfurmar [''Jofurmar''],     Álf the Old;

 It is much to know,-     wilt thou hear yet more?


 The name Ám agrees with that of a son of Dag in the ''Ættartolur'' and Jöfurmar is probably identical with Jöfur of the ''Ættartolur''. Fradmar, Gyrd, Álf the Old, and the two Frekis bring the total to seven. Adding the names Óli and Arngrím to this list from the ''Ættartolur'' brings the tally to nine, as the ''Ættartolur'' promised. This may be conincidental. It is odd that the ''Hyndluljód'' here leaves out the only two names for which the ''Hversu'' provides descendants. It is possible that the following stanzas of the ''Hyndluljód'' down to stanza 24 cover otherwise unknown members of the Dögling lineage since stanza 23 at least returns to the Dödlings, providing the names of the twelve sons of Arngrím and the following stanza tells of their birth to Arngrím and Eyfura. Áli mentioned in stanza 14 of the ''Hyndluljód'' (quoted near the beginning of this article) may be identical to Óli son of Dag mentioned in the ''Ættartolur''.
 Bragnings

 Bragi the Old [''Bragi gamli''] was king of Valdres and father of Agnar, father of Álf, father of Eirík (''Eiríkr''), father of Hild (''Hildr'') the mother of Halfdan the Generous, the father of Gudröd (''Guðroðr'') the Hunter, father of Halfdan the Black, father of 'Harald Fairhair'.
 Skilfings or Skjöldungs

 Skilfir was king of Vörs (''Vors'', modern Voss in northern Hordaland in southwestern Norway. Skelfir was father of Skjöld (''Skjoldr''), father of Eirík, father of Alrek (''Alrekr''), father of Eirík the Eloquent, father of Alrek the Bold (''Alrekr inn frækni''), father of Víkar (''Víkarr''), father of Vatnar (''Vatnarr''), father of two sons: Ímald (''Ímaldr'') and Eirík, this Eirik being father of Gyda (''Gyða'') who was one of the wives of 'Harald Fairhair'. They were called the Skilfing lineage or Skjöldung lineage. For commentary on this lineage and variant traditions on those listed here as belonging to it see 'Scylfing' and 'Víkar'.
 Hildings

 Hildir was father of Hildibrand (''Hildibrandr''), father of Vígbrand (''Vígbrandr''), father of Hildir and Herbrand (''Herbrandr''). Herbrand was father of Harald Red-beard, father of Ása who was the mother of Halfdan the Black, the father of 'Harald Fairhair'.
 (The text actually reads "Harald Grenski" (''Haraldr inn grenski'') instead of Harald Red-beard, but that must be an error. Harald Grenski was the name of a later figure, the father of King Olaf II of Norway, and the ''Ynglinga saga'' and many other sources name Harald Red-beard as Ása's father.
 Siklings

 Sigar is provided with two sons Siggeir and Sigmund (''Sigmundr''). Siggeir is prominent in ''Volsunga saga'' as the villanous husband of Signý the daughter of Völsung. Sigmund son of Sigar married Hild, daughter of King Grjótgard (''Grjótgarðr'') of Mœr. (See 'Gard Agdi' for Grjótgard's genealogy.) Their son was Sigar, father of Signý, that Sigar who caused Hagbard (''Hagbarðr'') to be hanged.
 One of the sources where the story of Hagbard appears is in ''Gesta Danorum'', Book 7, which relates the love between Hagbarthus son of Hamundus and Signe daughter of King Sigarus despite Hagbarthus having slain her brothers. When Sigarus discovered the affair, he had Hagbarthus hanged. Then Hagbarthus' brother Haco/Hako/Haki avenged Hagbarthus. In this version Sigar/Sigarus is a king of Denmark, son of Sivaldus, son of King Ungvinus who was originally king of Götaland (see Hagbard and Signy for more).
 There are places all over Scandinavia, associated with this legend such as Alsige in the former Danish (presently Swedish) province of Halland, which borders Götaland, where there are two large menhirs called ''Hagbard's gallows''.
 Hagbard and his brother Haki are mentioned as great sea-kings in the Ynglinga saga where Haki wrests the Swedish throne from king Hugleik (this event also appears in Gesta Danorum where Haco kills the Irish king Huglethus) only to be killed later in battle with Hugleik's cousin Jorund.
 A third reference to Hagbard and his brother Haki appears in the ''Völsunga saga'', chapter 25. It is there said that Hagbard and Haki not yet avenged themselves for Sigar's abduction of one sister and the slaying of another. Either the reference is garbled or it refers to a lost variant with a more extended account of Sigar's feud with Hagbard and his brothers.
 See 'Hagbard' and 'Haki' for more.
 Lofdungs

 Lofdi was a great king who raided Reidgotaland (''Reiðgotaland'') and became king there. Lofdi's sons were Skekkil Sea-king (''Skekkill sækonungr'') and Skyli. Skyli was father of Egdir (''Egðir''), the father of Hjálmthér (''Hjálmþér''), the father of Eylimi, the father of Hjördís (''Hjordís''), the mother of Sigurd Fáfnir's-bane, father of Áslaug (''Áslaugr'') by Brynhild whose ancestry appears below in the 'Budling' discussion. This Áslaug was a wife of Ragnar Lodbrok and by him the mother of Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye (''Sigurðr ormr í auga'') who was father of a second Áslaug who was mother of Sigurd Hart. Sigurd Hart was father of Ragnhild (''Ragnhildr''), mother of 'Harald Fairhair' as already stated.
 But stanza 26 of the ''Hyndluljód'' identifies Eylimi the father of Hjördís as an Ödling.
 Ödlings

 Audi and his brother Budli were sea-kings who raided together and settled in Valland (France) and Saxland (Saxony). Audi ruled in Valland. He was father of Fródi (''Fróði''), father of Kjár (''Kj??rr''), father of Ölrún (''Olrún'').
 Ölrún, daughter of King Kjár of Valland, appears in the prose introduction to the ''Völundarkvida'', as a Valkyrie swan-maiden who became the wife of Völund's brother Egil. The name ''Kjárr'' can be etymologically derived from Latin ''Caesar''. But here the connection with France suggests it might be an adaptation of French ''Charles''.
 Budlungs

 Budli the sea-king settled down in Saxland. He was father of Attil (''Attill''), father of Vífil (''Vífill''), father of Læfi, father of Budli. This second Budli was father of Sörli (''Sorli'') or Serli, of Atli, and of Brynhild. Brynhild was mother of Áslaug, ancestress of 'Harald Fairhair' as described in the previous Lofdungs discussion.
 Atli is a legendary version of 'Attila the Hun' and the name Budli comes from Bleda who was the historical Attila's elder brother. The name Sörli is given to a brother of Atli only in this text. But in the eddic poem ''Atlamál hin grœnlenzku'' (stanza 50), Atli declares that he was one of four living brothers when his father Budli died and that half of them are now dead, slain by his wife Gudrún. In the German ''Nibelungenlied'' Attila is called Etzel and said to be son of Botelung, obviously ''Budlung'' interpreted as a name. In this account Etzel has a younger brother named Bloedelin who was slain by Dancwart, Hagen's brother. Blowdelin is probably another memory of the historical Bleda. The eddic poem ''Oddrúnargrátr'' tells of Atli's sister Oddrún and her forbidden love affair with Gunnar, which was, according to this poem, one of the motivations for Atli's later treachery. Oddrún is also mentioned in ''Sigurðarkviða'', in the prose introduction to ''Dráp Niflunga'', and in the ''Völsunga saga''.
 Niflungs

 King Næfil was father of Heimar, father of Eynef (''Eynefr''), father of Rakni, father of Gjúki. Gjúki was father of two sons named Gunnar (''Gunnarr'') and Högni (''Hogni'') and of two daughters named Gudrún (''Guðrún'') and Gudný (''Guðný''). For commentary and variant traditions see 'Nibelung'.
 Halfdan the Old of Gór's lineage

 The ''Orkneying saga'' does not speak at all of Nór's descendants, but introduces instead a figure named Halfdan the Old as the son of Sveidi (''Sveiði'') the Sea-king, who is called Svadi (''Svaði'') in the ''Ættartolur''. Sveidi/Svadi in both texts was son of Heiti, son of Gór who was Nór's brother.
 This second Halfdan the Old is father of Jarl Ívar of the Uplands who married a daughter of a certain Eistein and so became father of Eystein the Clatterer (''Eysteinn Glumra'') who was father of Jarl Rögnvald of Møre and of Rögnvald's brother Sigurd, and also of two daughters: Svanhild who was one of King Harald Fairhair's wives and another daughter named Malahule. According to various sources, Jarl Rögnvald had three illegitimate sons: Hallad (''Hallaðr''), Hrollaug (''Hrollaugr''), and Torf-Einarr. Later, by his wife Ragnhild (''Ragnhildr'') daughter of Hrólf Nose (''Hrólf Nefja''), Rögnvald was father of three legitimate sons: Hrólf, Ívar, and Thórir (''Þórir'') the Silent. Hrólf, also called Ganger-Hrólf (''Gongu-Hrólfr'' 'Hrólf the walker'), Icelandic/Norwegian historians identify him as the Rollo who conquered Neustria which was then renamed as Normandy, but that identification seems very doubtful. Thórir inherited his father's lands. The first four Jarls of Orkney were successively Rögnvald's brother Sigurd, Sigurd's son Guthorm (''Guttormr''), Rögnvald's son Hallad, and Rögnvald's son Turf-Einar. From Turf-Einar the later Jarls descended. Hrollaug and his wife and sons settled in Iceland.
 Variant spellings

 ''Other anglicized forms:'' 'Álf the Old': ''Alf the Old;'' 'Áli': ''Ali'', ''Ole;'' 'Álmveig': ''Almveig;'' 'Ám': ''Am;'' 'Angantýr the Berserk': ''Angantyr the Berserk;'' 'Arngrím': ''Arngrim;'' 'Ása': ''Asa;'' 'Áslaug': ''Aslaug;'' 'Audi': ''Authi;'' 'Döglings': ''Doglings;'' 'Eirík the Eloquent': ''Eirik the Eloquent'', ''Eiríkr the Wise in Speech;'' 'Eystein the Clatterer': ''Eystein Glumra;'' 'Fradmar': ''Frathmar;'' 'Ganger-Hrólf': ''Rolf Ganger'', ''Göngu-Hrólf;'' 'Gór': ''Gorr;'' 'Gjúki': ''Gjuki'', ''Giuki;'' 'Gudröd the Hunter': ''Guthröth the Hunting-king;'' 'Gudný': ''Gudny;'' 'Gudrún': ''Gudrun'', ''Guthrún'', ''Guthrun;'' 'Gyrd': ''Gyrth;'' 'Hálf': ''Half;'' 'Halfdan the Black': ''Hálfdan the Black;'' 'Halfdan the Generous': ''Hálfdan the Generous;'' 'Halfdan the Old': ''Hálfdan the Old;'' 'Harald Fairhair': ''Harald fair-hair;'' 'Harald Red-beard': ''Harald the Redbeard'', ''Harald the Red-whiskered;'' 'Hjördís': ''Hjordís'', ''Hjordis'', ''Hiordis;'' 'Högni': ''Hogni;'' 'Hólmgard': ''Holmgard'', ''Hólmgarth;'' 'Hrólf Nose': ''Hrolf nosy'', ''Rolf Nefia;'' 'Jöfur': ''Iofur;'' 'Jöfurmar': ''Jofurmar'', ''Iosurmar;'' 'Kjár': ''Kjar'', ''Kiar;'' 'Mœr': ''More;'' 'Nór': ''Norr;'' 'Oddrún': ''Oddrun;'' 'Ödlings': ''Odlings'', ''Othlings;'' 'Ölrún': ''Olrun;'' 'Óttar': ''Ottar;'' 'Raumaríki': ''Raumarike'', ''Raumarik'', ''Raum's-ric;'' 'Ríg': ''Rig''; 'Ríg-Jarl', ''Rig-Jarl;'' 'Ringiríki': ''Ringerike;'' 'Rögnvald': ''Rognvald;'' 'Signý': ''Signy;'' 'Sigurd Fáfnir's-bane': ''Sigurd Fafnisbani;'' 'Sigurd Hart': ''Sigurth Hart;'' 'Sigurd Snake-in-Eye': ''Sigurth Serpent-in-the-Eye'', ''Sigurd the worm-eyed;'' 'Skjöld': ''Skjold'', ''Skiold;'' 'Skjöldung': ''Skjoldung'', ''Skioldung;'' 'Snær': ''Snaer'', ''Snœr'', ''Snow;'' 'Sölvi': ''Solvi'', ''Solve;'' 'Thóra': ''Thora;'' 'Thórir': ''Thorir'', ''Thorer;'' 'Víkar': ''Vikar;'' 'Völsung': ''Volsung;'' 'Völund': ''Volund;'' 'Vörs': ''Vor;'' 'Yngvi': ''Yngve''.
 See also


 ? Halfdan

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Orkneyinga Saga: The History of the Earls of Orkney
Hermann Pálsson, Paul Geoffrey Edwards
Penguin, 1981

Heiti, the son of Gor, was the father of the sea-king Sveidi, the father of Halfdan the Old, father of Earl Ivar of the Uplands, father of Eystein the Clatterer, father of the wise counselloer, Earl Rognvald the Powerful.
Icelandic Sagas and Other Historical Documents Relating to the Settlements and Descents of the Northmen on the British Isles ...: The Orkeyingers' saga, with appendices, &c. Translated by Sir G. W. Dasent
Guðbrandur Vigfússon
H.M. Stationery Office, 1894

The Clans, Septs & Regiments of the Scottish Highlands (Google eBook)
Frank Adam, Sir Thomas Innes of Learney
Genealogical Publishing Com, Jan 1, 1970

SINCLAIR

The founder of this family was Sir William Saint-Clair, son of Robert de Saint-Clair in Normandy, and Eleanor de Dreux (a granddaughter of the Sire de Coucy). Sir William was guardian of the Prince, and from Alexander III had a grant of the Barony of Roslin, with which, however, there appears to have been an earlier connection. His son, Sir Henry de Sancto Claro, supported Robert the Bruce, and was one of the Scottish barons who signed the celebrated letter to the Pope asserting the independence of Scotland. Sir William, his son, fell with b”Good Sir James Douglas” defending the Bruce's heart in Spain, and his son, Sir Henry, laid the northern foundation of the family by marrying one of the co-heiresses of Malise, Earl of Stratherne, Caithness, and Orkney. The eldest son of this marriage, Henry Sinclair of Roslin, obtained from King Haco VI of Norway a recognition of this claim to the Earldom or Orkney. William, 3rd Sinclair of Orkney, received in 1455 from the Scottish King, James II, a grant of the Earldom of Caithness. He was the founder of Roslin Chapen, and (as Prince of Orkney) is commemorated in the celebrated “Prince's Pillar” there (to which, in recent years, the hackneyed German “prentis” legend has been applied, which Scottish Masonry should repudiate). In 1470 the Earl of Orkney and Caithness was compelled to resign Orkney to the Scottish Crown in exchange for the Castle of Ravenscraig in Fife. The king was jealous because Orkney was a semi-royal fief, inherited by the Sinclairs from the Norse Jarls or Sea-Kings, who sprang from Rognvald, Jarl of Moeri, also ancestor of Rolf the Ganger, 1st Duke of Normandy. Rognvald was grandson of Ivar, Jarl of the Uplands, a Prince of the Royal House of Norway.

The Earl resettled the Earldom of Caithness on his son by his second wife, Marjory, daughter of Alexander Sutherland of Dunbeath. The direct line of the Sinclair Earls of Caithness came to an end with the death of George, 6th Earl. In 1672 he had executed a disposition to Sir John Campbell of Glenorchy of all his titles, property, and heritable jurisdictions, Sir John being one of his principal creditors.

The British Chronicles, Volume 2
David Hughes
Heritage Books, Jan 1, 2007 - Great Britain

Glumra 'eystein The Noisy' Ivarsson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2009)
Eystein Glumra (the Clatterer), also called Eystein Ivarsson (born ca. 805 in Nord-Trøndelag, Norway) was Jarl (Earl) of Oppland and Hedmark in Norway.[1][2]

The Heimskringla Saga states that Eystein Glumra was the father of Rognvald Eysteinsson and Sigurd Eysteinsson. And, that he was grandfather of Guthorm Sigurdsson and Torf-Einarr. Although the Saga does mention a few Ivars, none are said to be Eystein's father.[3]

The first earl in the Orkney Islands was called Sigurd, who was a son of Eystein Glumra, and brother of Ragnvald earl of More. After Sigurd, his son Guthorm was earl for one year. After him Torf-Einar, a son of Ragnvald, took the earldom, and was long earl, and was a man of great power.
According to the Orkneyinga Saga, Eystein the noisy was the son of Ivar the Uplanders’ earl, and grandson of Halfdan the Old. He was also father of Rognvald The Wise.[4]

Heiti, Gorr’s son, was father of Sveiði the sea-king, the father of Halfdan the old, the father of Ivar the Uplanders’ earl, the father of Eystein the noisy, the father of earl Rognvald the mighty and the wise in council.
Orkneyinga Saga makes his grandson Hrolf identical to Rollo, conqueror of Normandy, and hence ancestor of William the Conqueror and the resulting Royal Families of England, although the connection is viewed skeptically by scholars.

References[edit]
Jump up ^ Norsk Biografisk Leksikon, (19 volumes. Oslo: Aschehoug, 1921-1982), FHL book 948.1 D36n., vol. 11 p. 272-273.
Jump up ^ Våre Forfedre, Bugge, Mogens Fraas, (Olso: I kommisjon hos Cammermeyers Boghandel, 1939), FHL book 929.2481 B865b., p. 34.
Jump up ^ Heimskringla - SAGA OF OLAF HARALDSON
Jump up ^ THE ORKNEYINGERS’ SAGA

My Sources:
Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 1; 1898 - Staffordshire (England)

The Heimskringla: Or, The Sagas of the Norse Kings from the Icelandic of Snorre Sturlason, Volume 4
Snorri Sturluson, Samuel Laing, Rasmus Björn Anderson
J. C. Nimmo, 1889 – America

Following the Ark of the Covenant: The Treasure of God
Kerry Ross Boren, Lisa Lee Boren
Cedar Fort, Sep 1, 2000

Icelandic Sagas and Other Historical Documents Relating to the Settlements and Descents of the Northmen of the British Isles
Cambridge University Press, Nov 15, 2012

“Gorr had the isles, and for that he was called a sea-king; his sons were they Heiti and Beiti, they were sea-kings and mighty overbearing men. They had made many inroads on the realm of Norr's sons, and they had many battles and now one, now the other won the day. Beiti ran into Drontheim and warred there; he lay where it is now called Beitsea and Beitstede; thence he made them drag his ship from the innermost bight of Beitstede, and so north over Elduneck, that is where the Naumdales come down from the north. He sat himself on the poop and held the tiller in his hand, and claimed for his own all that land that then lay on the larboard, and that is many tilths and much land. Heiti, Gorr's son, was father of Sveidi, the sea-king, the father of Halfdan the old, the father of Ivar the Uplander's earl, the father of Eystein the noisy, the father of earl Rognvald the mighty and the wise in council.

Earl Rognvald joined Harold fair-hair when he seized the land, but he (Harold) gave him lordship over both the Maeren and Romsdale; he had to wife Ragnhilda the daughter of Hrolf nosy; their son was Hrolf who won Normandy, he was so tall that horses could not carry him; for that he was called Ganging-Hrolf; from him are come the Rouen Jarls and the English Kings; their son was also Ivar, and Thorir the silent. Rognvald had also base-born sons, their names were Hallad and Hrollaug and Einar, he was the youngest. Harold fair-hair fared the summer west across the sea to chastise the Vikings, when he was weary at the peacelessness of those who harried in Norway in summer, but were in the winter in Shetland or the Orkneys. He laid under him Shetland and the Orkneys and the Southern Isles; he fared west too as far as Man, and laid waste the tilths of Man. He had there many battles, and took as his own lands so far west that no king of Norway has ever owned land further west since. And in one battle, Ivar, son of earl Rognvald, fell. But when king Harold sailed from the west, then he gave to earl Rognvald, as an atonement for his son, Shetland and the Orkneys; but earl Rognvald gave both lands to Sigurd and his brother: he was one of king Harold's forecastle men. The king gave Sigurd the title of earl when he went from the west, and Sigurd stayed behing there in the west.”

The British Chronicles, Volume 2
David Hughes
Heritage Books, Jan 1, 2007

Chronicles of the Vikings: Records, Memorials, and Myths
Raymond Ian Page
University of Toronto Press, 1995

[WmtheConqueror.GED] [mccoydick.FTW] !NOTE: Royal & Noble Genealogical Data On the

Glumra, Eystein the Noisy, Jarl of the Uplanders Born: 788 Father: , Ivar of the Uplands, Earl of the Uplands Married to Ragnvaldsdottir, Ascrida Child 1: Eysteinsson, Ragnvald I the wise of More Child 2: Eysteinsson, Sigurd I Riki the Powerful, Earl of Orkney Child 3: Eysteinsdottir, Swanhilda Jarl is a Scandinavian title meaning a nobleman ranking directly below the King. I have seen the title in connection with Norsemen or Vikings.
[WmtheConqueror.GED]
[mccoydick.FTW]
!NOTE: Royal & Noble Genealogical Data On the
Glumra, Eystein the Noisy, Jarl of the Uplanders
Born: 788
Father: , Ivar of the Uplands, Earl of the Uplands
Married to Ragnvaldsdottir, Ascrida
Child 1: Eysteinsson, Ragnvald I the wise of More
Child 2: Eysteinsson, Sigurd I Riki the Powerful, Earl of Orkney
Child 3: Eysteinsdottir, Swanhilda
Jarl is a Scandinavian title meaning a nobleman ranking directly below the King.
I have seen the title in connection with Norsemen or Vikings.
 
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