Kung Halvdan "den givmilde" ØYSTEINSSON

Kung Halvdan "den givmilde" ØYSTEINSSON

Man ca 760 - 800  (~ 40 år)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Kung Halvdan "den givmilde" ØYSTEINSSONKung Halvdan "den givmilde" ØYSTEINSSON föddes ca 760 i Holtan, Borre, Vestfold, Norge (son till Kung Eystein "fret/fjert" HALFDANSSON och Drottning Hild EIRIKSDOTTER); dog 800 i Holtan, Borre, Vestfold, Norge; begravdes i Vestfold, Norge.

    Noteringar:

    Halvdan Øysteinsson, king of Romerike and Vestfold
    Engelska (förvalt): Halfdan "the Mild" (Eysteinsson), king of Romerike and Vestfold, Norska: Halvdan "Den Milde" Eysteinsson, king of Romerike and Vestfold, Litauiska: Romerik?s ir Vestfoldo Karalius Halfdanas "Ramusis" Eysteino s?nus, king of Romerike and Vestfold
    Also Known As: "den Milde"
    Birthdate: cirka 760
    Birthplace: Holtan, Vestfold, Norway
    Death: 800 (36-44)
    Holtan, Borre, Vestfold, Norway (Illness in his bed)
    Begravningsort: Vestfold, Norway

    Närstående:
    Son till Eystein «Fret/Fjert» Halfdansson och Hild Eiriksdotter
    Make till Queen Lif Dagsdotter
    Fader till Gudrød Halvdansson «the Hunter» Veidekonge; Sigurd II, 5th King of Haithabu och Unknown Halfdansdatter
    Bror till Æsa "den lyse" Eysteinsdatter; King of Hedeby Harold Eysteinsson, Second King of Haithabu; Gudrod Eysteinsson "Jagtkonge" (King in Vestfold); Geva och Sigurd, first King of Haithabu
    Occupation: King of Vestfold, Norway, Konge Vestfold



    About Halfdan "the Mild", king of Romerike and Vestfold
    TEMP NOTE: I found that some profiles of Halfdan Sveidasson are also marked as "Milde", so I promoted his father's name to a more visible place, and moved "Milde" to the suffix field - Alvestrand.

    He is NOT the father of Ivar Opplendingejarl.

    Halvdan Milde (Øysteinsson) (Hálfdan hinn mildi) ca 780, PAM

    In English: Halfdan the Mild

    King in part of Norway: Romerike / Vestfold

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=gb&emne=asatru&person=Halvdan%20Milde%20%28%D8ysteinsson%29&list=&vis=

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_%C3%98ysteinsson_den_gavmilde

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

    Three brothers, one sister:

    1. SIGEFRID [Sigurd] ([750]-798). First "King of Haithabu". The Annales Fuldenses record that "Sigifridi regis Danorum" sent "Halbdani…cum sociis suis" as missi to a council held by Charles I King of the Franks at "Lippia"[9]. One child:

    2. HARALD ([750]-killed in battle in the Irish Sea 804). Second "King of Haithabu". m IMHILD, daughter of WARNECHIN Graf von Engern & his wife Kunhilde von Rügen. Three children:

    3. HALFDAN Mildi ([750]-802, bur Borro). King of Vestfold. (See below)

    4. GEVA ([755]-) http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/DENMARK.htm#GevaMWidukindSaxonydied810

    HALFDAN "Mildi", son of --- ([750]-802, bur Borro). King of Vestfold. m LIF of Westmare, daughter and heiress of DAG King of Westmare & his wife ---.

    King Halfdan & his wife had [three] children:

    1. GODEFRID (-murdered 810). Godefrid is shown in Europäische Stammtafeln[11] as the son of King Halfdan, but the primary source on which this is based has not yet been identified. He succeeded as GODEFRID King of the Danes. King of Vestfold, Hedeland, Vaermland, Westmare and Hedemarken[12]. The Annales Ryenses record that "Karolus Imperator" came with all his army against "Godefrith regem Daciæ" in 776[13], although the dating would be questionable if this refers to the same King Godefrid. Adam of Bremen names "rex Godafridus" as the Danish leader against whom Emperor Charlemagne made war[14]. The Royal Frankish Annals record that King Godefrid exchanged envoys with Emperor Charles in Schleswig in 804[15]. Einhard records a dispute between "Drasconem ducem Abodritorum" and "Godelaibum alium ducem…et cum eis filium fratris sui…Reginoldum", the latter being killed in 808[16]. Einhard records that "Thrasco dux Abodritorum" was killed by "hominibus Godofridi" in "emporie Rerie" in 809[17]. The Royal Frankish Annals also record that King Godefrid attacked the Obotrites in 808 and destroyed their commercial centre at Reria[18]. He attacked the Frisians in 810[19]. Einhard records the death of "Godefrido Danorum rege" in 810 and the succession of "Hemmingus filius fratris eius"[20]. The Annales Fuldenses record the death in 810 of "Godafrido Danorum rege", the succession by "Hemmingus filius fratris eius", and the latter making peace with the emperor[21]. He was murdered by one of his retainers[22]. King Godefrid had [four or more] children:

    a) son (-killed in battle 814). He and his brothers were exiled to Sweden after the death of their father. They returned in 813 and expelled King Harald and King Reginfred[23]. Einhard's Annales record that "Harioldus et Reginfredus reges Danorum" who, in the previous year had been expelled from Denmark by "filiis Godofredi", attacked again in 814 but "Reginfridus et unus de filiis Godofredi qui maior natu erat" were killed[24].

    b) son (-after 827). Joint King of the Danes 813. The Annales Fuldenses record that Emperor Louis sent a Frankish army to help "Herioldo Danorum regi" against "filios Godafridi" in 815[25]. They are their brothers were driven out in 819 by King Harald, with the help of Emperor Louis I "le Pieux" and the Obotrites[26].

    c) other sons (-after 819). Joint King of the Danes 813. The Annales Fuldenses record that Emperor Louis sent a Frankish army to help "Herioldo Danorum regi" against "filios Godafridi" in 815[27]. No source has so far been identified which names the sons of King Godefrid or states how many sons there were. They are their brothers were driven out in 819 by King Harald, with the help of Emperor Louis I "le Pieux" and the Obotrites[28].

    2. [SIGURD] (-killed in battle Bardowick 810). King Godefrid's brother is named Sigurd in Europäische Stammtafeln[29], but the primary source on which this is based has not yet been identified.

    a) REGINOLD [Ragnvald] (-killed in battle 808). Einhard records a battle between "Drasconem ducem Abodritorum" and "Godelaibum alium ducem…et cum eis filium fratris sui…Reginoldum", the latter being killed in 808[30]. The Royal Frankish Annals name "Reginold, his [King Godefred's] brother's son" when recording that he was killed fighting the Obotrites[31]. The Annales Fuldenses record the battle between "Godafridus rex Danorum" and the Abotrites in which "Reginoldo filio fratris sui" was killed[32].

    b) HEMMING (-812). The Gesta Francorum names "Hemmingus filius fratris eius [=Godefrido Danorum rege]" when recording that he succeeded his uncle in 810[33]. He succeeded his paternal uncle in 810 as HEMMING King of the Danes. Adam of Bremen names "rex Godafridus" as patruelis of Hemming on the latter's accession as Danish king[34]. Einhard records the death of "Godefrido Danorum rege" in 810 and the succession of "Hemmingus filius fratris eius"[35]. The Annales Fuldenses record the death in 810 of "Godafrido Danorum rege", the succession by "Hemmingus filius fratris eius", and the latter making peace with the emperor[36]. He made peace with Emperor Charlemagne in 810, confirmed by a treaty signed at Heiligen on the river Eider in Spring 811[37]. Einhard's Annales name "fratres Hemmingi, Hancwin et Angandeo, Osfred cognomento Turdimulo, et Warstein, et Suomi, et Urm, et alius Osfrid filius Heiligen, et Osfred de Sconsowe et Hebbi et Aowin" as the Danish signatories of the peace agreed with the Franks in 811[38]. The Royal Frankish Annals record the death of King Hemming in 812[39]. Civil war broke out after King Hemming died. Einhard's Annales record that news of the death of "Hemmingus Danorum rex" arrived in 812, that "Sigifridus nepos Godofredi regis et Anulo nepos Herioldi quondam regis" both claimed the succession, and that the faction supporting "Anulonis" was victorious, with "fratres eius Herioldum et Reginfredum" being installed as kings[40]. The Annales Fuldenses record the death in 812 of "Hemmingo Danorum rege", the succession dispute between "Sigifredo nepos Godofredi regis et Anulo nepos Herioldi", the battle in which both were killed but which Anulo's supporters won, and the accession of "Herioldum et Reginfredum fratres eius regis"[41].

    c) HANKWIN [Hakon/Holkwin] (-killed in battle Haithabu Summer 812). Einhard's Annales name "fratres Hemmingi, Hancwin et Angandeo…" as the Danish signatories of the peace agreed in 811[42].

    d) ANGANDEO [Angantyr] (-Haithabu Summer 812). Einhard's Annales name "fratres Hemmingi, Hancwin et Angandeo…" as the Danish signatories of the peace agreed in 811[43].

    3. [--- . m ---.] One child:

    a) SIGURD [Sigfrid] (-killed in battle Summer 812). Einhard's Annales record that news of the death of "Hemmingus Danorum rex" arrived in 812, that "Sigifridus nepos Godofredi regis et Anulo nepos Herioldi quondam regis" both claimed the succession, and that the faction supporting "Anulonis" was victorious, with "fratres eius Herioldum et Reginfredum" being installed as kings[44]. The Annales Fuldenses record the death in 812 of "Hemmingo Danorum rege", the succession dispute between "Sigifredo nepos Godofredi regis et Anulo nepos Herioldi", the battle in which both were killed but which Anulo's supporters won, and the accession by "Herioldum et Reginfredum fratres eius regis"[45]. Assuming that "nepos" should here be translated as nephew, from the context of these passages it is likely that Sigfrid's parent was a different sibling of King Godofrid from the latter's brother who was King Hemming's father. Adam of Bremen names "Sigafrid et Anuleo, nepotes Godafridi" when recording that they fought to succeed after the death of King Hemming[46].

    http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/DENMARK.htm#HalfdanMildidied802B

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde og matille (født ca. 750 død ca. 800) var ifølge sagaene konge over Vestfold og Romerike. Av ynglingeætten.

    Foreldre: Øystein Halvdansson og Hild Eriksdotter

    Gift med: Liv Dagsdotter, Helga Dagsdotter, datter av Dag Frode

    Barn: Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge.

    Halvdan var kjent som en stor kriger og han vant store rikdommer på sine ferder. Han lønnet mennene sine bra, og var kjent for sin gavmildhet. Døde sottedød, ble hauglagt i Borre.

    Snorre skriver;

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Og til møte Lokes møy tredje konge fra livet kalte,

    da Halvdan, Holtanbonden,

    hadde nytt det norner bød.

    Og seierens menn siden gjemte budlungen der i Borre..

    Hálfdanar saga Eysteinssonar

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Jump to: navigation, search

    Hálfdanar saga Eysteinssonar is a legendary saga from early 14th century Iceland about Halfdan Eysteinsson. The main events appear to take place in the 9th century.

    Halfdan's grandfather was Þrándr the eponymous king of Trondheim, who in turn was the son of Sæmingr the king of Halogaland and the son of Odin. Sæmingr had married Naumu who had given her name to Namdalen. Þrándr had married Dagmær, the sister of Svanhvít, the heroine of Hrómundar saga Gripssonar, and they had had the sons Eysteinn and Eirikr inn víðförli who is the hero of Eireks saga víðförla and discovered Ódáinsakr.

    Eysteinn married Ása, the daughter of Sigurd Hart and Áslaug, the daughter of Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye. They had several sons among them Halfdan.

    It deals with Eysteinn's adventures in Staraja Ladoga (Aldeigjuborg), his conquest of Alaborg and about the adventures of his son Halfdan.

    [edit] External links

    An original English translation by George Hardmann at the Northvegr Foundation web site

    The saga in Old Norse

    A second site with the saga in Old Norse

    A third site

    [hide]v • d • eNorse mythology and paganism

    Æsir Baldr · Bragi · Forseti · Dellingr · Freyr · Heimdall · He

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde og matille (født ca. 750 død ca. 800) var ifølge sagaene konge over Vestfold og Romerike. Av ynglingeætten.

    Foreldre: Øystein Halvdansson og Hild Eriksdotter

    Gift med: Liv Dagsdotter, Helga Dagsdotter, datter av Dag Frode

    Barn: Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge.

    Halvdan var kjent som en stor kriger og han vant store rikdommer på sine ferder. Han lønnet mennene sine bra, og var kjent for sin gavmildhet. Døde sottedød, ble hauglagt i Borre.

    Snorre skriver;

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Og til møte Lokes møy tredje konge fra livet kalte,

    da Halvdan, Holtanbonden,

    hadde nytt det norner bød.

    Og seierens menn siden gjemte budlungen der i Borre..

    Ble kalt "den gamilde" og "matille".

    52. OF HALFDAN THE MILD.

    Halfdan was the name of King Eystein's son who succeeded him. He was called Halfdan the Mild, but the Bad Entertainer; that is to say, he was reported to be generous, and to give his men as much gold as other kings gave of silver, but he starved them in their diet. He was a great warrior, who had been long on viking cruises, and had collected great property. He was married to Liv, a daughter of King Dag of Westmare. Holtar, in Westfold,

    was his chief house; and he died there on the bed of sickness, and was buried at Borre under a mound. So says Thjodolf: --

    "By Hel's summons, a great king

    Was called away to Odin's Thing:

    King Halfdan, he who dwelt of late

    At Holtar, must obey grim Fate.

    At Borre, in the royal mound,

    They laid the hero in the ground."

    Halfdan the Mild was the son of king Öystein Halfdansson, of the House of Yngling and he succeeded his father as king, according to Heimskringla.

    From "The Ynglinga Saga":

    "52. OF HALFDAN THE MILD.

    Halfdan was the name of King Eystein's son who succeeded him. He was called Halfdan the Mild, but the Bad Entertainer; that is to say, he was reported to be generous, and to give his men as much gold as other kings gave of silver, but he starved them in their diet. He was a great warrior, who had been long on viking cruises, and had collected great property. He was married to Liv, a daughter of King Dag of Westmare. Holtar, in Westfold, was his chief house; and he died there on the bed of sickness, and was buried at Borre under a mound. So says Thjodolf: --

    'By Hel's summons, a great king

    Was called away to Odin's Thing:

    King Halfdan, he who dwelt of late

    At Holtar, must obey grim Fate.

    At Borre, in the royal mound,

    They laid the hero in the ground.' "

    Noted events in his life were:
    • He was a king of Romerike and Vestfold.

    Halvdan married Liv Dagsdotter.

    ABT 0750 - AFT ER 780

    OCCUPATION: Konge i Vestfold

    BIRTH: ABT 0750, "den (Gav)Milde"

    DEATH: AFT ER 780, Holtan, Vesterøya, Sandefjord (av sykd.)

    BURIAL: Borrestranda (hauglagt)

    Father: Øystein HALVDANSSON

    Mother: Hild EIRIKSDATTER

    Family 1 : Liv DAGSDATTER

    +Gudrød Halvdansson VEIDEKONGE

    Kilde: nermo.org

    Halfdan Mildi, King of Westfold

    M, #42857, b. 750, d. 802

    Last Edited=9 Aug 2004

    Halfdan Mildi, King of Westfold was born in 750. He was the son of unknown parent (?). He died in 802.
    Halfdan Mildi, King of Westfold gained the title of King Halfdan of Westfold.
    Children of Halfdan Mildi, King of Westfold and Lif (?)

    -1. Godefrid, 6th King of Haithabu+ d. 810

    -2. Sigurd, 5th King of Haithabu+ d. 810

    Forrás:

    http://www.thepeerage.com/p4286.htm#i42857

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde og matille (født ca. 750 død ca. 800) var ifølge sagaene konge over Vestfold og Romerike. Av ynglingeætten.

    Foreldre: Øystein Halvdansson og Hild Eriksdotter

    Gift med: Liv Dagsdotter, Helga Dagsdotter, datter av Dag Frode

    Barn: Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge.

    Halvdan var kjent som en stor kriger og han vant store rikdommer på sine ferder. Han lønnet mennene sine bra, og var kjent for sin gavmildhet. Døde sottedød, ble hauglagt i Borre.

    Snorre skriver;

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Og til møte Lokes møy tredje konge fra livet kalte,

    da Halvdan, Holtanbonden,

    hadde nytt det norner bød.

    Og seierens menn siden gjemte budlungen der i Borre..

    King of Vestfold

    King of Vestfold

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde og matille (født ca. 750 død ca. 800) var ifølge sagaene konge over Vestfold og Romerike. Av ynglingeætten.

    Foreldre: Øystein Halvdansson og Hild Eriksdotter

    Gift med: Liv Dagsdotter, Helga Dagsdotter, datter av Dag Frode

    Barn: Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge.

    Halvdan var kjent som en stor kriger og han vant store rikdommer på sine ferder. Han lønnet mennene sine bra, og var kjent for sin gavmildhet. Døde sottedød, ble hauglagt i Borre.

    Snorre skriver;

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Og til møte Lokes møy tredje konge fra livet kalte,

    da Halvdan, Holtanbonden,

    hadde nytt det norner bød.

    Og seierens menn siden gjemte budlungen der i Borre..

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_%C3%98ysteinsson_den_gavmilde

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_%C3%98ysteinsson_den_gavmilde

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde og matille (født ca. 750 død ca. 800) var ifølge sagaene konge over Vestfold og Romerike. Av ynglingeætten.

    Foreldre: Øystein Halvdansson og Hild Eriksdotter

    Gift med: Liv Dagsdotter, Helga Dagsdotter, datter av Dag Frode

    Barn: Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge.

    Halvdan var kjent som en stor kriger og han vant store rikdommer på sine ferder. Han lønnet mennene sine bra, og var kjent for sin gavmildhet. Døde sottedød, ble hauglagt i Borre.

    Snorre skriver;

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Og til møte Lokes møy tredje konge fra livet kalte,

    da Halvdan, Holtanbonden,

    hadde nytt det norner bød.

    Og seierens menn siden gjemte budlungen der i Borre..

    Född: 763

    Äktenskap : Liv Dagsdotter

    Död : 802 i åldern 39

    Buried : Borre , Vestfold , Norge

    Allmänna hänvisningar:
    Halfdan Mild var son till kung Öystein Halfdansson , av huset Yngling och han efterträdde sin far som kung , enligt Heimskringla .

    Från "The Ynglinga Saga " :

    " 52 . AV Halfdan mild.

    Halfdan var namnet på kung Eystein son som efterträdde honom . Han kallades Halvdan Mild , men Bad Entertainer , det vill säga , ska han vara generös och att ge hans män lika mycket guld som andra kungar gav silver , men han svälta dem i deras kost. Han var en stor krigare , som hade varit länge på viking kryssningar, och hade samlat stor egendom. Han var gift med Liv, en dotter till kung Dag för Westmare . Holtar i Västfold , var hans förnämsta hus , och han dog där på sängen av sjukdom och begravdes vid Borre under en kulle . Så säger Thjodolf : -

    "Genom Hels stämning , en stor konung

    Kallades bort till Odens sak:

    Kung Halfdan , han som bodde i slutet av

    Vid Holtar , måste lyda bistra ödet.

    På Borre , i den kungliga högen ,

    De som hjälten i marken . " "

    Noterade händelser i hans liv var:
    • Han var en kung i Romerike och Vestfold .

    Halvdan gift Liv Dagsdotter .

    Källor

    1 Snorre Sturlasson (ca 1179 till 1241 ), http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/OMACL/ ( Om 1225 ), The Ynglinga Saga .

    2 Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/ ).

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde og matille (født ca. 750 død ca. 800) var ifølge sagaene konge over Vestfold og Romerike. Av ynglingeætten.

    Foreldre: Øystein Halvdansson og Hild Eriksdotter

    Gift med: Liv Dagsdotter, Helga Dagsdotter, datter av Dag Frode

    Barn: Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge.

    Halvdan var kjent som en stor kriger og han vant store rikdommer på sine ferder. Han lønnet mennene sine bra, og var kjent for sin gavmildhet. Døde sottedød, ble hauglagt i Borre.

    Snorre skriver;

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Og til møte Lokes møy tredje konge fra livet kalte,

    da Halvdan, Holtanbonden,

    hadde nytt det norner bød.

    Og seierens menn siden gjemte budlungen der i Borre..

    aka Halvdan II OYSTEINSSON `le Debonnaire' King in VESTFOLD (& DENMARK); `the Stingy'
    Blev ca 52 år.

    Född: omkring 750

    Död: omkring 802

    Halfdan the Mild (Old Norse: Hálfdan hinn mildi) was the son of king Eystein Halfdansson, of the House of Yngling and he succeeded his father as king, according to Heimskringla. He was king of Romerike and Vestfold.

    He was said to be generous in gold but to starve his men with food. He was a great warrior who often pillaged and gathered great booty.

    His wife was Liv, the daughter of king Dag of Vestmar. Halfdan the Mild died of illness in his bed.

    He was succeeded by his son, Gudrød the Hunter.

    Frå Wikipedia – det frie oppslagsverket

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    Halvdan den Milde og Mat-ille var ein konge av Ynglingeætta, far til Gudrød Veidekonge og farfar til Halvdan Svarte. Han var son av kong Øystein av ynglingeætta.

    Han sat som konge i Holtar, no Holtan i Borre, og er gravlagd der. Han var gift med Liv, dotter til kong Dag på Vestmar, i dag eigna kring Langesund. Namnet og gravstaden hans tyder på ei lekk til Danmark (Borrestil).

    Eystein, we are told, was succeeded by his son Halfdan the Generous and the Stingy of Food. Halfdan gained this title by paying his men generously in coin but poorly in food. He died of a malady, was duly buried in a mound beside his father Eystein, and was succeeded by his son Gudrod. Gudrod is considered to be a historical personage, although the tales that are told about him are no doubt at least partly legendary.

    [Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flander & Kiev]

    Eystein, we are told, was succeeded by his son Halfdan the Generous and the Stingy of Food. Halfdan gained this title by paying his men generously in coin but poorly in food. He died of a malady, was duly buried in a mound beside his father

    Eystein, and was succeeded by his son Gudrod. Gudrod is considered to be a historical personage, although the tales that are told about him are no doubt at least partly legendary.

    Halfdan II Eysteinsson King Of Vestfold 1

    Birth: About 767 in <, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway> 2 3

    Death: 800 in , Borre, Vestfold, Norway 2 3

    Sex: M

    Father: Eysteinn I "Fretr" Glumru Halfdansson King Of Vestfold b. About 740 in , , Vestfold, Norway

    Mother: Hildi Eiriksdatter b. About 740 in (, , Vestfold, Norway)

    Unknown: , , Vestfold, Norway 4 1 3

    Changed: 23 Jul 2002 01:00

    Spouses & Children
    Hlif Dagsdatter (Wife) b. About 772 in , Holtum, Vestfold, Norway
    1 2 3

    Marriage: Abt 787 in (, , Vestfold, Norway) 6 Nov 2004 14:29

    Children:

    Oplaendinge Halfdansson Earl Of The Uplands b. After 788 in (, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway)

    Gudrod Halfdansson King Of Vesfold b. About 789 in , Holtum, Vestfold, Norway

    Rognvald Olafsson b. About 790 in (, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway)

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    Notes
    Individual:
    Name Suffix: King of Vestfold

    REFN: HWS6139

    Ancestral File Number:8HS8-CR

    OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\c_crown.gifCHAN23 Jul 2002

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Sources
    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Title: "Royal Lines & Adamic Genealogy: Genealogical Research of A
    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Author: Schmuhl, Albert F.

    Publication: e-mail documentation, March 1997, Albert F. Schmuhl, Americ

    a Online Posting: Genealogy Forum

    Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral Fileâ„¢ v4.19"

    Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

    Publication: 3 Feb 2001

    Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson"

    Author: Larson, Kirk

    Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Desce

    ndants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library

    Title: "Héraldique européenne"

    Author: Arnaud Bunel

    Publication: Coats of Arms for European Royalty and Nobility (http://www

    .heraldique-europeenne.org, Arnaud Bunel, 1998) , Internet"Armigerous" (ahr-MIJ-ehr-us) adjective

    Bearing or entitled to bear heraldicarms.

    The reason the notion of a family crest was brought into th

    e languagewas that those who were armigerous (entitled to bear arms) used to put their crest or achieveme

    Eystein, we are told, was succeeded by his son Halfdan the Generous and the Stingy of Food. Halfdan gained this title by paying his men generously in coin but poorly in food. He died of a malady, was duly buried in a mound beside his father Eystein, and was succeeded by his son Gudrod. Gudrod is considered to be a historical personage, although the tales that are told about him are no doubt at least partly legendary.
    Note: [Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flander & Kiev]
    Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
    Note: Page: 121e-14
    Note: Text: Halfdan, the Old
    Halfdan the Mild (Old Norse: Hálfdan hinn mildi) was the son of king Eystein Halfdansson, of the House of Yngling and he succeeded his father as king, according to Heimskringla. He was king of Romerike and Vestfold.

    He was said to be generous in gold but to starve his men with food. He was a great warrior who often pillaged and gathered great booty.

    His wife was Liv, the daughter of king Dag of Vestmar. Halfdan the Mild died of illness in his bed.

    Halfdan the Mild (Old Norse: Hálfdan hinn mildi) was the son of king Eystein Halfdansson, of the House of Yngling and he succeeded his father as king, according to Heimskringla. He was king of Romerike and Vestfold.
    He was said to be generous in gold but to starve his men with food. He was a great warrior who often pillaged and gathered great booty.

    His wife was Liv, the daughter of king Dag of Vestmar. Halfdan the Mild died of illness in his bed.

    He was succeeded by his son, Gudrød the Hunter.

    Halfdan the Mild (Old Norse: Hálfdan hinn mildi) was the son of king Eystein Halfdansson, of the House of Yngling and he succeeded his father as king, according to Heimskringla. He was king of Romerike and Vestfold.

    He was said to be generous in gold but to starve his men with food. He was a great warrior who often pillaged and gathered great booty.

    His wife was Liv, the daughter of king Dag of Vestmar. Halfdan the Mild died of illness in his bed.

    He was succeeded by his son, Gudrød the Hunter.

    TEMP NOTE: I found that some profiles of Halfdan Sveidasson are also marked as "Milde", so I promoted his father's name to a more visible place, and moved "Milde" to the suffix field - Alvestrand.
    He is NOT the father of Ivar Opplendingejarl.

    Halvdan Milde (Øysteinsson) (Hálfdan hinn mildi) ca 780, PAM

    In English: Halfdan the Mild

    King in part of Norway: Romerike / Vestfold

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=gb&emne=asatru&person=Halvdan%20Milde%20%28%D8ysteinsson%29&list=&vis=

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_%C3%98ysteinsson_den_gavmilde

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

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde og matille (født ca. 750 død ca. 800) var ifølge sagaene konge over Vestfold og Romerike. Av ynglingeætten.

    Foreldre: Øystein Halvdansson og Hild Eriksdotter

    Gift med: Liv Dagsdotter, Helga Dagsdotter, datter av Dag Frode

    Barn: Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge.

    Halvdan var kjent som en stor kriger og han vant store rikdommer på sine ferder. Han lønnet mennene sine bra, og var kjent for sin gavmildhet. Døde sottedød, ble hauglagt i Borre.

    Snorre skriver;

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Og til møte Lokes møy tredje konge fra livet kalte,

    da Halvdan, Holtanbonden,

    hadde nytt det norner bød.

    Og seierens menn siden gjemte budlungen der i Borre..

    Hálfdanar saga Eysteinssonar

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Jump to: navigation, search

    Hálfdanar saga Eysteinssonar is a legendary saga from early 14th century Iceland about Halfdan Eysteinsson. The main events appear to take place in the 9th century.

    Halfdan's grandfather was Þrándr the eponymous king of Trondheim, who in turn was the son of Sæmingr the king of Halogaland and the son of Odin. Sæmingr had married Naumu who had given her name to Namdalen. Þrándr had married Dagmær, the sister of Svanhvít, the heroine of Hrómundar saga Gripssonar, and they had had the sons Eysteinn and Eirikr inn víðförli who is the hero of Eireks saga víðförla and discovered Ódáinsakr.

    Eysteinn married Ása, the daughter of Sigurd Hart and Áslaug, the daughter of Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye. They had several sons among them Halfdan.

    It deals with Eysteinn's adventures in Staraja Ladoga (Aldeigjuborg), his conquest of Alaborg and about the adventures of his son Halfdan.

    [edit] External links

    An original English translation by George Hardmann at the Northvegr Foundation web site

    The saga in Old Norse

    A second site with the saga in Old Norse

    A third site

    [hide]v • d • eNorse mythology and paganism

    Æsir Baldr · Bragi · Forseti · Dellingr · Freyr · Heimdall · He

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde og matille (født ca. 750 død ca. 800) var ifølge sagaene konge over Vestfold og Romerike. Av ynglingeætten.

    Foreldre: Øystein Halvdansson og Hild Eriksdotter

    Gift med: Liv Dagsdotter, Helga Dagsdotter, datter av Dag Frode

    Barn: Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge.

    Halvdan var kjent som en stor kriger og han vant store rikdommer på sine ferder. Han lønnet mennene sine bra, og var kjent for sin gavmildhet. Døde sottedød, ble hauglagt i Borre.

    Snorre skriver;

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Og til møte Lokes møy tredje konge fra livet kalte,

    da Halvdan, Holtanbonden,

    hadde nytt det norner bød.

    Og seierens menn siden gjemte budlungen der i Borre..

    Ble kalt "den gamilde" og "matille".

    52. OF HALFDAN THE MILD.

    Halfdan was the name of King Eystein's son who succeeded him. He was called Halfdan the Mild, but the Bad Entertainer; that is to say, he was reported to be generous, and to give his men as much gold as other kings gave of silver, but he starved them in their diet. He was a great warrior, who had been long on viking cruises, and had collected great property. He was married to Liv, a daughter of King Dag of Westmare. Holtar, in Westfold,

    was his chief house; and he died there on the bed of sickness, and was buried at Borre under a mound. So says Thjodolf: --

    "By Hel's summons, a great king

    Was called away to Odin's Thing:

    King Halfdan, he who dwelt of late

    At Holtar, must obey grim Fate.

    At Borre, in the royal mound,

    They laid the hero in the ground."

    Halfdan the Mild was the son of king Öystein Halfdansson, of the House of Yngling and he succeeded his father as king, according to Heimskringla.

    From "The Ynglinga Saga":

    "52. OF HALFDAN THE MILD.

    Halfdan was the name of King Eystein's son who succeeded him. He was called Halfdan the Mild, but the Bad Entertainer; that is to say, he was reported to be generous, and to give his men as much gold as other kings gave of silver, but he starved them in their diet. He was a great warrior, who had been long on viking cruises, and had collected great property. He was married to Liv, a daughter of King Dag of Westmare. Holtar, in Westfold, was his chief house; and he died there on the bed of sickness, and was buried at Borre under a mound. So says Thjodolf: --

    'By Hel's summons, a great king

    Was called away to Odin's Thing:

    King Halfdan, he who dwelt of late

    At Holtar, must obey grim Fate.

    At Borre, in the royal mound,

    They laid the hero in the ground.' "

    Noted events in his life were:
    • He was a king of Romerike and Vestfold.

    Halvdan married Liv Dagsdotter.

    ABT 0750 - AFT ER 780

    OCCUPATION: Konge i Vestfold

    BIRTH: ABT 0750, "den (Gav)Milde"

    DEATH: AFT ER 780, Holtan, Vesterøya, Sandefjord (av sykd.)

    BURIAL: Borrestranda (hauglagt)

    Father: Øystein HALVDANSSON

    Mother: Hild EIRIKSDATTER

    Family 1 : Liv DAGSDATTER

    +Gudrød Halvdansson VEIDEKONGE

    Kilde: nermo.org

    Halfdan Mildi, King of Westfold

    M, #42857, b. 750, d. 802

    Last Edited=9 Aug 2004

    Halfdan Mildi, King of Westfold was born in 750. He was the son of unknown parent (?). He died in 802.
    Halfdan Mildi, King of Westfold gained the title of King Halfdan of Westfold.
    Children of Halfdan Mildi, King of Westfold and Lif (?)

    -1. Godefrid, 6th King of Haithabu+ d. 810

    -2. Sigurd, 5th King of Haithabu+ d. 810

    Forrás:

    http://www.thepeerage.com/p4286.htm#i42857

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde og matille (født ca. 750 død ca. 800) var ifølge sagaene konge over Vestfold og Romerike. Av ynglingeætten.

    Foreldre: Øystein Halvdansson og Hild Eriksdotter

    Gift med: Liv Dagsdotter, Helga Dagsdotter, datter av Dag Frode

    Barn: Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge.

    Halvdan var kjent som en stor kriger og han vant store rikdommer på sine ferder. Han lønnet mennene sine bra, og var kjent for sin gavmildhet. Døde sottedød, ble hauglagt i Borre.

    Snorre skriver;

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Og til møte Lokes møy tredje konge fra livet kalte,

    da Halvdan, Holtanbonden,

    hadde nytt det norner bød.

    Og seierens menn siden gjemte budlungen der i Borre..

    King of Vestfold

    King of Vestfold

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde og matille (født ca. 750 død ca. 800) var ifølge sagaene konge over Vestfold og Romerike. Av ynglingeætten.

    Foreldre: Øystein Halvdansson og Hild Eriksdotter

    Gift med: Liv Dagsdotter, Helga Dagsdotter, datter av Dag Frode

    Barn: Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge.

    Halvdan var kjent som en stor kriger og han vant store rikdommer på sine ferder. Han lønnet mennene sine bra, og var kjent for sin gavmildhet. Døde sottedød, ble hauglagt i Borre.

    Snorre skriver;

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Og til møte Lokes møy tredje konge fra livet kalte,

    da Halvdan, Holtanbonden,

    hadde nytt det norner bød.

    Og seierens menn siden gjemte budlungen der i Borre..

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_%C3%98ysteinsson_den_gavmilde

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_%C3%98ysteinsson_den_gavmilde

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde og matille (født ca. 750 død ca. 800) var ifølge sagaene konge over Vestfold og Romerike. Av ynglingeætten.

    Foreldre: Øystein Halvdansson og Hild Eriksdotter

    Gift med: Liv Dagsdotter, Helga Dagsdotter, datter av Dag Frode

    Barn: Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge.

    Halvdan var kjent som en stor kriger og han vant store rikdommer på sine ferder. Han lønnet mennene sine bra, og var kjent for sin gavmildhet. Døde sottedød, ble hauglagt i Borre.

    Snorre skriver;

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Og til møte Lokes møy tredje konge fra livet kalte,

    da Halvdan, Holtanbonden,

    hadde nytt det norner bød.

    Og seierens menn siden gjemte budlungen der i Borre..

    Född: 763

    Äktenskap : Liv Dagsdotter

    Död : 802 i åldern 39

    Buried : Borre , Vestfold , Norge

    Allmänna hänvisningar:
    Halfdan Mild var son till kung Öystein Halfdansson , av huset Yngling och han efterträdde sin far som kung , enligt Heimskringla .

    Från "The Ynglinga Saga " :

    " 52 . AV Halfdan mild.

    Halfdan var namnet på kung Eystein son som efterträdde honom . Han kallades Halvdan Mild , men Bad Entertainer , det vill säga , ska han vara generös och att ge hans män lika mycket guld som andra kungar gav silver , men han svälta dem i deras kost. Han var en stor krigare , som hade varit länge på viking kryssningar, och hade samlat stor egendom. Han var gift med Liv, en dotter till kung Dag för Westmare . Holtar i Västfold , var hans förnämsta hus , och han dog där på sängen av sjukdom och begravdes vid Borre under en kulle . Så säger Thjodolf : -

    "Genom Hels stämning , en stor konung

    Kallades bort till Odens sak:

    Kung Halfdan , han som bodde i slutet av

    Vid Holtar , måste lyda bistra ödet.

    På Borre , i den kungliga högen ,

    De som hjälten i marken . " "

    Noterade händelser i hans liv var:
    • Han var en kung i Romerike och Vestfold .

    Halvdan gift Liv Dagsdotter .

    Källor

    1 Snorre Sturlasson (ca 1179 till 1241 ), http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/OMACL/ ( Om 1225 ), The Ynglinga Saga .

    2 Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/ ).

    Halvdan Øysteinsson den gavmilde og matille (født ca. 750 død ca. 800) var ifølge sagaene konge over Vestfold og Romerike. Av ynglingeætten.

    Foreldre: Øystein Halvdansson og Hild Eriksdotter

    Gift med: Liv Dagsdotter, Helga Dagsdotter, datter av Dag Frode

    Barn: Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge.

    Halvdan var kjent som en stor kriger og han vant store rikdommer på sine ferder. Han lønnet mennene sine bra, og var kjent for sin gavmildhet. Døde sottedød, ble hauglagt i Borre.

    Snorre skriver;

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Og til møte Lokes møy tredje konge fra livet kalte,

    da Halvdan, Holtanbonden,

    hadde nytt det norner bød.

    Og seierens menn siden gjemte budlungen der i Borre..

    aka Halvdan II OYSTEINSSON le Debonnaire' King in VESTFOLD (& DENMARK); the Stingy'

    Blev ca 52 år.

    Född: omkring 750

    Död: omkring 802

    Halfdan the Mild (Old Norse: Hálfdan hinn mildi) was the son of king Eystein Halfdansson, of the House of Yngling and he succeeded his father as king, according to Heimskringla. He was king of Romerike and Vestfold.

    He was said to be generous in gold but to starve his men with food. He was a great warrior who often pillaged and gathered great booty.

    His wife was Liv, the daughter of king Dag of Vestmar. Halfdan the Mild died of illness in his bed.

    He was succeeded by his son, Gudrød the Hunter.

    Frå Wikipedia – det frie oppslagsverket

    Jump to: navigering, søk

    Halvdan den Milde og Mat-ille var ein konge av Ynglingeætta, far til Gudrød Veidekonge og farfar til Halvdan Svarte. Han var son av kong Øystein av ynglingeætta.

    Han sat som konge i Holtar, no Holtan i Borre, og er gravlagd der. Han var gift med Liv, dotter til kong Dag på Vestmar, i dag eigna kring Langesund. Namnet og gravstaden hans tyder på ei lekk til Danmark (Borrestil).

    Eystein, we are told, was succeeded by his son Halfdan the Generous and the Stingy of Food. Halfdan gained this title by paying his men generously in coin but poorly in food. He died of a malady, was duly buried in a mound beside his father Eystein, and was succeeded by his son Gudrod. Gudrod is considered to be a historical personage, although the tales that are told about him are no doubt at least partly legendary.

    [Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flander & Kiev]

    Eystein, we are told, was succeeded by his son Halfdan the Generous and the Stingy of Food. Halfdan gained this title by paying his men generously in coin but poorly in food. He died of a malady, was duly buried in a mound beside his father

    Eystein, and was succeeded by his son Gudrod. Gudrod is considered to be a historical personage, although the tales that are told about him are no doubt at least partly legendary.

    Halfdan II Eysteinsson King Of Vestfold 1

    Birth: About 767 in <, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway> 2 3

    Death: 800 in , Borre, Vestfold, Norway 2 3

    Sex: M

    Father: Eysteinn I "Fretr" Glumru Halfdansson King Of Vestfold b. About 740 in , , Vestfold, Norway

    Mother: Hildi Eiriksdatter b. About 740 in (, , Vestfold, Norway)

    Unknown: , , Vestfold, Norway 4 1 3

    Changed: 23 Jul 2002 01:00

    Spouses & Children
    Hlif Dagsdatter (Wife) b. About 772 in , Holtum, Vestfold, Norway
    1 2 3

    Marriage: Abt 787 in (, , Vestfold, Norway) 6 Nov 2004 14:29

    Children:

    Oplaendinge Halfdansson Earl Of The Uplands b. After 788 in (, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway)

    Gudrod Halfdansson King Of Vesfold b. About 789 in , Holtum, Vestfold, Norway

    Rognvald Olafsson b. About 790 in (, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway)

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Notes
    Individual:
    Name Suffix: King of Vestfold

    REFN: HWS6139

    Ancestral File Number:8HS8-CR

    OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\c_crown.gifCHAN23 Jul 2002

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Sources
    http://www.norsesaga.no/hvorledes-norge-ble-bosatt.html
    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Title: "Royal Lines & Adamic Genealogy: Genealogical Research of A
    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Author: Schmuhl, Albert F.

    Publication: e-mail documentation, March 1997, Albert F. Schmuhl, Americ

    a Online Posting: Genealogy Forum

    Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral Fileâ„¢ v4.19"

    Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

    Publication: 3 Feb 2001

    Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson"

    Author: Larson, Kirk

    Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Desce

    ndants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library

    Title: "Héraldique européenne"

    Author: Arnaud Bunel

    Publication: Coats of Arms for European Royalty and Nobility (http://www

    .heraldique-europeenne.org, Arnaud Bunel, 1998) , Internet"Armigerous" (ahr-MIJ-ehr-us) adjective

    Bearing or entitled to bear heraldicarms.

    The reason the notion of a family crest was brought into th

    e languagewas that those who were armigerous (entitled to bear arms) used to put their crest or achieveme

    Eystein, we are told, was succeeded by his son Halfdan the Generous and the Stingy of Food. Halfdan gained this title by paying his men generously in coin but poorly in food. He died of a malady, was duly buried in a mound beside his father Eystein, and was succeeded by his son Gudrod. Gudrod is considered to be a historical personage, although the tales that are told about him are no doubt at least partly legendary.
    Note: [Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flander & Kiev] Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 Note: Page: 121e-14 Note: Text: Halfdan, the Old
    Halfdan the Mild (Old Norse: Hálfdan hinn mildi) was the son of king Eystein Halfdansson, of the House of Yngling and he succeeded his father as king, according to Heimskringla. He was king of Romerike and Vestfold.

    He was said to be generous in gold but to starve his men with food. He was a great warrior who often pillaged and gathered great booty.

    His wife was Liv, the daughter of king Dag of Vestmar. Halfdan the Mild died of illness in his bed. -------------------- Halfdan the Mild (Old Norse: Hálfdan hinn mildi) was the son of king Eystein Halfdansson, of the House of Yngling and he succeeded his father as king, according to Heimskringla. He was king of Romerike and Vestfold.

    He was said to be generous in gold but to starve his men with food. He was a great warrior who often pillaged and gathered great booty.

    His wife was Liv, the daughter of king Dag of Vestmar. Halfdan the Mild died of illness in his bed.

    He was succeeded by his son, Gudrød the Hunter.

    Halfdan the Mild (Old Norse: Hálfdan hinn mildi) was the son of king Eystein Halfdansson, of the House of Yngling and he succeeded his father as king, according to Heimskringla. He was king of Romerike and Vestfold.

    He was said to be generous in gold but to starve his men with food. He was a great warrior who often pillaged and gathered great booty.

    His wife was Liv, the daughter of king Dag of Vestmar. Halfdan the Mild died of illness in his bed.

    He was succeeded by his son, Gudrød the Hunter.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halfdan_the_Mild
    Halvdan den (Gav)Milde av Vestfold
    King of Vestfold Hálfdan Mildi Eysteinsson was called Halfdan the Mild, but the Bad Entertainer; that is to say, he was reported to be generous, and to give his men as much gold as other kings gave of silver, but he starved them in their diet. He was a great warrior, who had been long on Viking cruises, and had collected great property.
    He married Hlíf Dagsdóttir, daughter of konung av Vestmörum Dagr av Vestmörum.

    He died at Holtar, Vestfold, Norway, in his chief house, on the bed of sickness. He was buried in Borre, Raden, near Vodle, Vestfold, Norway, under a mound.

    So says Thjodolf:

    "By Hel's summons, a great king

    Was called away to Odin's Thing:

    King Halfdan, he who dwelt of late

    At Holtar, must obey grim Fate.

    At Borre, in the royal mound,

    They laid the hero in the ground."

    See "My Lines"

    ( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p276.htm#i8266 )

    from Compiler: R. B. Stewart, Evans, GA

    ( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/index.htm )

    Halfdan II 'the Stingy', King of Vestfold Generous with gold, but mean with rations. He married Lifa of Westmare, daughter of Dag of Vestmare, King of Westmore. Halfdan II 'the Stingy', King of Vestfold was born in 738. He died in 800.
    King of the Uplanders in Russia
    Bodde på sin gård i Holte tillsammans med drottning Liv. Han blev sjuk och dog i sin säng.
    HALFDAN THE MILD - who was King of Vest fold about 780. He was also called the "Bad Entertainer" as he did not feed his men well. He married Liv, daughter of King Dag of Vestmare and lived at the Holte Farm. He became ill and died in his bed. Their son was:

    26. GUDROD HALVDANSON - "Gudrod the Hunter" or Gudrod the Magnificent". He was King of Vestfold and Romerike until he was killed in 821.

    Halfdan Hvitbeinn

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Jump to: navigation, search

    Halfdan Hvitbeinn (Old Norse: Hálfdan hvítbeinn) was a mythical petty king in Norway, described in Ynglinga saga. The following description is based on the account in Ynglinga saga, written in the 1220s by Snorri Sturluson. The historicity of the kings described in that saga is generally not accepted by modern historians.

    He was the son of Olof Trätälja of the House of Yngling. His father was sacrificed to Odin by the Swedish settlers in Värmland because of a famine. Some Swedes, however, realised that the famine was brought by overpopulation and not by the fact that the king had been neglecting his religious duties.

    Consequently, they resolved to cross the Ed Forest and settle in Norway and happened to end up in Soleyar where they killed king Sölve and took Halfdan prisoner. The Swedish expatriates elected Halfdan king as he was the son of their old king, Olof. Halfdan subjugated all of Soleyar and took his army into Romerike and subjugated that province as well.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    Halfdan conquered a large part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland and a part of Vestfold. When his brother Ingjald Olofsson died, he inherited Värmland. Halfdan died of old age in Toten and was transported to Vestfold where he was buried under a mound in Skiringssal.

    Preceded by

    Olof Trätälja

    Head of the House of Yngling

    Succeeded by

    Eystein Halfdansson

    Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halfdan_Hvitbeinn"

    Halfdan the MildFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Halfdan the Mild (Old Norse: Hálfdan hinn mildi) was the son of king Eystein Halfdansson, of the House of Yngling and he succeeded his father as king, according to Heimskringla. He was king of Romerike and Vestfold.
    He was said to be generous in gold but to starve his men with food. He was a great warrior who often pillaged and gathered great booty.

    His wife was Liv, the daughter of king Dag of Vestmar. Halfdan the Mild died of illness in his bed.

    He was succeeded by his son, Gudrød the Hunter.

    According to the historian Halvdan Koht, Halfdan may have been the one to win independence for Vestfold during the turbulent years of 813-14. The Frankish annals state that the kings of Hedeby had to solve an uprising in Vestfold at this time. According to Ynglingatal, Halfdan´s people "gained victory" in this uprising, and Halfdan is thus the first independent ruler of Vestfold.

    Also called Halfdan the Old or Halfdan the Generous. He was quite old when he died in 802. Halfdan's wife, Liv, was a daughter of Dag, King of Westmare.

    Halvdan bodde på Holtan gård i Borre. Folket hans fikk lite og dårlig kost og han ble derfor kalt matille. Han ble også kalt gavmilde da folket fikk like mange gullpenger som andre konger ga i sølvpenger. Halvdan ble gammel og døde i 802. Fra hans sønn Gudrød gjeve stammet de senere norske ynglinge-kongene, Halvdan svarte, Harald Hårfagre etc.

    BIOGRAFI:
    Halvdan Øysteinsson «den gavmilde og matille» er en av de småkongene fra Ynglingeætten som nevnes i Snorre Sturlasons Ynglingesaga i Heimskringla.[1]

    Denne hovedsakelige legendariske sagaen er hovedkilden om Halvdan, bortsett fra et kvad av Tjodolv den kvinværske, som ble kvedet rundt 100-150 år senere, noe som indikerer en livlig muntlig tradisjon på Ynglingeætten. Halvdan er også så vidt nevnt i Historia Norvegiæ, skrevet en gang rundt 1170.

    Snorre forteller at hans paradoksale tilnavn som «gavemild» og «matille» hadde sin årsak at han var rundhåndet i å lønne mennene sine i rede penger, «like mange gullmynter som andre konger ga sølvmynter», men samtidig sultet dem i kostholdet, uten at det oppgis noen grunn til misforholdet. Årsaken til den økonomiske velstanden var derimot at han hadde vært i viking i lange tider og på den måten skaffet seg store rikdommer.

    I den grad Halvdan er historisk var han en småkonge på Vestfold og Romerike en gang kanskje sent på 700-tallet eller rundt 800. Han var sønn av Øystein Halvdansson og Hild, datter av Eirik Agnarsson fra Vestfold. Selv ble Halvdan gift med Liv, datter av en konge «Dag fra Vestmar». Det finnes ingen andre direkte referanser til Vestmar, men det kan ha vært et navn som pekte på kystlandet rundt Langesundsfjorden til Agder.[2] Det eneste avkom etter Halvdan som nevnes er hans direkte etterkommer, Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge (eller Stormodige). Gudrød var far til kong Halvdan Svarte og farfar til kong Harald Hårfagre.

    Snorre oppgir også at Halvdans hovedgård var Holtan i Vestfold hvor han døde på sotteseng, og ble gravlagt i Borre. I sin oversettelse av Historia Norvegiæ bemerket Halvdan Koht: «No høyrer vi i frankiske krøniker, at i året 813 var det upprør på Vestfold imot dei danske kongane, og kanskje var det denne kong Halvdan som no gjorde Vestfold sjølvstendigt; Det kann vi ha eit minne um i at Tjodolv kallar mennene hans for 'dei som vann siger'»[3]

    Tjodolvs kvad, som Halvdan Koht henviser til, har strofen «Og seierens menn / siden gjemte / budlungen / der i Borre». 'Budlungen' er et poetisk ord for konge.

    King in the Vestfold. 'Milldi' AKA "the Old & Stingy".
    http://www.mathematical.com/halfdan.html
    http://www.ourfamilyhistories.org/getperson.php?personID=I6139&tree=00

    http://www.celtic-casimir.com/webtree/3/2512.htm Born: 754, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway Married: Abt 788, Vestfold, Norway Died: 800, , Borre, Vestfold, Norway
    Ancestral File Number: 8HS8-CR.
    General Notes:
    Relationship to compiler: 35th great grandfather

    Events:
    1. Alt. Birth; 762. Spouses/Children: Hlif DAGSDÓTTIR Halfdan "The Old" EYSTEINSSON+ Gudrod "Jagtkonge" HÁLFDANARSON King in Vestfold+

    Marriage Information:
    Halfdan married Hlif DAGSDÓTTIR about 788 in Vestfold, Norway. (Hlif DAGSDÓTTIR was born in 757 in Holtum, Vestfold, Norway.)

    Sagokung av Ynglingaätten.
    https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ynglinga%C3%A4tten

    http://www.cft-win.com/getperson.php?personID=I011608&tree=Norway
    Om Halvdan "Den Milde" Eysteinsson, king of Romerike and Vestfold (Norsk)
    Bragi den gamle var konge i Valdres. Han var far til Agnar, far til Ålf, far til Eirik, far til Hilda, mor til Halfdan den gavmilde, far til Gudrød, far til Halfdan svarte, far til Harald hårfagre. Denne ætten til Harald het Bragninger.

    http://www.norsesaga.no/hvorledes-norge-ble-bosatt.html

    Halvdan Øysteinsson «den gavmilde og matille» er en av de småkongene fra Ynglingeætten som nevnes i Snorre Sturlasons Ynglingesaga i Heimskringla.

    Denne hovedsakelige legendariske sagaen er hovedkilden om Halvdan, bortsett fra et kvad av Tjodolv den kvinværske, som ble kvedet rundt 100-150 år senere, noe som indikerer en livlig muntlig tradisjon på Ynglingeætten. Halvdan er også så vidt nevnt i Historia Norvegiæ, skrevet en gang rundt 1170.

    Snorre forteller at hans paradoksale tilnavn som «gavemild» og «matille» hadde sin årsak at han var rundhåndet i å lønne mennene sine i rede penger, «like mange gullmynter som andre konger ga sølvmynter», men samtidig sultet dem i kostholdet, uten at det oppgis noen grunn til misforholdet. Årsaken til den økonomiske velstanden var derimot at han hadde vært i viking i lange tider og på den måten skaffet seg store rikdommer.

    I den grad Halvdan er historisk var han en småkonge på Vestfold og Romerike en gang kanskje sent på 700-tallet eller rundt 800. Han var sønn av Øystein Halvdansson og Hild, datter av Eirik Agnarsson fra Vestfold. Selv ble Halvdan gift med Liv, datter av en konge «Dag fra Vestmar». Det finnes ingen andre direkte referanser til Vestmar, men det kan ha vært et navn som pekte på kystlandet rundt Langesundsfjorden til Agder. Det eneste avkom etter Halvdan som nevnes er hans direkte etterkommer, Gudrød Halvdansson Veidekonge (eller Stormodige). Gudrød var far til kong Halvdan Svarte og farfar til kong Harald Hårfagre.

    https://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_%C3%98ysteinsson_den_gavmilde

    Snorre oppgir også at Halvdans hovedgård var Holtan i Vestfold hvor han døde på sotteseng, og ble gravlagt i Borre. I sin oversettelse av Historia Norvegiæ bemerket Halvdan Koht: «No høyrer vi i frankiske krøniker, at i året 813 var det upprør på Vestfold imot dei danske kongane, og kanskje var det denne kong Halvdan som no gjorde Vestfold sjølvstendigt; Det kann vi ha eit minne um i at Tjodolv kallar mennene hans for 'dei som vann siger'» Snorre skriver; Så sier Tjodolv: Og til møte Lokes møy tredje konge fra livet kalte, da Halvdan, Holtanbonden, hadde nytt det norner bød. Og seierens menn siden gjemte budlungen (konge) der i Borre..

    Kong Halvdan matille / den gavmilde Sønn av kong Øystein. Arvet riket etter sin far (Vestfold og Romerike). Han fikk ord på seg til å gi hærmennene sine like mange gullpenger i lønn som andre ga sølvpenger, men han sultet dem på mat. Han var stor hærmann og dro i viking og hentet seg rikdom. Gift med Liv, datter til kong Dag fra Vestmar. Døde på sotteseng på hovedgården sin Holtan i Vestfold og ble hauglagt på Borre. Far til Gudrød Veidekonge.

    http://www.arild-hauge.com/konger.htm

    Familj/Make/Maka: Drottning Lif DAGSDOTTER. Lif föddes ca 766 i Vestmar, Telemark, Norge; dog 810 i Holtan, Borre, Vestfold, Norge. [Familjeöversikt] [Familjediagram]

    Barn:
    1. Kung Gudrød "the Hunter" VEIDEKONGE HALVDANSSON föddes ca 780 i Holtum, Vestfold, Norge; dog ca 821 i Vestfold, Norge; begravdes i Borre?.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Kung Eystein "fret/fjert" HALFDANSSONKung Eystein "fret/fjert" HALFDANSSON föddes 725 i Vestfold, Norge (son till Kung Halfdan "Kvitbein" OLAFSSON och Drottning Åsa EYSTEINSDOTTER); dog 780 i Holtum, Vestfold, Norge.

    Noteringar:

    Also Known As: "Øystein Halvdansson Fret", "Fart", "Fretr", "Glumru Halfdansson", "Konge over Romerike og Vestfold", "Fart the Flatulent", "King of Vestfold"
    Birthdate: 725
    Birthplace: Vestfold, Norway
    Death: 780 (55)
    Holtum, Vestfold, Norway (Drowned by swing ships boom hitting Eystein so that he fell overboard)
    Begravningsort: Borre, Vestfold, Norway

    Närstående:
    Son till Halfdan Olafsson «Whiteshanks» Kvitbein och Åsa (Aasa) Eysteinsdotter
    Make till Hild Eiriksdotter

    Fader till Æsa "den lyse" Eysteinsdatter; King of Hedeby Harold Eysteinsson, Second King of Haithabu; Kung Halvdan Øysteinsson den givmilde; Gudrod Eysteinsson "Jagtkonge" (King in Vestfold); Geva och Sigurd, first King of Haithabu

    Bror till King Guthroth/Gudrød Halfdansson I
    Occupation: Konge i Romerike, Vestfold, Romerike og Vestfold, King of Vestfold, Konge i Vestfold og Romerike, Konge Vestfold Og Romerike



    About Eystein «Fret/Fjert» Halfdansson
    http://www.friesian.com/germania.htm#orkney

    Eystein "Fret/Fjert" Halfdansson, son of Halvdan Olavsson Kvitbein

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%98ystein_Halvdansson

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

    Øystein Halvdansson / Eystein Halfdansson / Eysteinn Hálfdansson

    (In English: Eystein Halfdansson)

    King in part of Norway: Romerike / Vestfold

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=gb&emne=asatru&person=%D8ystein%20Halvdansson

    Øystein Halvdansson (levde i tiden rundt 730 e. Kr.) var, i henhold til Snorre Sturlassons Ynglingesagaen, småkonge over Vestfold og Romerike. Han var sønn av Halvdan Kvitbein og Åsa Øysteinsdotter og ble gift med Hild Eiriksdotter, datter til Eirik Agnarsson, småkonge i Vestfold. Deres sønn var Halvdan Øysteinsson, også kalt for den den gavmilde.

    Øystein arvet av sin far Solør, store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og en del av Vestfold. Etter at svigerfaren Eirik Agnarsson døde sønnesløs arvet Øystein også resten av Vestfold.

    Snorre forteller at Øystein dro på plyndringsferd til Varna og tok med seg alt av husdyr og verdisaker. Kongen av Varna var på denne tiden var Skjøld som etter sigende var «en stor trollmann». Da Skjøld kom til stranda og så Øysteins seil vinket han med kappen sin og blåste inn i den. Trolldommen fikk bommen på Øysteins skip til å svinge og slo ham over bord. I sjøen druknet Øystein og det ble hans bane. Liket ble derimot berget og ført til Borre, hvor det ble hauglagt.

    Druknet, begravet på Borrestranda (Hauglagt)

    Den eldste Noregshistoria frå 1170 fortel at Øystein hadde tilnamnet fjert

    Eystein Halfdansson (Old Norse: Eysteinn Hálfdansson) was the son of Halfdan Hvitbeinn of the House of Yngling according to Heimskringla. He inherited the throne of Romerike and Vestfold.

    His wife was Hild, the daughter of the king of Vestfold, Erik Agnarsson. Erik had no son, so Eystein inherited Vestfold.

    Eystein died while pillaging in Varna. King Skjöld of Varna, a great warlock, arrived at the beach and saw the sails of Eystein's ships. He waved his cloak and blew into it which caused a boom of one ship to swing and hit Eystein so that he fell overboard and drowned. His body was salvaged and buried in a mound. Eystein was succeeded by his son Halfdan the Mild.

    ABT 0725 - ABT 0780

    OCCUPATION: Konge i Romerike/Vestfold

    BIRTH: ABT 0725, (704 ?)

    DEATH: ABT 0780, Jarlsø (druknet)

    BURIAL: Borrestranda (hauglagt)

    Father: Halvdan Olavsson KVITBEIN

    Mother: Aasa ØYSTEINSDATTER

    Family 1 : Hild EIRIKSDATTER

    +Halvdan ØYSTEINSSON

    Kilde: nermo.org

    Öystein var son till Halfdan Hvitbeinn av huset Yngling enligt Heimskringla . Han ärvde tronen i Romerike och Västfold .

    Hans hustru var Hild , dotter till konungen i Västfold , Erik Agnarsson . Erik hade ingen son så Eystein ärvt Västfold .

    Öystein gick till Varna med några fartyg att plundra och transporteras bort alla djur och andra värdesaker . Var dock konungen i Varna kung Skjold som var en stor trollkarl . Skjold kom till stranden och såg seglen för Öystein skepp . Han vinkade sin kappa och blåste in i den som orsakade en boom av ett fartyg att svinga och slå Eystein så att han föll överbord och drunknade. Hans kropp bärgades och begravd i en kulle .

    Öystein ärvdes av hans son Halfdan Mild .

    Öystein gift Hild Eriksdatter , dotter till Erik Agnarsson och Okänd.

    The Ynglings were the oldest known Scandinavian dynasty. It can refer to the following clans:

    The Scylfings (Old Norse: Skilfingar), the semi-legendary royal Swedish clan during the Age of Migrations, with kings such as Eadgils, Onela and Ohthere. When Beowulf and Ynglingatal were composed sometime in the eighth-tenth centuries, the respective scop and skald expected his audience to have a great deal of background information about these kings, which is shown in the allusiveness of the references.

    The Fairhair dynasty, descending from the kings of Oppland, Norway. According to surviving early sources, such as Ynglingatal and Íslendingabók, these kings were descended from the Swedish Scylfings of Uppland, Sweden.

    The House of Munsö, a Swedish dynasty. The earliest kings of this dynasty that historians generally agree are historical are Eric the Victorious and Olof Skötkonung.

    Some early kings were probably mythical, whereas others probably existed in real life. Especially, Egil, Ottar, Ale and Adils are mentioned in several sources and are very likely to have been real kings

    In the Scandinavian sources they are the descendants of Yngvi-Frey of Vanaheim. Yngling means descendant of Frey, and in the Gesta Danorum of Saxo Grammaticus they are called the sons of Frey.

    Several of these kings appear in Beowulf: Eadgils (Adils), Onela (Ale), and Ohthere (Ottar Vendelkråka), but here they are called Scylfings (see the Beowulf section below). Snorri Sturluson hints at a less divine origin in Skáldskaparmál for this dynasty: One war-king was named Skelfir; and his house is called the House of Skilfings: his kindred is in the Eastern Region (Sweden is the eastern part of Scandinavia, and the Swedish kings could be called east kings).

    Another origin for the name skilfing is possible: Snorri described Erik and Alrik, the sons of Skjalf to be the de facto ancestors of this Norse clan.

    The kings who resided at Upsal had been the supreme chiefs over the whole Swedish dominions until the death of Agne, when, as before related, the kingdom came to be divided between brothers (Alrek and Erik). After that time the dominions and kingly powers were spread among the branches of the family as these increased; but some kings cleared great tracts of forest-land, and settled them, and thereby increased their domains

    From Sweden to Norway

    According to Snorri Sturluson, the dynasty led the settlement of the Swedish provinces and established themselves as the kings of its provinces, accepting the overlordship of the Swedish king at Uppsala, until the dynasty all but exterminated itself with Ingjald Ill-Ruler and his downfall. A survivor Olof Trätälja was the ancestor of the Norwegian branch

    However, both Snorri (as in the earlier quote) and Saxo described the clan as remaining in Sweden after this date.

    Saxo on the Battle of Bråvalla (ca 750):

    Now the bravest of the Swedes were these: Arwakki, Keklu-Karl (Kelke-Karl), Krok the Peasant, (from Akr), Gudfast and Gummi from Gislamark. These were kindred of the god Frey, and most faithful witnesses to the gods. Ingi (Yngwe) also, and Oly, Alver, Folki, all sons of Elrik (Alrek), embraced the service of Ring (Sigurd Ring); they were men ready of hand, quick in counsel, and very close friends of Ring. They likewise held the god Frey to be the founder of their race. Amongst these from the town of Sigtun (Old Sigtuna) also came Sigmund, a champion advocate, versed in making contracts of sale and purchase; besides him Frosti surnamed Bowl: allied with him was Alf the Lofty (Proud?) from the district of Upsala (Old Uppsala); this man was a swift spear-thrower, and used to go in the front of the battle.

    Moreover, both in Icelandic sources and in the Gesta Danorum, king Sigurd Ring would become the ancestor of the houses of Ragnar Lodbrok and would thus be the semi-legendary ancestor of later Swedish and Danish royal houses. (See the House of Munsö.)

    Eysteinn I "Fretr" Glumru Halfdansson King Of Vestfold 1 2

    Birth: About 740 in , , Vestfold, Norway 3 4

    Death:

    Sex: M

    Father: Halfdan "Hvitbein" Olafsson King Of Uppsala b. 725 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway

    Mother: Asa Eysteinsdatter Princess Of Hedmark b. About 710 in (, , Uppsala, Sweden)

    Unknown: , , Vestfold, Norway 5 1 2 4

    Unknown: 5 1 2 4

    Spouses & Children
    Hildi Eiriksdatter (Wife) b. About 740 in (, , Vestfold, Norway)
    1 2 3 4

    Marriage: Abt 755 in (, , Vestfold, Norway) 6 Nov 2004 14:29

    Children:

    Geva Eysteinsdatter b. About 756 in (, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway)

    Halfdan II Eysteinsson King Of Vestfold b. About 767 in (, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway)

    Lifa Eysteinsdatter Princess Of Vestfold b. 772 in (, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway)

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Notes
    Individual:
    Name Suffix: King of Vestfold

    REFN: HWS8564

    Ancestral File Number:HRN9-Q6

    OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\c_crown.gif

    OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\C_Murale.GIFCHAN20 Mar 2001

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Sources
    Title: "Concise Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia"
    Author: Ansley, Clarke F.

    Publication: (Morningside Heights, New York, Columbia University Press

    , Licensed from INSO Corporation, December 31, 1941, 1994), Hard C

    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Title: "Royal Lines & Adamic Genealogy: Genealogical Research of A

    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Author: Schmuhl, Albert F.

    Publication: e-mail documentation, March 1997, Albert F. Schmuhl, Americ

    a Online Posting: Genealogy Forum

    Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral Fileâ„¢ v4.19"

    Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

    Publication: 3 Feb 2001

    Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson"

    Author: Larson, Kirk

    Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Desce

    ndants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library

    Title: "Héraldique européenne"

    Author: Arnaud Bunel

    Publication: Coats of Arms for European Royalty and Nobility (http://www

    .heraldique-europeenne.org, Arnaud Bunel, 1998) , Internet"Armigerous" (ahr-MIJ-ehr-us) adjective

    Bearing or entitled to bear heraldicarms.

    The reason the notion of a family crest was brought into th

    e languagewas that those who were armigerous (entitled to bear arms) used to put their crest or achieveme

    After Halfdan Whiteleg's death, according to the sagas, his son Eystein ruled Vestfold until a rival king named Skjold used his magic powers to have Eystein knocked overboard during a sailing expedition. Eystein's body was recovered from the sea and buried with great ceremony.

    Note: [Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flander & Kiev]
    Note: Title: Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flanders, and Kiev, by Rupert Alen & Anna Dahlquist, 1997, King's River Publ.
    Note: Page: 7
    http://www.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy/ps05/ps05_090.htm

    51. OF KING EYSTEIN'S DEATH.

    Eystein, Halfdan Hvitbein's son, became king after in Raumarike

    and Westfold. He was married to Hild, a daughter of Eric

    Agnarsson, who was king in Westfold. Agnar, Eric's father, was a

    son of Sigtryg, king in the Vend district. King Eric had no son,

    and died while King Halfdan Hvitbein was still in life. The

    father and son, Halfdan and Eystein, then took possession of the

    whole of Westfold, which Eystein ruled over as long as he lived.

    At that time there lived at Varna a king called Skjold, who was a

    great warlock. King Eystein went with some ships of war to

    Varna, plundered there, and carried away all he could find of

    clothes or other valuables, and of peasants' stock, and killed

    cattle on the strand for provision, and then went off. King

    Skjold came to the strand with his army, just as Eystein was at

    such a distance over the fjord that King Skjold could only see

    his sails. Then he took his cloak, waved it, and blew into it.

    King Eystein was sitting at the helm as they sailed in past

    Jarls, and another ship was sailing at the side of his, when

    there came a stroke of a wave, by which the boom of the other

    ship struck the king and threw him overboard, which proved his

    death. His men fished up his body, and it was carried into

    Borre, where a mound was thrown up over it, out towards the sea

    at Raden, near Vodle. So says Thjodolf: --

    "King Eystein sat upon the poop

    Of his good ship: with sudden swoop

    The swinging boom dashed him to hell,

    And fathoms deep the hero fell

    Beneath the brine. The fury whirl

    Of Loke, Tempest's brother's girl,

    Grim Hel, clutched his soul away;

    And now where Vodle's ocean bay

    Receives the ice-cold stream, the grave

    Of Eystein stands -- the good, the brave!"

    ****************************
    Events in the life of Eysteinn "the Fart" Hálfdansson

    ·King Skjold of Varna came to the strand with his army, just as Eystein was at such a distance over the fjord that King Skjold could only see his sails. Then he took his cloak, waved it, and blew into it. King Eystein was sitting at the helm as they sailed in past Jarls, and another ship was sailing at the side of his, when there came a stroke of a wave, by which the boom of the other ship struck the king and threw him overboard, which proved his death.

    event 1 .

    ·given Vestfold to rule over after his father took possession of Eystein's deceased father-in-law's territory

    burial 1 .

    in Borre, Raden, near Vodle, Vestfold.

    ·His men fished up his body, and it was carried into Borre, where a mound was thrown up over it, out towards the sea at Raden, near Vodle. So says Thjodolf: -- "King Eystein sat upon the poop Of his good ship: with sudden swoop The swinging boom dashed him to hell, And fathoms deep the hero fell Beneath the brine. The fury whirl Of Loke, Tempest's brother's girl, Grim Hel, clutched his soul away; And now where Vodle's ocean bay Receives the ice-cold stream, the grave Of Eystein stands -- the good, the brave!"

    event 1 .

    ·went with some ships of war to Varna, the land of King Skjold, and plundered there, and carried away all he could find of clothes or other valuables, and of peasants' stock, and killed cattle on the strand for provision, and then began his return home

    Eystein "Fret/Fjert" Halfdansson, son of Halvdan Olavsson Kvitbein

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%98ystein_Halvdansson

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

    Øystein Halvdansson / Eystein Halfdansson / Eysteinn Hálfdansson

    (In English: Eystein Halfdansson)

    King in part of Norway: Romerike / Vestfold

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=gb&emne=asatru&person=%D8ystein%20Halvdansson

    Øystein Halvdansson (levde i tiden rundt 730 e. Kr.) var, i henhold til Snorre Sturlassons Ynglingesagaen, småkonge over Vestfold og Romerike. Han var sønn av Halvdan Kvitbein og Åsa Øysteinsdotter og ble gift med Hild Eiriksdotter, datter til Eirik Agnarsson, småkonge i Vestfold. Deres sønn var Halvdan Øysteinsson, også kalt for den den gavmilde.

    Øystein arvet av sin far Solør, store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og en del av Vestfold. Etter at svigerfaren Eirik Agnarsson døde sønnesløs arvet Øystein også resten av Vestfold.

    Snorre forteller at Øystein dro på plyndringsferd til Varna og tok med seg alt av husdyr og verdisaker. Kongen av Varna var på denne tiden var Skjøld som etter sigende var «en stor trollmann». Da Skjøld kom til stranda og så Øysteins seil vinket han med kappen sin og blåste inn i den. Trolldommen fikk bommen på Øysteins skip til å svinge og slo ham over bord. I sjøen druknet Øystein og det ble hans bane. Liket ble derimot berget og ført til Borre, hvor det ble hauglagt.

    Druknet, begravet på Borrestranda (Hauglagt)

    Den eldste Noregshistoria frå 1170 fortel at Øystein hadde tilnamnet fjert

    ABT 0725 - ABT 0780

    OCCUPATION: Konge i Romerike/Vestfold

    BIRTH: ABT 0725, (704 ?)

    DEATH: ABT 0780, Jarlsø (druknet)

    BURIAL: Borrestranda (hauglagt)

    Father: Halvdan Olavsson KVITBEIN

    Mother: Aasa ØYSTEINSDATTER

    Family 1 : Hild EIRIKSDATTER

    +Halvdan ØYSTEINSSON

    Kilde: nermo.org

    Öystein var son till Halfdan Hvitbeinn av huset Yngling enligt Heimskringla . Han ärvde tronen i Romerike och Västfold .

    Hans hustru var Hild , dotter till konungen i Västfold , Erik Agnarsson . Erik hade ingen son så Eystein ärvt Västfold .

    Öystein gick till Varna med några fartyg att plundra och transporteras bort alla djur och andra värdesaker . Var dock konungen i Varna kung Skjold som var en stor trollkarl . Skjold kom till stranden och såg seglen för Öystein skepp . Han vinkade sin kappa och blåste in i den som orsakade en boom av ett fartyg att svinga och slå Eystein så att han föll överbord och drunknade. Hans kropp bärgades och begravd i en kulle .

    Öystein ärvdes av hans son Halfdan Mild .

    Öystein gift Hild Eriksdatter , dotter till Erik Agnarsson och Okänd.

    Eysteinn I "Fretr" Glumru Halfdansson King Of Vestfold 1 2

    Birth: About 740 in , , Vestfold, Norway 3 4

    Death:

    Sex: M

    Father: Halfdan "Hvitbein" Olafsson King Of Uppsala b. 725 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway

    Mother: Asa Eysteinsdatter Princess Of Hedmark b. About 710 in (, , Uppsala, Sweden)

    Unknown: , , Vestfold, Norway 5 1 2 4

    Unknown: 5 1 2 4

    LDS Baptism: 28 May 1923

    LDS Endowment: 16 May 1928 ARIZO

    LDS Sealing Child: Done

    Changed: 11 Dec 2002 00:00

    Spouses & Children
    Hildi Eiriksdatter (Wife) b. About 740 in (, , Vestfold, Norway)
    1 2 3 4

    Marriage: Abt 755 in (, , Vestfold, Norway) 6 Nov 2004 14:29

    Children:

    Geva Eysteinsdatter b. About 756 in (, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway)

    Halfdan II Eysteinsson King Of Vestfold b. About 767 in (, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway)

    Lifa Eysteinsdatter Princess Of Vestfold b. 772 in (, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway)

    After Halfdan Whiteleg's death, according to the sagas, his son Eystein ruled Vestfold until a rival king named Skjold used his magic powers to have Eystein knocked overboard during a sailing expedition. Eystein's body was recovered from the sea and buried with great ceremony.

    Note: [Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flander & Kiev] Note: Title: Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flanders, and Kiev, by Rupert Alen & Anna Dahlquist, 1997, King's River Publ. Note: Page: 7
    King of Raumerike and Vestfold Eysteinn "the Fart" Hálfdanarson was given Vestfold to rule over after his father took possession of Eystein's deceased father-in-law's territory. He was King between 750 and 780.

    He married Hild Eiríksdóttir, daughter of King of Vestfold Eiríkr Agnarsson.

    He went with some ships of war to Varna, the land of King Skjold, and plundered there, and carried away all he could find of clothes or other valuables, and of peasants' stock, and killed cattle on the strand for provision, and then began his return home.

    King Skjold of Varna came to the strand with his army, just as Eystein was at such a distance over the fjord that King Skjold could only see his sails. Then he took his cloak, waved it, and blew into it. King Eystein was sitting at the helm as they sailed in past Jarls, and another ship was sailing at the side of his, when there came a stroke of a wave, by which the boom of the other ship struck the king and threw him overboard, which proved his death.

    He was buried in Borre, Raden, near Vodle, Vestfold, Norway. His men fished up his body, and it was carried into Borre, where a mound was thrown up over it, out towards the sea at Raden, near Vodle.

    So says Thjodolf:

    "King Eystein sat upon the poop

    Of his good ship: with sudden swoop

    The swinging boom dashed him to hell,

    And fathoms deep the hero fell

    Beneath the brine. The fury whirl

    Of Loke, Tempest's brother's girl,

    Grim Hel, clutched his soul away;

    And now where Vodle's ocean bay

    Receives the ice-cold stream, the grave

    Of Eystein stands -- the good, the brave!"

    See "My Lines"

    ( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p278.htm#i9085 )

    from Compiler: R. B. Stewart, Evans, GA

    ( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/index.htm )

    King of Norway
    Eystein "Fret/Fjert" Halfdansson, son of Halvdan Olavsson Kvitbein
    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%98ystein_Halvdansson

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

    Øystein Halvdansson / Eystein Halfdansson / Eysteinn Hálfdansson

    (In English: Eystein Halfdansson)

    King in part of Norway: Romerike / Vestfold

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=gb&emne=asatru&person=%D8ystein%20Halvdansson

    Øystein Halvdansson (levde i tiden rundt 730 e. Kr.) var, i henhold til Snorre Sturlassons Ynglingesagaen, småkonge over Vestfold og Romerike. Han var sønn av Halvdan Kvitbein og Åsa Øysteinsdotter og ble gift med Hild Eiriksdotter, datter til Eirik Agnarsson, småkonge i Vestfold. Deres sønn var Halvdan Øysteinsson, også kalt for den den gavmilde.

    Øystein arvet av sin far Solør, store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og en del av Vestfold. Etter at svigerfaren Eirik Agnarsson døde sønnesløs arvet Øystein også resten av Vestfold.

    Snorre forteller at Øystein dro på plyndringsferd til Varna og tok med seg alt av husdyr og verdisaker. Kongen av Varna var på denne tiden var Skjøld som etter sigende var «en stor trollmann». Da Skjøld kom til stranda og så Øysteins seil vinket han med kappen sin og blåste inn i den. Trolldommen fikk bommen på Øysteins skip til å svinge og slo ham over bord. I sjøen druknet Øystein og det ble hans bane. Liket ble derimot berget og ført til Borre, hvor det ble hauglagt.

    Druknet, begravet på Borrestranda (Hauglagt)

    Den eldste Noregshistoria frå 1170 fortel at Øystein hadde tilnamnet fjert

    BIOGRAFI:

    Øystein Halvdansson (levde i tiden rundt 730 e. Kr.) var, i henhold til Snorre Sturlassons Ynglingesagaen, småkonge over Vestfold og Romerike. Han var sønn av Halvdan Kvitbein og Åsa Øysteinsdotter og ble gift med Hild Eiriksdotter, datter til Eirik Agnarsson, småkonge i Vestfold. Deres sønn var Halvdan Øysteinsson, også kalt for den den gavmilde.

    Øystein arvet av sin far Solør, store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og en del av Vestfold. Etter at svigerfaren Eirik Agnarsson døde sønnesløs arvet Øystein også resten av Vestfold.

    Snorre forteller at Øystein dro på plyndringsferd til Varna og tok med seg alt av husdyr og verdisaker. Kongen av Varna var på denne tiden var Skjøld som etter sigende var «en stor trollmann». Da Skjøld kom til stranda og så Øysteins seil vinket han med kappen sin og blåste inn i den. Trolldommen fikk bommen på Øysteins skip til å svinge og slo ham over bord. I sjøen druknet Øystein og det ble hans bane. Liket ble derimot berget og ført til Borre, hvor det ble hauglagt.

    Note: 'Fretr' AKA "the Fart".
    http://www.mathematical.com/sviadrassonsveide.html
    Han levde på 730-talet
    Eystein "Fret/Fjert" Halfdansson, son of Halvdan Olavsson Kvitbein
    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%98ystein_Halvdansson

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

    Øystein Halvdansson / Eystein Halfdansson / Eysteinn Hálfdansson

    (In English: Eystein Halfdansson)

    King in part of Norway: Romerike / Vestfold

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=gb&emne=asatru&person=%D8ystein%20Halvdansson

    Øystein Halvdansson (levde i tiden rundt 730 e. Kr.) var, i henhold til Snorre Sturlassons Ynglingesagaen, småkonge over Vestfold og Romerike. Han var sønn av Halvdan Kvitbein og Åsa Øysteinsdotter og ble gift med Hild Eiriksdotter, datter til Eirik Agnarsson, småkonge i Vestfold. Deres sønn var Halvdan Øysteinsson, også kalt for den den gavmilde.

    Øystein arvet av sin far Solør, store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og en del av Vestfold. Etter at svigerfaren Eirik Agnarsson døde sønnesløs arvet Øystein også resten av Vestfold.

    Snorre forteller at Øystein dro på plyndringsferd til Varna og tok med seg alt av husdyr og verdisaker. Kongen av Varna var på denne tiden var Skjøld som etter sigende var «en stor trollmann». Da Skjøld kom til stranda og så Øysteins seil vinket han med kappen sin og blåste inn i den. Trolldommen fikk bommen på Øysteins skip til å svinge og slo ham over bord. I sjøen druknet Øystein og det ble hans bane. Liket ble derimot berget og ført til Borre, hvor det ble hauglagt.

    Druknet, begravet på Borrestranda (Hauglagt)

    Den eldste Noregshistoria frå 1170 fortel at Øystein hadde tilnamnet fjert

    ABT 0725 - ABT 0780

    OCCUPATION: Konge i Romerike/Vestfold

    BIRTH: ABT 0725, (704 ?)

    DEATH: ABT 0780, Jarlsø (druknet)

    BURIAL: Borrestranda (hauglagt)

    Father: Halvdan Olavsson KVITBEIN

    Mother: Aasa ØYSTEINSDATTER

    Family 1 : Hild EIRIKSDATTER

    +Halvdan ØYSTEINSSON

    Kilde: nermo.org

    Öystein var son till Halfdan Hvitbeinn av huset Yngling enligt Heimskringla . Han ärvde tronen i Romerike och Västfold .

    Hans hustru var Hild , dotter till konungen i Västfold , Erik Agnarsson . Erik hade ingen son så Eystein ärvt Västfold .

    Öystein gick till Varna med några fartyg att plundra och transporteras bort alla djur och andra värdesaker . Var dock konungen i Varna kung Skjold som var en stor trollkarl . Skjold kom till stranden och såg seglen för Öystein skepp . Han vinkade sin kappa och blåste in i den som orsakade en boom av ett fartyg att svinga och slå Eystein så att han föll överbord och drunknade. Hans kropp bärgades och begravd i en kulle .

    Öystein ärvdes av hans son Halfdan Mild .

    Öystein gift Hild Eriksdatter , dotter till Erik Agnarsson och Okänd.

    "Fret/Fjert" Halfdansson, son of Halvdan Olavsson Kvitbein

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%98ystein_Halvdansson

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

    Øystein Halvdansson / Eystein Halfdansson / Eysteinn Hálfdansson

    (In English: Eystein Halfdansson)

    King in part of Norway: Romerike / Vestfold

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=gb&emne=asatru&person=%D8ystein%20Halvdansson

    Øystein Halvdansson (levde i tiden rundt 730 e. Kr.) var, i henhold til Snorre Sturlassons Ynglingesagaen, småkonge over Vestfold og Romerike. Han var sønn av Halvdan Kvitbein og Åsa Øysteinsdotter og ble gift med Hild Eiriksdotter, datter til Eirik Agnarsson, småkonge i Vestfold. Deres sønn var Halvdan Øysteinsson, også kalt for den den gavmilde.

    Øystein arvet av sin far Solør, store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og en del av Vestfold. Etter at svigerfaren Eirik Agnarsson døde sønnesløs arvet Øystein også resten av Vestfold.

    Snorre forteller at Øystein dro på plyndringsferd til Varna og tok med seg alt av husdyr og verdisaker. Kongen av Varna var på denne tiden var Skjøld som etter sigende var «en stor trollmann». Da Skjøld kom til stranda og så Øysteins seil vinket han med kappen sin og blåste inn i den. Trolldommen fikk bommen på Øysteins skip til å svinge og slo ham over bord. I sjøen druknet Øystein og det ble hans bane. Liket ble derimot berget og ført til Borre, hvor det ble hauglagt.

    Druknet, begravet på Borrestranda (Hauglagt)

    Den eldste Noregshistoria frå 1170 fortel at Øystein hadde tilnamnet fjert

    Öystein var son till Halfdan Hvitbeinn av huset Yngling enligt Heimskringla . Han ärvde tronen i Romerike och Västfold .

    Hans hustru var Hild , dotter till konungen i Västfold , Erik Agnarsson . Erik hade ingen son så Eystein ärvt Västfold .

    Öystein gick till Varna med några fartyg att plundra och transporteras bort alla djur och andra värdesaker . Var dock konungen i Varna kung Skjold som var en stor trollkarl . Skjold kom till stranden och såg seglen för Öystein skepp . Han vinkade sin kappa och blåste in i den som orsakade en boom av ett fartyg att svinga och slå Eystein så att han föll överbord och drunknade. Hans kropp bärgades och begravd i en kulle .

    Öystein ärvdes av hans son Halfdan Mild .

    Öystein gift Hild Eriksdatter , dotter till Erik Agnarsson och Okänd.

    After Halfdan Whiteleg's death, according to the sagas, his son Eystein ruled Vestfold until a rival king named Skjold used his magic powers to have Eystein knocked overboard during a sailing expedition. Eystein's body was recovered from the sea and buried with great ceremony.

    Note: [Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flander & Kiev] Note: Title: Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flanders, and Kiev, by Rupert Alen & Anna Dahlquist, 1997, King's River Publ. Note: Page: 7

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%98ystein_Halvdansson

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

    Øystein Halvdansson / Eystein Halfdansson / Eysteinn Hálfdansson

    (In English: Eystein Halfdansson)

    King in part of Norway: Romerike / Vestfold

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=gb&emne=asatru&person=%D8ystein%20Halvdansson

    Øystein Halvdansson (levde i tiden rundt 730 e. Kr.) var, i henhold til Snorre Sturlassons Ynglingesagaen, småkonge over Vestfold og Romerike. Han var sønn av Halvdan Kvitbein og Åsa Øysteinsdotter og ble gift med Hild Eiriksdotter, datter til Eirik Agnarsson, småkonge i Vestfold. Deres sønn var Halvdan Øysteinsson, også kalt for den den gavmilde.

    Øystein arvet av sin far Solør, store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og en del av Vestfold. Etter at svigerfaren Eirik Agnarsson døde sønnesløs arvet Øystein også resten av Vestfold.

    Snorre forteller at Øystein dro på plyndringsferd til Varna og tok med seg alt av husdyr og verdisaker. Kongen av Varna var på denne tiden var Skjøld som etter sigende var «en stor trollmann». Da Skjøld kom til stranda og så Øysteins seil vinket han med kappen sin og blåste inn i den. Trolldommen fikk bommen på Øysteins skip til å svinge og slo ham over bord. I sjøen druknet Øystein og det ble hans bane. Liket ble derimot berget og ført til Borre, hvor det ble hauglagt.

    Druknet, begravet på Borrestranda (Hauglagt)

    Den eldste Noregshistoria frå 1170 fortel at Øystein hadde tilnamnet fjert

    http://www.celtic-casimir.com/webtree/2/2738.htm Spouses/Children: Hildi EIRÍKSDÓTTIR Harald EYSTEINSSON King of Haithabu+ Halfdan II 'Milldi' EYSTEINSSON King in Vestfold+ Geva EYSTEINSDÓTTIR of Westfold+ Marriage Information:

    Eysteinn married Hildi EIRÍKSDÓTTIR, daughter of Eirik AGNARSSON King in Vestfold and Unknown. (Hildi EIRÍKSDÓTTIR was born in 735 in Vestfold, Norway.)

    Sagokung av Ynglingaätten.
    https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ynglinga%C3%A4tten

    http://www.cft-win.com/getperson.php?personID=I010070&tree=Norway
    Om Eystein "Fretr" Halfdansson (Norsk)
    Øystein Halvdanson, konge over Romerike og Vestfold fra ca 750 til ca 780

    Han var sønn av Halvdan Kvitbein og Åsa Øysteinsdotter og ble gift med Hild Eiriksdotter, datter til Eirik Agnarsson, småkonge i Vestfold. De hadde barna Halvdan. Sigfred, Harald , Geva Åsa og Gudrød

    Øystein arvet av sin far Solør, store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og en del av Vestfold. Etter at svigerfaren Eirik Agnarsson døde sønnesløs arvet Øystein også resten av Vestfold.

    Snorre forteller at Øystein dro på plyndringsferd til Varna og tok med seg alt av husdyr og verdisaker. Kongen av Varna var på denne tiden var Skjøld som etter sigende var «en stor trollmann». Da Skjøld kom til stranda og så Øysteins seil vinket han med kappen sin og blåste inn i den. Trolldommen fikk bommen på Øysteins skip til å svinge og slo ham over bord. I sjøen druknet Øystein og det ble hans bane. Liket ble derimot berget og ført til Borre, hvor det ble hauglagt. Den eldste Noregshistoria frå 1170 fortel at Øystein hadde tilnamnet fjert



    http://www.norsesaga.no/hvorledes-norge-ble-bosatt.html

    Eystein gift Drottning Hild EIRIKSDOTTER. Hild föddes ca 740 i Jarlsberg, Vestfold, Norge; dog efter 762 i Holtan, Borre, Vestfold, Norge. [Familjeöversikt] [Familjediagram]


  2. 3.  Drottning Hild EIRIKSDOTTER föddes ca 740 i Jarlsberg, Vestfold, Norge; dog efter 762 i Holtan, Borre, Vestfold, Norge.

    Noteringar:

    Also Known As: "Hildi", "Hilda", "Eiricksdottir", "Ericsdotter", "Eiriksdatter", "Eiriksdatter of Norway"
    Birthdate: cirka 740
    Birthplace: Jarlsberg, Vestfold, Norway
    Death: efter 762
    Holtan, Borre, Vestfold, Norway

    Närstående:
    Dotter till Eirik Alvsson, King of Vestfold och NN Alvsson
    Hustru till Herbrand Hildibrandsson, of Agder och Eystein «Fret/Fjert» Halfdansson
    Moder till Æsa "den lyse" Eysteinsdatter; King of Hedeby Harold Eysteinsson, Second King of Haithabu; Kung Halvdan Øysteinsson den givmilde; Gudrod Eysteinsson "Jagtkonge" (King in Vestfold); Geva och 1 annan
    Occupation: Dronning i Vestfold og Romerike


    About Hild Eiriksdotter
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eystein_Halfdansson

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=&emne=nor&person=Hild%20Eiriksdotter

    http://www.celtic-casimir.com/webtree/2/2739.htm

    From "The Ynglinga Saga":

    "51. OF KING EYSTEIN'S DEATH.

    Eystein, Halfdan Hvitbein's son, became king after in Raumarike and Westfold. He was married to Hild, a daughter of Eric Agnarsson, who was king in Westfold. Agnar, Eric's father, was a son of Sigtryg, king in the Vend district. King Eric had no son, and died while King Halfdan Hvitbein was still in life. The father and son, Halfdan and Eystein, then took possession of the whole of Westfold, which Eystein ruled over as long as he lived. ..."

    Hild married Öystein Halfdansson, son of Halvdan "Hvitbeinn" Olofsson and Åsa Eysteinsdatter.

    og gift med Hild, dotter hans Eirik Agnarsson i Vestfold. Han arva Vestfold av verfaren. Snorre fortel at Eirik var soneson av ein konge i Vendsyssel.

    From "The Ynglinga Saga":

    "51. OF KING EYSTEIN'S DEATH.

    Eystein, Halfdan Hvitbein's son, became king after in Raumarike and Westfold. He was married to Hild, a daughter of Eric Agnarsson, who was king in Westfold. Agnar, Eric's father, was a son of Sigtryg, king in the Vend district. King Eric had no son, and died while King Halfdan Hvitbein was still in life. The father and son, Halfdan and Eystein, then took possession of the whole of Westfold, which Eystein ruled over as long as he lived. ..."

    Hild married Öystein Halfdansson, son of Halvdan "Hvitbeinn" Olofsson and Åsa Eysteinsdatter.

    Äktenskap : Öystein Halfdansson

    Allmänna hänvisningar:
    Från "The Ynglinga Saga " :

    " 51 . Kung Eystein död.

    Eystein , Halfdan Hvitbein son, blev konung efter i Raumarike och Västfold . Han var gift med Hild , dotter till Erik Agnarsson , som var kung i Västfold . Agnar , Eriks far, var son till Sigtryg , kung i SALUFÖRA stadsdelen. Kung Erik hade ingen son , och dog medan kung Halfdan Hvitbein fortfarande var i livet. Far och son , Halfdan och Eystein , tog då besittning hela Västfold som Eystein styrde över så länge han levde. ... "

    Hild gift Öystein Halfdansson , son till Halvdan " Hvitbeinn " Olofsson och Åsa Eysteinsdatter .

    Källor

    1 Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/ ).

    2 Snorre Sturlasson (ca 1179 till 1241 ), http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/OMACL/ ( Om 1225 ) , "Den YNGLINGA Saga " .

    og gift med Hild, dotter hans Eirik Agnarsson i Vestfold. Han arva Vestfold av verfaren. Snorre fortel at Eirik var soneson av ein konge i Vendsyssel.

    Hilda of Vestfold married Eystein I 'the Fart', King of Vestfold, son of Halfdan Huitbein (White Leg), King Salver, Uplands and Asa. Hilda of Vestfold was born in 710.
    Bragi den gamle var konge i Valdres. Han var far til Agnar, far til Ålf, far til Eirik, far til Hilda, mor til Halfdan den gavmilde, far til Gudrød, far til Halfdan svarte, far til Harald hårfagre. Denne ætten til
    http://www.norsesaga.no/hvorledes-norge-ble-bosatt.html

    Om Hild (Hildi) Eiriksdotter (Norsk)
    Hild Eriksdatter. dronning av Romerike og Vestfold

    Hun var datter av til Eirik Agnarsson, småkonge i Vestfold, ble gift med Øystein Halvdanson. De hadde barna Halvdan. Sigfred, Harald , Geva, Åsa og Gudrød

    Da hennes far døde sønneløs arvet Øystein resten av Vestfold.etter han

    Bragi den gamle var konge i Valdres. Han var far til Agnar, far til Ålf, far til Eirik, far til Hilda, mor til Halfdan den gavmilde, far til Gudrød, far til Halfdan svarte, far til Harald hårfagre. Denne ætten til Harald het Bragninger.



    Barn:
    1. 1. Kung Halvdan "den givmilde" ØYSTEINSSON föddes ca 760 i Holtan, Borre, Vestfold, Norge; dog 800 i Holtan, Borre, Vestfold, Norge; begravdes i Vestfold, Norge.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Kung Halfdan "Kvitbein" OLAFSSONKung Halfdan "Kvitbein" OLAFSSON föddes ca 710 i (Svitjod), Värmland, Sverige (son till Kung Olof TRÄTÄLJA och Drottning Solveig HALFDANSDATTER); dog ca 750 i Østre Toten, Oppland, Norge; begravdes i Tjølling ved Sandefjord, Norge.

    Noteringar:

    Also Known As: "Halvdan"
    Birthdate: cirka 710
    Birthplace: (Svitjod), Värmland, Sweden
    Death: cirka 750 (32-48)
    Vestre Toten, Oppland, Norway (sottedøden )
    Begravningsort: Tjølling ved Sandefjord, Norway

    Närstående:
    Son till Kung Olof Trätälja och Solveig Halfdansdatter, fra Solør

    Make till Åsa (Aasa) Eysteinsdotter

    Fader till Eystein «Fret/Fjert» Halfdansson och King Guthroth/Gudrød Halfdansson I

    Bror till Ingjald Olofsson, king of Värmland och Åsa Olafsdatter, Trondheim

    Occupation: King of Uppsala and Vestfold, King of Norway, Konge



    About Halfdan Olafsson «Whiteshanks» Kvitbein
    http://www.friesian.com/germania.htm#orkney

    http://www.friesian.com/germania.htm#norse

    Halvdan Olavsson "Whiteshanks" Kvitbein, King of Solør / Hedmark / Toten / Hadeland / Vestfold (Norway)

    Halvdan Kvitbein (Olavsson) (Hálfdan hvítbeinn) ca 710, PAM

    (In English: Halfdan Hvitbein)

    King in part of Norway: Solør / Hedmark / Toten / Hadeland / Vestfold (Norway)

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=gb&emne=asatru&person=Halvdan%20Kvitbein%20%28Olavsson%29

    Halfdan Hvitbeinn (Old Norse: Hálfdan hvítbeinn) was a mythical petty king in Norway, described in Ynglinga saga.

    Halvdan Kvitbein (levde ca. 710) var den første av ynglingesagaens konger som slo seg ned i Norge. Han var sønn av Olav Tretelgja og Solveig Halvdansdotter. Han var gift med Åsa Øysteinsdotter som han fikk sønnene Øystein Halvdansson og Gudrød Halvdansson med.

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_Kvitbein

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

    Halfdan Olafsson: Date born 2: 704, Romerike, Buskerud, Norway. http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/h/e/l/Patricia-Hellerud-/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0309.html

    Please check as father was born later than 685 ?

    Född 685 i Värmland, Svitjod. Död 715 i Toten Oppland, Norge. Kung i Värmland, Svitjod och Norge.

    White Leg founded the pagan temple at Skiringssal.

    Those of the Swedes who had more understanding found that the dear times proceeded from there being a greater number of people on the land than it could support, and that the king could not be blamed for this. They took the resolution, therefore, to cross the Eida forest with all their men, and came quite unexpectedly into Soleyar, where they put to death King Solve, and took Halfdan Hvitbein prisoner, and made him their chief, and gave him the title of king. Thereupon he subdued Soleyar, and proceeding with his army into Raumarike, plundered there, and laid that district also in subjection by force of arms.

    Halfdan Hvitbein became a great king. He was married to Aasa, a daughter of Eystein the Severe, who was king of the Upland people, and ruled over Hedemark. Halfdan and Aasa had two sons, Eystein and Gudrod. Halfdan subdued a great part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland, and much of Westfold. He lived to be an old man, and died in his bed at Toten, from whence his body was transported to Westfold, and was buried under a mound at a place called Skaereid, at Skiringsale. So says Thjodolf:

    "Halfdan, esteemed by friends and foes,

    Receives at last life's deep repose:

    The aged man at last, though late,

    Yielded in Toten to stern fate.

    At Skiringsale hangs o'er his grave

    A rock, that seems to mourn the brave Halfdan,

    to chiefs and people dear,

    Received from all a silent tear." - [1]

    [1] - http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?vis=s_e_ynglingesoga

    [ ] - http://home.earthlink.net/~artdugan/Trowbridge%20Vikings.htm

    The following description is based on the account in Ynglinga saga, written in the 1220s by Snorri Sturluson. The historicity of the kings described in that saga is generally not accepted by modern historians.

    Halvdan og broren Ingjald Olavsson vokste opp på Solør hos deres mors onkel, Sølve. Halvdans far ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolkning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Hva det beskrivende kallenavnet ‘Kvitbein’ står for er ikke helt klart, men kan være en karakteristikk av utseendet.

    Halvdan ble etter sigende en stor konge som erobret store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og deler av Vestfold. Da hans bror døde arvet han Värmland også. Selv døde Halvdan Kvitbein på Toten og ble hauglagt i Skæreid i Skiringsdal.

    Snorre nevener et kvad av skalden Tjodolv:

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Hvermann vet

    at Halvdan'

    saknet ble

    av stridsmeklere;

    for Hel sjøl

    til steinrøysa

    tjodkongen

    på Toten tok,

    og Skæreid

    i Skiringssal

    står bøyd over

    brynjekongen.

    Halvdan Kvitbein (levde ca. 710) var den første av ynglingesagaens konger som slo seg ned i Norge. Han var sønn av Olav Tretelgja og Solveig Halvdansdotter. Han var gift med Åsa Øysteinsdotter som han fikk sønnene Øystein Halvdansson og Gudrød Halvdansson med.

    Halvdan og broren Ingjald Olavsson vokste opp på Solør hos deres mors onkel, Sølve.

    Halvdans far ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Hva det beskrivende kallenavnet ‘Kvitbein’ står for er ikke helt klart, men kan være en karakteristikk av utseendet.

    Halvdan ble etter sigende en stor konge som erobret store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og deler av Vestfold. Da hans bror døde arvet han Värmland også. Selv døde Halvdan Kvitbein på Toten og ble hauglagt i Skæreid i Skiringsdal.

    Halvdan married Åsa Øysteinsdatter Av Oplandene, daughter of Eystein Hardråde and Unknown. (Åsa Øysteinsdatter Av Oplandene was born in 680 in Norway and died in 718 in Norway.)

    OCCUPATION: Konge på slutten av 600

    BIRTH: CIR700

    DEATH: Toten

    BURIAL: Skiringsal ved Sandefjord ( Tjøling )

    Halfdan Hvitbeinn was the son of Olof Trätälja of the House of Yngling according to Heimskringla.

    His father was sacrificed to Odin by the Swedish settlers in Värmland because of a famine. Some Swedes, however, realised that the famine was brought by overpopulation and not by the fact that the king had been neglecting his religious duties.

    Consequently, they resolved to cross the Ed Forest and settle in Norway and happened to end up in Soleyar (Solør) where they killed king Sölve and took Halfdan prisoner. The Swedish expatriates elected Halfdan king as he was the son of their old king, Olof. Halfdan subjugated all of Soleyar and took his army into Romerike and subjugated that province as well.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    Halfdan conquered a large part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland and a part of Westfold. When his brother Ingjald Olofsson died, he inherited Wermelandia. Halfdan died of old age in Toten and was transported to Westfold where he was buried under a mound at a place called Skaereid, at Skiringsale.

    Noted events in his life were:
    • He was a King in Norway.

    Halvdan married Åsa Eysteinsdatter, daughter of Eystein Hardråde and Unknown, circa 700 in Norway. (Åsa Eysteinsdatter was born in 680 in Norway and died in 718 in Norway.)

    ABT 0700 - ____

    RESIDENCE: Sønner: Øystein og Gudrød

    OCCUPATION: Konge på slutten av 600

    BIRTH: ABT 0700, (første 'Yngling' i Norge)

    DEATH: Toten (av sykdom)

    BURIAL: Skæreid, Skiringsal, Tjølling (Sandefj.)

    Father: Olav Ingjaldsøn TRETELJA

    Mother: Solveig HALVDANSDATTER

    Family 1 : Aasa ØYSTEINSDATTER

    +Øystein HALVDANSSON

    Kilde: nermo.org

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_Kvitbein

    Halvdan Kvitbein (levde ca. 710) var den første av ynglingesagaens konger som slo seg ned i Norge. Han var sønn av Olav Tretelgja og Solveig Halvdansdotter. Han var gift med Åsa Øysteinsdotter som han fikk sønnene Øystein Halvdansson og Gudrød Halvdansson med.

    Halvdan og broren Ingjald Olavsson vokste opp på Solør hos deres mors onkel, Sølve.

    Halvdans far ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolkning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Hva det beskrivende kallenavnet ‘Kvitbein’ står for er ikke helt klart, men kan være en karakteristikk av utseendet.

    Halvdan ble etter sigende en stor konge som erobret store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og deler av Vestfold. Da hans bror døde arvet han Värmland også. Selv døde Halvdan Kvitbein på Toten og ble hauglagt i Skæreid i Skiringsdal.

    Snorre nevener et kvad av skalden Tjodolv:

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Hvermann vet

    at Halvdan'

    saknet ble

    av stridsmeklere;

    for Hel sjøl

    til steinrøysa

    tjodkongen

    på Toten tok,

    og Skæreid

    i Skiringssal

    står bøyd over

    brynjekongen.

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Forgjenger:

    Halvdan Gulltann Konge av Solør
    (?–?) Etterfølger:

    Øystein Halvdansson
    King of Uppsala

    King of Uppsala

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_Kvitbein

    48. HALFDAN HVITBEIN MADE KING.

    Those of the Swedes who had more understanding found that the

    dear times proceeded from there being a greater number of people

    on the land than it could support, and that the king could not be

    blamed for this. They took the resolution, therefore, to cross

    the Eida forest with all their men, and came quite unexpectedly

    into Soleyar, where they put to death King Solve, and took

    Halfdan Hvitbein prisoner, and made him their chief, and gave him

    the title of king. Thereupon he subdued Soleyar, and proceeding

    with his army into Raumarike, plundered there, and laid that

    district also in subjection by force of arms.

    49. OF HALFDAN HVITBEIN.

    Halfdan Hvitbein became a great king. He was married to Aasa, a

    daughter of Eystein the Severe, who was king of the Upland

    people, and ruled over Hedemark. Halfdan and Aasa had two sons,

    Eystein and Gudrod. Halfdan subdued a great part of Hedemark,

    Toten, Hadeland, and much of Westfold. He lived to be an old

    man, and died in his bed at Toten, from whence his body was

    transported to Westfold, and was buried under a mound at a place

    called Skaereid, at Skiringsale. So says Thjodolf: --

    "Halfdan, esteemed by friends and foes,

    Receives at last life's deep repose:

    The aged man at last, though late,

    Yielded in Toten to stern fate.

    At Skiringsale hangs o'er his grave

    A rock, that seems to mourn the brave Halfdan,

    to chiefs and people dear,

    Received from all a silent tear."

    **********************
    Events in the life of Hálfdan Hvítbeinn O'láfsson

    event

    in Skaereid, Skiringsale.

    ·founded a pagan temple

    † death 1 .

    ·He lived to be an old man, and died in his bed at Toten.

    event 1 .

    ·subdued Soleyar (his foster father's homeland), and then proceeded with his army into Raumarike, plundered there, and laid that district also in subjection by force of arms

    burial 1 .

    in Skaereid, Skiringsale, Vëstfold.

    ·After he had died, his body was transported to Westfold, and was buried under a mound at a place called Skaereid, at Skiringsale. So says Thjodolf: -- "Halfdan, esteemed by friends and foes, Receives at last life's deep repose: The aged man at last, though late, Yielded in Toten to stern fate. At Skiringsale hangs o'er his grave A rock, that seems to mourn the brave Halfdan, to chiefs and people dear, Received from all a silent tear."

    event 1 .

    ·captured by the Swedes who'd killed his Uncle, and made their Chief (in deference to his Yngling blood?)

    event 1 .

    ·brought up in Soleyar, in the house of his mother's brother Solve

    event 1 .

    ·subdued a great part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland, and much of Westfold

    event 1 .

    ·took possession of Värmland after his brothers death, raised scatt (tax) from it, and placed earls over it as long as he lived

    Halvdan Kvitbein (levde ca. 710) var den første av ynglingesagaens konger som slo seg ned i Norge. Han var sønn av Olav Tretelgja og Solveig Halvdansdotter. Han var gift med Åsa Øysteinsdotter som han fikk sønnene Øystein Halvdansson og Gudrød Halvdansson med.

    Halvdan og broren Ingjald Olavsson vokste opp på Solør hos deres mors onkel, Sølve.

    Halvdans far ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolkning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Hva det beskrivende kallenavnet ‘Kvitbein’ står for er ikke helt klart, men kan være en karakteristikk av utseendet.

    Halvdan ble etter sigende en stor konge som erobret store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og deler av Vestfold. Da hans bror døde arvet han Värmland også. Selv døde Halvdan Kvitbein på Toten og ble hauglagt i Skæreid i Skiringsdal.

    Snorre nevener et kvad av skalden Tjodolv:

    Så sier Tjodolv:
    Hvermann vet
    at Halvdan'
    saknet ble
    av stridsmeklere;
    for Hel sjøl
    til steinrøysa
    tjodkongen
    på Toten tok,
    og Skæreid
    i Skiringssal
    står bøyd over
    brynjekongen.
    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_Kvitbein

    Född: 680 Abt , Norge

    Äktenskap : Åsa Eysteinsdatter ca 700 i Norge

    Död : Abt 715 , Toten , Oppland , Norge åldern omkring 35

    Andra namn för Halvdan var Halvdan " Vitben " Olofsson och Halvdan Den Gavmilde Olofsson.

    Allmänna hänvisningar:
    Halfdan Hvitbeinn var son till Olof Trätälja av huset Yngling enligt Heimskringla .

    Hans far var offras till Oden av svenska nybyggare i Värmland på grund av en hungersnöd. En del svenskar dock insett att hungersnöden var väckt av överbefolkning och inte av det faktum att kungen hade varit att försumma sina religiösa plikter .

    Därför beslöt de att korsa Ed Skog och bosätter sig i Norge och råkade hamna i Soleyar ( Solør ) där de dödade kung Sölve och tog Halfdan fånge. Den svenska utflyttade valde Halfdan kungen som han var son till sin gamle kungen , Olof . Halfdan underkuvade alla Soleyar och tog sin armé i Romerike och styrdes provinsen också.

    Halfdan skulle bli en stor kung , som gifte sig med Åsa , dotter till kung Eystein , härskaren av Oppland och Hedmark . De fick två söner , Öystein Halfdansson och Gudröd .

    Halfdan erövrade en stor del av Hedemarken , Toten , Hadeland och en del av Västfold . När hans bror Ingjald Olofsson dog, ärvde han Wermelandia . Halfdan dog av ålderdom i Toten och har transporterats till Västfold där han begravdes under en kulle på ett ställe som heter Skaereid kl Skiringsale .

    Noterade händelser i hans liv var:
    • Han var en kung i Norge.

    Halvdan gift Åsa Eysteinsdatter , dotter till Eystein Hårdråde och okända, ca 700 i Norge. (Åsa Eysteinsdatter född 680 i Norge och dog i 718 i Norge. )

    Källor

    1 Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/ ).

    Halvdan Kvitbein (levde ca. 710) var den første av ynglingesagaens konger som slo seg ned i Norge. Han var sønn av Olav Tretelgja og Solveig Halvdansdotter. Han var gift med Åsa Øysteinsdotter som han fikk sønnene Øystein Halvdansson og Gudrød Halvdansson med.

    Halvdan og broren Ingjald Olavsson vokste opp på Solør hos deres mors onkel, Sølve.

    Halvdans far ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolkning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Hva det beskrivende kallenavnet ‘Kvitbein’ står for er ikke helt klart, men kan være en karakteristikk av utseendet.

    Halvdan ble etter sigende en stor konge som erobret store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og deler av Vestfold. Da hans bror døde arvet han Värmland også. Selv døde Halvdan Kvitbein på Toten og ble hauglagt i Skæreid i Skiringsdal.

    Snorre nevner et kvad av skalden Tjodolv:

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Hvermann vet

    at Halvdan'

    saknet ble

    av stridsmeklere;

    for Hel sjøl

    til steinrøysa

    tjodkongen

    på Toten tok,

    og Skæreid

    i Skiringssal

    står bøyd over

    brynjekongen.

    ID: I49502
    Name: Halfdan "Hvitbein" OLAFSSON King Of Uplanders
    Given Name: Halfdan "Hvitbein" OLAFSSON
    Surname: King Of Uplanders
    Sex: M
    Birth: Abt 704 in Romerike, Buskerud, Norway
    Death: 800 in Toten, Oppland, Norway
    Change Date: 21 Sep 2005 at 15:23
    Note:
    Alias: Halfdan/white leg/
    Royalty for Commoners by Robert W. Stuart, GenealogicalPublishing Co.,Revised 2nd Edition, 1995:
    Gen 166-41 - Halfdan Olaffson "Huitbeing" (white leg), King of theUplanders of Sweden, King of Salver and Vestfold: conquered Rouimarike;
    founded the pagan temple a t Skiringssal, 8th century; m. AsaEysteinsdotter, dau. of Eystein "Hardrade" (the severe), King of the
    Uplands, and his wife Solveig Halfdansdotter (see note after Gen. 33. Gen166-33 -
    Moncreiff (chart 35),p. 109) adds two generations between my Gen 40 andGe n 41:
    (41B): Halfdan "The Stingy," King of Vestfold, as father of Gudron(Gudroth), whom he calls "Godfrey the Proud"; whose fatherwas (41A)
    Eyestein " The fart", King of Roumarike. Thou the work carries nobibliography, Moncrei ffe was an outstanding authority, and pending proofotherwise, may well be co nsidered correct. Moncreiogge is in agreementwith Sturluson (pp. 47-78)."
    Halfdan conquered Raumarike in Norway and Vestfold, the fertile area westof Christiania Fjord. He founded the temple at Skiringssal. That became agreat trading center and favorite seat of the Norwegian Kings.
    Source: Adrienne Anderson chart of Scandinavian Norman Descent of Hamblins

    Han vokste opp i Solør hos sinmorbroren sin. Han ble fanget av en svenskehær. Halvdan var konge på slutten av 600-tallet, og han styrte over Solør, Romerike, Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland og Vestfold, kongssete lå på Toten.

    Blev högst 30 år.

    Född: 685 Värmland

    Död: 715

    Noteringar

    Biografi

    Kung i Värmland, Svitjod och Norge. Född 685 i Värmland, Svitjod. Död 715 i Toten Oppland, Norge. Olof Trätälja blev aldrig kung i Uppsala som sina förfäder, men han var den siste av Ynglingaätten som levde i Sverige. Hans son Halvdan Vitben drog med en här vidare västerut och lade under sig ett område i södra Norge. (Källa: Gåtfulla platser i Sverige, sid 227, Stig Linnell) Halfdan 'Vitben', gift med Åsa som var dotter till kungen i Oppland, Eystein 'Hårdråde'. Halfdan var en mäktig kung. Halfdan tog stora delar av Hedmark, Toten, Hedaland och mycket av Vestvold. Efter sin bror Ingjalds död lade han också dennes kungadöme i Värmland under sig. Halfdan blev en mycket gammal man och dog av sjukdom på Toten, Oppland och är höglagd i Vestvold. Makarna hade två söner, Eystein och Gundröd. (Källa: Heimskringla, Ynglingasagan)

    Halfdan Whiteshanks (Old Norse: Hálfdan hvítbeinn) was a mythical petty king in Norway, described in Ynglinga saga. The following description is based on the account in Ynglinga saga, written in the 1220s by Snorri Sturluson. The historicity of the kings described in that saga is generally not accepted by modern historians.

    He was the son of Olof Trätälja of the House of Yngling. His father was sacrificed to Odin by the Swedish settlers in Värmland because of a famine. Some Swedes, however, realised that the famine was brought by overpopulation and not by the fact that the king had been neglecting his religious duties.

    Consequently, they resolved to cross the Ed Forest and settle in Norway and happened to end up in Soleyar where they killed king Sölve and took Halfdan prisoner. The Swedish expatriates elected Halfdan king as he was the son of their old king, Olof. Halfdan subjugated all of Soleyar and took his army into Romerike and subjugated that province as well.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    Halfdan conquered a large part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland and a part of Vestfold. When his brother Ingjald Olofsson died, he inherited Värmland. Halfdan died of old age in Toten and was transported to Vestfold where he was buried under a mound in Skiringssal.

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

    Halfdan Hvitbeinn (Old Norse: Hálfdan hvítbeinn) was a mythical petty king in Norway, described in Ynglinga saga. The following description is based on the account in Ynglinga saga, written in the 1220s by Snorri Sturluson. The historicity of the kings described in that saga is generally not accepted by modern historians.

    He was the son of Olof Trätälja of the House of Yngling. His father was sacrificed to Odin by the Swedish settlers in Värmland because of a famine. Some Swedes, however, realised that the famine was brought by overpopulation and not by the fact that the king had been neglecting his religious duties.

    Consequently, they resolved to cross the Ed Forest and settle in Norway and happened to end up in Soleyar where they killed king Sölve and took Halfdan prisoner. The Swedish expatriates elected Halfdan king as he was the son of their old king, Olof. Halfdan subjugated all of Soleyar and took his army into Romerike and subjugated that province as well.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    Halfdan conquered a large part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland and a part of Vestfold. When his brother Ingjald Olofsson died, he inherited Värmland. Halfdan died of old age in Toten and was transported to Vestfold where he was buried under a mound in Skiringssal.

    Halfdan Hvitbeinn (Old Norse: Hálfdan hvítbeinn) was a mythical petty king in Norway, described in Ynglinga saga. The following description is based on the account in Ynglinga saga, written in the 1220s by Snorri Sturluson. The historicity of the kings described in that saga is generally not accepted by modern historians.

    He was the son of Olof Trätälja of the House of Yngling. His father was sacrificed to Odin by the Swedish settlers in Värmland because of a famine. Some Swedes, however, realised that the famine was brought by overpopulation and not by the fact that the king had been neglecting his religious duties.

    Consequently, they resolved to cross the Ed Forest and settle in Norway and happened to end up in Soleyar where they killed king Sölve and took Halfdan prisoner. The Swedish expatriates elected Halfdan king as he was the son of their old king, Olof. Halfdan subjugated all of Soleyar and took his army into Romerike and subjugated that province as well.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    Halfdan conquered a large part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland and a part of Vestfold. When his brother Ingjald Olofsson died, he inherited Värmland. Halfdan died of old age in Toten and was transported to Vestfold where he was buried under a mound in Skiringssal.

    Fra Wikipedia, den frie encyklopedi

    Halvdan Kvitbein (levde ca. 710) var den første av ynglingesagaens konger som slo seg ned i Norge. Han var sønn av Olav Tretelgja og Solveig Halvdansdotter. Han var gift med Åsa Øysteinsdotter som han fikk sønnene Øystein Halvdansson og Gudrød Halvdansson med.

    Halvdan og broren Ingjald Olavsson vokste opp på Solør hos deres mors onkel, Sølve.

    Halvdans far ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Hva det beskrivende kallenavnet ‘Kvitbein’ står for er ikke helt klart, men kan være en karakteristikk av utseendet.

    Halvdan ble etter sigende en stor konge som erobret store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og deler av Vestfold. Da hans bror døde arvet han Värmland også. Selv døde Halvdan Kvitbein på Toten og ble hauglagt i Skæreid i Skiringsdal.

    Snorre nevener et kvad av skalden Tjodolv:

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Hvermann vet

    at Halvdan'

    saknet ble

    av stridsmeklere;

    for Hel sjøl

    til steinrøysa

    tjodkongen

    på Toten tok,

    og Skæreid

    i Skiringssal

    står bøyd over

    brynjekongen.

    Halfdan "Hvitbein" Olafsson King Of Uppsala 1 2 517 SmartMatches

    Birth: 725 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway 3 4

    Death:

    Sex: M

    Father: Olaf Ingjaldsson King Of Värmland b. About 682 in , , Värmland, Sweden

    Mother: Solveig Halfdansdatter b. About 670 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway)

    Unknown: , Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden 5 1 2 4

    Unknown: (, , Vestfold, Norway) 5 1 2 4

    Spouses & Children
    Asa Eysteinsdatter Princess Of Hedmark (Wife) b. About 710 in (, , Uppsala, Sweden)
    1 2 3 4

    Marriage: Abt 735 in (, , Vestfold, Norway) 6 Nov 2004 14:29

    Children:

    Eysteinn I "Fretr" Glumru Halfdansson King Of Vestfold b. About 740 in , , Vestfold, Norway

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Notes
    Individual:
    Name Suffix: King of Uppsala

    REFN: HWS8565

    Ancestral File Number:FLHG-TG

    OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\c_crown.gif

    OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\c_crown.gif

    OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\C_Murale.GIF

    OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\C_Murale.GIFCHAN20 Mar 2001

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Sources
    Title: "Concise Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia"
    Author: Ansley, Clarke F.

    Publication: (Morningside Heights, New York, Columbia University Press

    , Licensed from INSO Corporation, December 31, 1941, 1994), Hard C

    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Title: "Royal Lines & Adamic Genealogy: Genealogical Research of A

    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Author: Schmuhl, Albert F.

    Publication: e-mail documentation, March 1997, Albert F. Schmuhl, Americ

    a Online Posting: Genealogy Forum

    Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral Fileâ„¢ v4.19"

    Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

    Publication: 3 Feb 2001

    Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson"

    Author: Larson, Kirk

    Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Desce

    ndants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library

    Title: "Héraldique européenne"

    Author: Arnaud Bunel

    Publication: Coats of Arms for European Royalty and Nobility (http://www

    .heraldique-europeenne.org, Arnaud Bunel, 1998) , Internet"Armigerous" (ahr-MIJ-ehr-us) adjective

    Bearing or entitled to bear heraldicarms.

    The reason the notion of a family crest was brought into th

    e languagewas that those who were armigerous (entitled to bear arms) used to put their crest or achieveme

    After a season of bad harvests, the woodcutting king [Olof Ingjaldsson] was sacrificed to Odin so that his people might have good crops. He was succeeded by his son Halfdan Whiteleg, who is said to have extended his rule over much of southern Norway. Halfdan died at a ripe old age, was duly placed in a burial mound, and his deeds were sun by the bards.

    After a season of bad harvests, the woodcutting king [Olof Ingjaldsson] was sacrificed to Odin so that his people might have good crops. He was succeeded by his son Halfdan Whiteleg, who is said to have extended his rule over much of southern Norway. Halfdan died at a ripe old age, was dully placed in a burial mound, and his deeds were sun by the bards.

    Note: [Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flander & Kiev]
    Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
    Page: 243a-15

    Note: One source says father of Gudrod "The Magnificent". The other source has White Leg as gr grandfather. The latter is my genealogy, with Halfdan "The Old" being father of Gudrod.
    Note: Title: Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flanders, and Kiev, by Rupert Alen & Anna Dahlquist, 1997, King's River Publ., Page: 7
    48. HALFDAN HVITBEIN MADE KING.

    Those of the Swedes who had more understanding found that the

    dear times proceeded from there being a greater number of people

    on the land than it could support, and that the king could not be

    blamed for this. They took the resolution, therefore, to cross

    the Eida forest with all their men, and came quite unexpectedly

    into Soleyar, where they put to death King Solve, and took

    Halfdan Hvitbein prisoner, and made him their chief, and gave him

    the title of king. Thereupon he subdued Soleyar, and proceeding

    with his army into Raumarike, plundered there, and laid that

    district also in subjection by force of arms.

    49. OF HALFDAN HVITBEIN.

    Halfdan Hvitbein became a great king. He was married to Aasa, a

    daughter of Eystein the Severe, who was king of the Upland

    people, and ruled over Hedemark. Halfdan and Aasa had two sons,

    Eystein and Gudrod. Halfdan subdued a great part of Hedemark,

    Toten, Hadeland, and much of Westfold. He lived to be an old

    man, and died in his bed at Toten, from whence his body was

    transported to Westfold, and was buried under a mound at a place

    called Skaereid, at Skiringsale. So says Thjodolf: --

    "Halfdan, esteemed by friends and foes,

    Receives at last life's deep repose:

    The aged man at last, though late,

    Yielded in Toten to stern fate.

    At Skiringsale hangs o'er his grave

    A rock, that seems to mourn the brave Halfdan,

    to chiefs and people dear,

    Received from all a silent tear."

    **********************
    Events in the life of Hálfdan Hvítbeinn O'láfsson

    event

    in Skaereid, Skiringsale.

    ·founded a pagan temple

    † death 1 .

    ·He lived to be an old man, and died in his bed at Toten.

    event 1 .

    ·subdued Soleyar (his foster father's homeland), and then proceeded with his army into Raumarike, plundered there, and laid that district also in subjection by force of arms

    burial 1 .

    in Skaereid, Skiringsale, Vëstfold.

    ·After he had died, his body was transported to Westfold, and was buried under a mound at a place called Skaereid, at Skiringsale. So says Thjodolf: -- "Halfdan, esteemed by friends and foes, Receives at last life's deep repose: The aged man at last, though late, Yielded in Toten to stern fate. At Skiringsale hangs o'er his grave A rock, that seems to mourn the brave Halfdan, to chiefs and people dear, Received from all a silent tear."

    event 1 .

    ·captured by the Swedes who'd killed his Uncle, and made their Chief (in deference to his Yngling blood?)

    event 1 .

    ·brought up in Soleyar, in the house of his mother's brother Solve

    event 1 .

    ·subdued a great part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland, and much of Westfold

    event 1 .

    ·took possession of Värmland after his brothers death, raised scatt (tax) from it, and placed earls over it as long as he lived

    References: [RFC]

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

    Brought up in Soleyar, in the house of his mother's brother, Solve. Buried under a mound. 'Halfdan, esteemed by friends & foes. Receives at last life's deep repose: The aged man at last, though late, Yielded in toten to stern fate. At Skiringsale hangs o'er his grave. A rock, that seems to mourn the brave Halfdan, to chiefs & people dear, Received from all a silent tear', so says Thjodolf.

    Halfdan Whiteshanks (Old Norse: Hálfdan hvítbeinn) was a mythical petty king in Norway, described in Ynglinga saga. The following description is based on the account in Ynglinga saga, written in the 1220s by Snorri Sturluson. The historicity of the kings described in that saga is generally not accepted by modern historians.
    He was the son of Olof Trätälja of the House of Yngling. His father was sacrificed to Odin by the Swedish settlers in Värmland because of a famine. Some Swedes, however, realised that the famine was brought by overpopulation and not by the fact that the king had been neglecting his religious duties.

    Consequently, they resolved to cross the Ed Forest and settle in Norway and happened to end up in Soleyar where they killed king Sölve and took Halfdan prisoner. The Swedish expatriates elected Halfdan king as he was the son of their old king, Olof. Halfdan subjugated all of Soleyar and took his army into Romerike and subjugated that province as well.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    Halfdan conquered a large part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland and a part of Vestfold. When his brother Ingjald Olofsson died, he inherited Värmland. Halfdan died of old age in Toten and was transported to Vestfold where he was buried under a mound in Skiringssal.

    Preceded by

    Olof Trätälja

    Halfdan Hvitbeinn (Old Norse: Hálfdan hvítbeinn) was a mythical petty king in Norway, described in Ynglinga saga. The following description is based on the account in Ynglinga saga, written in the 1220s by Snorri Sturluson. The historicity of the kings described in that saga is generally not accepted by modern historians.

    He was the son of Olof Trätälja of the House of Yngling. His father was sacrificed to Odin by the Swedish settlers in Värmland because of a famine. Some Swedes, however, realised that the famine was brought by overpopulation and not by the fact that the king had been neglecting his religious duties.

    Consequently, they resolved to cross the Ed Forest and settle in Norway and happened to end up in Soleyar where they killed king Sölve and took Halfdan prisoner. The Swedish expatriates elected Halfdan king as he was the son of their old king, Olof. Halfdan subjugated all of Soleyar and took his army into Romerike and subjugated that province as well.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    Halfdan conquered a large part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland and a part of Vestfold. When his brother Ingjald Olofsson died, he inherited Värmland. Halfdan died of old age in Toten and was transported to Vestfold where he was buried under a mound in Skiringssal.

    From http://www.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy/ps05/ps05_091.htm

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    48. HALFDAN HVITBEIN MADE KING.

    Those of the Swedes who had more understanding found that the

    dear times proceeded from there being a greater number of people

    on the land than it could support, and that the king could not be

    blamed for this. They took the resolution, therefore, to cross

    the Eida forest with all their men, and came quite unexpectedly

    into Soleyar, where they put to death King Solve, and took

    Halfdan Hvitbein prisoner, and made him their chief, and gave him

    the title of king. Thereupon he subdued Soleyar, and proceeding

    with his army into Raumarike, plundered there, and laid that

    district also in subjection by force of arms.

    49. OF HALFDAN HVITBEIN.

    Halfdan Hvitbein became a great king. He was married to Aasa, a

    daughter of Eystein the Severe, who was king of the Upland

    people, and ruled over Hedemark. Halfdan and Aasa had two sons,

    Eystein and Gudrod. Halfdan subdued a great part of Hedemark,

    Toten, Hadeland, and much of Westfold. He lived to be an old

    man, and died in his bed at Toten, from whence his body was

    transported to Westfold, and was buried under a mound at a place

    called Skaereid, at Skiringsale. So says Thjodolf: --

    "Halfdan, esteemed by friends and foes,

    Receives at last life's deep repose:

    The aged man at last, though late,

    Yielded in Toten to stern fate.

    At Skiringsale hangs o'er his grave

    A rock, that seems to mourn the brave Halfdan,

    to chiefs and people dear,

    Received from all a silent tear."

    **********************
    Events in the life of Hálfdan Hvítbeinn O'láfsson

    event

    in Skaereid, Skiringsale.

    ·founded a pagan temple

    † death 1 .

    ·He lived to be an old man, and died in his bed at Toten.

    event 1 .

    ·subdued Soleyar (his foster father's homeland), and then proceeded with his army into Raumarike, plundered there, and laid that district also in subjection by force of arms

    burial 1 .

    in Skaereid, Skiringsale, Vëstfold.

    ·After he had died, his body was transported to Westfold, and was buried under a mound at a place called Skaereid, at Skiringsale. So says Thjodolf: -- "Halfdan, esteemed by friends and foes, Receives at last life's deep repose: The aged man at last, though late, Yielded in Toten to stern fate. At Skiringsale hangs o'er his grave A rock, that seems to mourn the brave Halfdan, to chiefs and people dear, Received from all a silent tear."

    event 1 .

    ·captured by the Swedes who'd killed his Uncle, and made their Chief (in deference to his Yngling blood?)

    event 1 .

    ·brought up in Soleyar, in the house of his mother's brother Solve

    event 1 .

    ·subdued a great part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland, and much of Westfold

    event 1 .

    ·took possession of Värmland after his brothers death, raised scatt (tax) from it, and placed earls over it as long as he lived

    Halfdan Whiteshanks (Old Norse: Hálfdan hvítbeinn) was a mythical petty king in Norway, described in Ynglinga saga. The following description is based on the account in Ynglinga saga, written in the 1220s by Snorri Sturluson. The historicity of the kings described in that saga is generally not accepted by modern historians.

    He was the son of Olof Trätälja of the House of Yngling. His father was sacrificed to Odin by the Swedish settlers in Värmland because of a famine. Some Swedes, however, realised that the famine was brought by overpopulation and not by the fact that the king had been neglecting his religious duties.

    Consequently, they resolved to cross the Ed Forest and settle in Norway and happened to end up in Soleyar where they killed king Sölve and took Halfdan prisoner. The Swedish expatriates elected Halfdan king as he was the son of their old king, Olof. Halfdan subjugated all of Soleyar and took his army into Romerike and subjugated that province as well.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had three sons, Öystein Halfdansson, Eystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    Halfdan conquered a large part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland and a part of Vestfold. When his brother Ingjald Olofsson died, he inherited Värmland. Halfdan died of old age in Toten and was transported to Vestfold where he was buried under a mound in Skiringssal.

    Brought up in Soleyar, in the house of his mother's brother, Solve.
    Nickname stands for 'The Meek'.

    Halvdan Olavsson "Whiteshanks" Kvitbein, King of Solør / Hedmark / Toten / Hadeland / Vestfold (Norway)

    Halvdan Kvitbein (Olavsson) (Hálfdan hvítbeinn) ca 710, PAM

    (In English: Halfdan Hvitbein)

    King in part of Norway: Solør / Hedmark / Toten / Hadeland / Vestfold (Norway)

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=gb&emne=asatru&person=Halvdan%20Kvitbein%20%28Olavsson%29

    Halfdan Hvitbeinn (Old Norse: Hálfdan hvítbeinn) was a mythical petty king in Norway, described in Ynglinga saga.

    Halvdan Kvitbein (levde ca. 710) var den første av ynglingesagaens konger som slo seg ned i Norge. Han var sønn av Olav Tretelgja og Solveig Halvdansdotter. Han var gift med Åsa Øysteinsdotter som han fikk sønnene Øystein Halvdansson og Gudrød Halvdansson med.

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_Kvitbein

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

    Född 685 i Värmland, Svitjod. Död 715 i Toten Oppland, Norge. Kung i Värmland, Svitjod och Norge.

    White Leg founded the pagan temple at Skiringssal.

    Those of the Swedes who had more understanding found that the dear times proceeded from there being a greater number of people on the land than it could support, and that the king could not be blamed for this. They took the resolution, therefore, to cross the Eida forest with all their men, and came quite unexpectedly into Soleyar, where they put to death King Solve, and took Halfdan Hvitbein prisoner, and made him their chief, and gave him the title of king. Thereupon he subdued Soleyar, and proceeding with his army into Raumarike, plundered there, and laid that district also in subjection by force of arms.

    Halfdan Hvitbein became a great king. He was married to Aasa, a daughter of Eystein the Severe, who was king of the Upland people, and ruled over Hedemark. Halfdan and Aasa had two sons, Eystein and Gudrod. Halfdan subdued a great part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland, and much of Westfold. He lived to be an old man, and died in his bed at Toten, from whence his body was transported to Westfold, and was buried under a mound at a place called Skaereid, at Skiringsale. So says Thjodolf:

    "Halfdan, esteemed by friends and foes,

    Receives at last life's deep repose:

    The aged man at last, though late,

    Yielded in Toten to stern fate.

    At Skiringsale hangs o'er his grave

    A rock, that seems to mourn the brave Halfdan,

    to chiefs and people dear,

    Received from all a silent tear." - [1]

    [1] - http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?vis=s_e_ynglingesoga

    [ ] - http://home.earthlink.net/~artdugan/Trowbridge%20Vikings.htm

    The following description is based on the account in Ynglinga saga, written in the 1220s by Snorri Sturluson. The historicity of the kings described in that saga is generally not accepted by modern historians.

    Halvdan og broren Ingjald Olavsson vokste opp på Solør hos deres mors onkel, Sølve. Halvdans far ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolkning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Hva det beskrivende kallenavnet ‘Kvitbein’ står for er ikke helt klart, men kan være en karakteristikk av utseendet.

    Halvdan ble etter sigende en stor konge som erobret store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og deler av Vestfold. Da hans bror døde arvet han Värmland også. Selv døde Halvdan Kvitbein på Toten og ble hauglagt i Skæreid i Skiringsdal.

    Snorre nevener et kvad av skalden Tjodolv:

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Hvermann vet

    at Halvdan'

    saknet ble

    av stridsmeklere;

    for Hel sjøl

    til steinrøysa

    tjodkongen

    på Toten tok,

    og Skæreid

    i Skiringssal

    står bøyd over

    brynjekongen.

    Halvdan Kvitbein (levde ca. 710) var den første av ynglingesagaens konger som slo seg ned i Norge. Han var sønn av Olav Tretelgja og Solveig Halvdansdotter. Han var gift med Åsa Øysteinsdotter som han fikk sønnene Øystein Halvdansson og Gudrød Halvdansson med.

    Halvdan og broren Ingjald Olavsson vokste opp på Solør hos deres mors onkel, Sølve.

    Halvdans far ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Hva det beskrivende kallenavnet ‘Kvitbein’ står for er ikke helt klart, men kan være en karakteristikk av utseendet.

    Halvdan ble etter sigende en stor konge som erobret store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og deler av Vestfold. Da hans bror døde arvet han Värmland også. Selv døde Halvdan Kvitbein på Toten og ble hauglagt i Skæreid i Skiringsdal.

    Halvdan married Åsa Øysteinsdatter Av Oplandene, daughter of Eystein Hardråde and Unknown. (Åsa Øysteinsdatter Av Oplandene was born in 680 in Norway and died in 718 in Norway.)

    OCCUPATION: Konge på slutten av 600

    BIRTH: CIR700

    DEATH: Toten

    BURIAL: Skiringsal ved Sandefjord ( Tjøling )

    Halfdan Hvitbeinn was the son of Olof Trätälja of the House of Yngling according to Heimskringla.

    His father was sacrificed to Odin by the Swedish settlers in Värmland because of a famine. Some Swedes, however, realised that the famine was brought by overpopulation and not by the fact that the king had been neglecting his religious duties.

    Consequently, they resolved to cross the Ed Forest and settle in Norway and happened to end up in Soleyar (Solør) where they killed king Sölve and took Halfdan prisoner. The Swedish expatriates elected Halfdan king as he was the son of their old king, Olof. Halfdan subjugated all of Soleyar and took his army into Romerike and subjugated that province as well.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    Halfdan conquered a large part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland and a part of Westfold. When his brother Ingjald Olofsson died, he inherited Wermelandia. Halfdan died of old age in Toten and was transported to Westfold where he was buried under a mound at a place called Skaereid, at Skiringsale.

    Noted events in his life were:
    • He was a King in Norway.

    Halvdan married Åsa Eysteinsdatter, daughter of Eystein Hardråde and Unknown, circa 700 in Norway. (Åsa Eysteinsdatter was born in 680 in Norway and died in 718 in Norway.)

    ABT 0700 - ____

    RESIDENCE: Sønner: Øystein og Gudrød

    OCCUPATION: Konge på slutten av 600

    BIRTH: ABT 0700, (første 'Yngling' i Norge)

    DEATH: Toten (av sykdom)

    BURIAL: Skæreid, Skiringsal, Tjølling (Sandefj.)

    Father: Olav Ingjaldsøn TRETELJA

    Mother: Solveig HALVDANSDATTER

    Family 1 : Aasa ØYSTEINSDATTER

    +Øystein HALVDANSSON

    Kilde: nermo.org

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_Kvitbein

    Halvdan Kvitbein (levde ca. 710) var den første av ynglingesagaens konger som slo seg ned i Norge. Han var sønn av Olav Tretelgja og Solveig Halvdansdotter. Han var gift med Åsa Øysteinsdotter som han fikk sønnene Øystein Halvdansson og Gudrød Halvdansson med.

    Halvdan og broren Ingjald Olavsson vokste opp på Solør hos deres mors onkel, Sølve.

    Halvdans far ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolkning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Hva det beskrivende kallenavnet ‘Kvitbein’ står for er ikke helt klart, men kan være en karakteristikk av utseendet.

    Halvdan ble etter sigende en stor konge som erobret store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og deler av Vestfold. Da hans bror døde arvet han Värmland også. Selv døde Halvdan Kvitbein på Toten og ble hauglagt i Skæreid i Skiringsdal.

    Snorre nevener et kvad av skalden Tjodolv:

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Hvermann vet

    at Halvdan'

    saknet ble

    av stridsmeklere;

    for Hel sjøl

    til steinrøysa

    tjodkongen

    på Toten tok,

    og Skæreid

    i Skiringssal

    står bøyd over

    brynjekongen.

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Forgjenger:

    Halvdan Gulltann Konge av Solør

    (?–?) Etterfølger:

    Øystein Halvdansson

    King of Uppsala

    King of Uppsala

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_Kvitbein

    48. HALFDAN HVITBEIN MADE KING.

    Those of the Swedes who had more understanding found that the

    dear times proceeded from there being a greater number of people

    on the land than it could support, and that the king could not be

    blamed for this. They took the resolution, therefore, to cross

    the Eida forest with all their men, and came quite unexpectedly

    into Soleyar, where they put to death King Solve, and took

    Halfdan Hvitbein prisoner, and made him their chief, and gave him

    the title of king. Thereupon he subdued Soleyar, and proceeding

    with his army into Raumarike, plundered there, and laid that

    district also in subjection by force of arms.

    49. OF HALFDAN HVITBEIN.

    Halfdan Hvitbein became a great king. He was married to Aasa, a

    daughter of Eystein the Severe, who was king of the Upland

    people, and ruled over Hedemark. Halfdan and Aasa had two sons,

    Eystein and Gudrod. Halfdan subdued a great part of Hedemark,

    Toten, Hadeland, and much of Westfold. He lived to be an old

    man, and died in his bed at Toten, from whence his body was

    transported to Westfold, and was buried under a mound at a place

    called Skaereid, at Skiringsale. So says Thjodolf: --

    "Halfdan, esteemed by friends and foes,

    Receives at last life's deep repose:

    The aged man at last, though late,

    Yielded in Toten to stern fate.

    At Skiringsale hangs o'er his grave

    A rock, that seems to mourn the brave Halfdan,

    to chiefs and people dear,

    Received from all a silent tear."

    **********************
    Events in the life of Hálfdan Hvítbeinn O'láfsson

    event

    in Skaereid, Skiringsale.

    ·founded a pagan temple

    † death 1 .

    ·He lived to be an old man, and died in his bed at Toten.

    event 1 .

    ·subdued Soleyar (his foster father's homeland), and then proceeded with his army into Raumarike, plundered there, and laid that district also in subjection by force of arms

    burial 1 .

    in Skaereid, Skiringsale, Vëstfold.

    ·After he had died, his body was transported to Westfold, and was buried under a mound at a place called Skaereid, at Skiringsale. So says Thjodolf: -- "Halfdan, esteemed by friends and foes, Receives at last life's deep repose: The aged man at last, though late, Yielded in Toten to stern fate. At Skiringsale hangs o'er his grave A rock, that seems to mourn the brave Halfdan, to chiefs and people dear, Received from all a silent tear."

    event 1 .

    ·captured by the Swedes who'd killed his Uncle, and made their Chief (in deference to his Yngling blood?)

    event 1 .

    ·brought up in Soleyar, in the house of his mother's brother Solve

    event 1 .

    ·subdued a great part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland, and much of Westfold

    event 1 .

    ·took possession of Värmland after his brothers death, raised scatt (tax) from it, and placed earls over it as long as he lived

    Halvdan Kvitbein (levde ca. 710) var den første av ynglingesagaens konger som slo seg ned i Norge. Han var sønn av Olav Tretelgja og Solveig Halvdansdotter. Han var gift med Åsa Øysteinsdotter som han fikk sønnene Øystein Halvdansson og Gudrød Halvdansson med.

    Halvdan og broren Ingjald Olavsson vokste opp på Solør hos deres mors onkel, Sølve.

    Halvdans far ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolkning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Hva det beskrivende kallenavnet ‘Kvitbein’ står for er ikke helt klart, men kan være en karakteristikk av utseendet.

    Halvdan ble etter sigende en stor konge som erobret store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og deler av Vestfold. Da hans bror døde arvet han Värmland også. Selv døde Halvdan Kvitbein på Toten og ble hauglagt i Skæreid i Skiringsdal.

    Snorre nevener et kvad av skalden Tjodolv:

    Så sier Tjodolv:
    Hvermann vet
    at Halvdan'
    saknet ble
    av stridsmeklere;
    for Hel sjøl
    til steinrøysa
    tjodkongen
    på Toten tok,
    og Skæreid
    i Skiringssal
    står bøyd over
    brynjekongen.
    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_Kvitbein

    Född: 680 Abt , Norge

    Äktenskap : Åsa Eysteinsdatter ca 700 i Norge

    Död : Abt 715 , Toten , Oppland , Norge åldern omkring 35

    Andra namn för Halvdan var Halvdan " Vitben " Olofsson och Halvdan Den Gavmilde Olofsson.

    Allmänna hänvisningar:
    Halfdan Hvitbeinn var son till Olof Trätälja av huset Yngling enligt Heimskringla .

    Hans far var offras till Oden av svenska nybyggare i Värmland på grund av en hungersnöd. En del svenskar dock insett att hungersnöden var väckt av överbefolkning och inte av det faktum att kungen hade varit att försumma sina religiösa plikter .

    Därför beslöt de att korsa Ed Skog och bosätter sig i Norge och råkade hamna i Soleyar ( Solør ) där de dödade kung Sölve och tog Halfdan fånge. Den svenska utflyttade valde Halfdan kungen som han var son till sin gamle kungen , Olof . Halfdan underkuvade alla Soleyar och tog sin armé i Romerike och styrdes provinsen också.

    Halfdan skulle bli en stor kung , som gifte sig med Åsa , dotter till kung Eystein , härskaren av Oppland och Hedmark . De fick två söner , Öystein Halfdansson och Gudröd .

    Halfdan erövrade en stor del av Hedemarken , Toten , Hadeland och en del av Västfold . När hans bror Ingjald Olofsson dog, ärvde han Wermelandia . Halfdan dog av ålderdom i Toten och har transporterats till Västfold där han begravdes under en kulle på ett ställe som heter Skaereid kl Skiringsale .

    Noterade händelser i hans liv var:
    • Han var en kung i Norge.

    Halvdan gift Åsa Eysteinsdatter , dotter till Eystein Hårdråde och okända, ca 700 i Norge. (Åsa Eysteinsdatter född 680 i Norge och dog i 718 i Norge. )

    Källor

    1 Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/ ).

    Halvdan Kvitbein (levde ca. 710) var den første av ynglingesagaens konger som slo seg ned i Norge. Han var sønn av Olav Tretelgja og Solveig Halvdansdotter. Han var gift med Åsa Øysteinsdotter som han fikk sønnene Øystein Halvdansson og Gudrød Halvdansson med.

    Halvdan og broren Ingjald Olavsson vokste opp på Solør hos deres mors onkel, Sølve.

    Halvdans far ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolkning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Hva det beskrivende kallenavnet ‘Kvitbein’ står for er ikke helt klart, men kan være en karakteristikk av utseendet.

    Halvdan ble etter sigende en stor konge som erobret store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og deler av Vestfold. Da hans bror døde arvet han Värmland også. Selv døde Halvdan Kvitbein på Toten og ble hauglagt i Skæreid i Skiringsdal.

    Snorre nevner et kvad av skalden Tjodolv:

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Hvermann vet

    at Halvdan'

    saknet ble

    av stridsmeklere;

    for Hel sjøl

    til steinrøysa

    tjodkongen

    på Toten tok,

    og Skæreid

    i Skiringssal

    står bøyd over

    brynjekongen.

    ID: I49502 Name: Halfdan "Hvitbein" OLAFSSON King Of Uplanders Given Name: Halfdan "Hvitbein" OLAFSSON Surname: King Of Uplanders Sex: M Birth: Abt 704 in Romerike, Buskerud, Norway Death: 800 in Toten, Oppland, Norway Change Date: 21 Sep 2005 at 15:23 Note:
    Alias: Halfdan/white leg/
    Royalty for Commoners by Robert W. Stuart, GenealogicalPublishing Co.,Revised 2nd Edition, 1995:
    Gen 166-41 - Halfdan Olaffson "Huitbeing" (white leg), King of theUplanders of Sweden, King of Salver and Vestfold: conquered Rouimarike;
    founded the pagan temple a t Skiringssal, 8th century; m. AsaEysteinsdotter, dau. of Eystein "Hardrade" (the severe), King of the
    Uplands, and his wife Solveig Halfdansdotter (see note after Gen. 33. Gen166-33 -
    Moncreiff (chart 35),p. 109) adds two generations between my Gen 40 andGe n 41:
    (41B): Halfdan "The Stingy," King of Vestfold, as father of Gudron(Gudroth), whom he calls "Godfrey the Proud"; whose fatherwas (41A)
    Eyestein " The fart", King of Roumarike. Thou the work carries nobibliography, Moncrei ffe was an outstanding authority, and pending proofotherwise, may well be co nsidered correct. Moncreiogge is in agreementwith Sturluson (pp. 47-78)."
    Halfdan conquered Raumarike in Norway and Vestfold, the fertile area westof Christiania Fjord. He founded the temple at Skiringssal. That became agreat trading center and favorite seat of the Norwegian Kings.
    Source: Adrienne Anderson chart of Scandinavian Norman Descent of Hamblins

    Han vokste opp i Solør hos sinmorbroren sin. Han ble fanget av en svenskehær. Halvdan var konge på slutten av 600-tallet, og han styrte over Solør, Romerike, Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland og Vestfold, kongssete lå på Toten.

    Blev högst 30 år.

    Född: 685 Värmland

    Död: 715

    Noteringar

    Biografi

    Kung i Värmland, Svitjod och Norge. Född 685 i Värmland, Svitjod. Död 715 i Toten Oppland, Norge. Olof Trätälja blev aldrig kung i Uppsala som sina förfäder, men han var den siste av Ynglingaätten som levde i Sverige. Hans son Halvdan Vitben drog med en här vidare västerut och lade under sig ett område i södra Norge. (Källa: Gåtfulla platser i Sverige, sid 227, Stig Linnell) Halfdan 'Vitben', gift med Åsa som var dotter till kungen i Oppland, Eystein 'Hårdråde'. Halfdan var en mäktig kung. Halfdan tog stora delar av Hedmark, Toten, Hedaland och mycket av Vestvold. Efter sin bror Ingjalds död lade han också dennes kungadöme i Värmland under sig. Halfdan blev en mycket gammal man och dog av sjukdom på Toten, Oppland och är höglagd i Vestvold. Makarna hade två söner, Eystein och Gundröd. (Källa: Heimskringla, Ynglingasagan)

    Halfdan Whiteshanks (Old Norse: Hálfdan hvítbeinn) was a mythical petty king in Norway, described in Ynglinga saga. The following description is based on the account in Ynglinga saga, written in the 1220s by Snorri Sturluson. The historicity of the kings described in that saga is generally not accepted by modern historians.

    He was the son of Olof Trätälja of the House of Yngling. His father was sacrificed to Odin by the Swedish settlers in Värmland because of a famine. Some Swedes, however, realised that the famine was brought by overpopulation and not by the fact that the king had been neglecting his religious duties.

    Consequently, they resolved to cross the Ed Forest and settle in Norway and happened to end up in Soleyar where they killed king Sölve and took Halfdan prisoner. The Swedish expatriates elected Halfdan king as he was the son of their old king, Olof. Halfdan subjugated all of Soleyar and took his army into Romerike and subjugated that province as well.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    Halfdan conquered a large part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland and a part of Vestfold. When his brother Ingjald Olofsson died, he inherited Värmland. Halfdan died of old age in Toten and was transported to Vestfold where he was buried under a mound in Skiringssal.

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

    Halfdan Hvitbeinn (Old Norse: Hálfdan hvítbeinn) was a mythical petty king in Norway, described in Ynglinga saga. The following description is based on the account in Ynglinga saga, written in the 1220s by Snorri Sturluson. The historicity of the kings described in that saga is generally not accepted by modern historians.

    He was the son of Olof Trätälja of the House of Yngling. His father was sacrificed to Odin by the Swedish settlers in Värmland because of a famine. Some Swedes, however, realised that the famine was brought by overpopulation and not by the fact that the king had been neglecting his religious duties.

    Consequently, they resolved to cross the Ed Forest and settle in Norway and happened to end up in Soleyar where they killed king Sölve and took Halfdan prisoner. The Swedish expatriates elected Halfdan king as he was the son of their old king, Olof. Halfdan subjugated all of Soleyar and took his army into Romerike and subjugated that province as well.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    Halfdan conquered a large part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland and a part of Vestfold. When his brother Ingjald Olofsson died, he inherited Värmland. Halfdan died of old age in Toten and was transported to Vestfold where he was buried under a mound in Skiringssal.

    Halfdan Hvitbeinn (Old Norse: Hálfdan hvítbeinn) was a mythical petty king in Norway, described in Ynglinga saga. The following description is based on the account in Ynglinga saga, written in the 1220s by Snorri Sturluson. The historicity of the kings described in that saga is generally not accepted by modern historians.

    He was the son of Olof Trätälja of the House of Yngling. His father was sacrificed to Odin by the Swedish settlers in Värmland because of a famine. Some Swedes, however, realised that the famine was brought by overpopulation and not by the fact that the king had been neglecting his religious duties.

    Consequently, they resolved to cross the Ed Forest and settle in Norway and happened to end up in Soleyar where they killed king Sölve and took Halfdan prisoner. The Swedish expatriates elected Halfdan king as he was the son of their old king, Olof. Halfdan subjugated all of Soleyar and took his army into Romerike and subjugated that province as well.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    Halfdan conquered a large part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland and a part of Vestfold. When his brother Ingjald Olofsson died, he inherited Värmland. Halfdan died of old age in Toten and was transported to Vestfold where he was buried under a mound in Skiringssal.

    Fra Wikipedia, den frie encyklopedi

    Halvdan Kvitbein (levde ca. 710) var den første av ynglingesagaens konger som slo seg ned i Norge. Han var sønn av Olav Tretelgja og Solveig Halvdansdotter. Han var gift med Åsa Øysteinsdotter som han fikk sønnene Øystein Halvdansson og Gudrød Halvdansson med.

    Halvdan og broren Ingjald Olavsson vokste opp på Solør hos deres mors onkel, Sølve.

    Halvdans far ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Hva det beskrivende kallenavnet ‘Kvitbein’ står for er ikke helt klart, men kan være en karakteristikk av utseendet.

    Halvdan ble etter sigende en stor konge som erobret store deler av Hedmark, Toten, Hadeland og deler av Vestfold. Da hans bror døde arvet han Värmland også. Selv døde Halvdan Kvitbein på Toten og ble hauglagt i Skæreid i Skiringsdal.

    Snorre nevener et kvad av skalden Tjodolv:

    Så sier Tjodolv:

    Hvermann vet

    at Halvdan'

    saknet ble

    av stridsmeklere;

    for Hel sjøl

    til steinrøysa

    tjodkongen

    på Toten tok,

    og Skæreid

    i Skiringssal

    står bøyd over

    brynjekongen.

    Halfdan "Hvitbein" Olafsson King Of Uppsala 1 2 517 SmartMatches

    Birth: 725 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway 3 4

    Death:

    Sex: M

    Father: Olaf Ingjaldsson King Of Värmland b. About 682 in , , Värmland, Sweden

    Mother: Solveig Halfdansdatter b. About 670 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway)

    Unknown: , Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden 5 1 2 4

    Unknown: (, , Vestfold, Norway) 5 1 2 4

    Unknown: 5 1 2 4

    Unknown: 5 1 2 4

    LDS Baptism: 19 Dec 1905

    LDS Endowment: 14 May 1928

    LDS Sealing Child: 2 Feb 1932

    Changed: 20 Mar 2001 00:00

    Spouses & Children
    Asa Eysteinsdatter Princess Of Hedmark (Wife) b. About 710 in (, , Uppsala, Sweden)
    1 2 3 4

    Marriage: Abt 735 in (, , Vestfold, Norway) 6 Nov 2004 14:29

    Children:

    Eysteinn I "Fretr" Glumru Halfdansson King Of Vestfold b. About 740 in , , Vestfold, Norway

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Notes
    Individual:
    Name Suffix: King of Uppsala

    REFN: HWS8565

    Ancestral File Number:FLHG-TG

    OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\c_crown.gif

    OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\c_crown.gif

    OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\C_Murale.GIF

    OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\C_Murale.GIFCHAN20 Mar 2001

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Sources
    Title: "Concise Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia"
    Author: Ansley, Clarke F.

    Publication: (Morningside Heights, New York, Columbia University Press

    , Licensed from INSO Corporation, December 31, 1941, 1994), Hard

    Halfdan gift Drottning Åsa EYSTEINSDOTTER. Åsa föddes 680§ i Opplandene, Oppland, Norge; dog 718 i Hyle, Voss, Hordaland, Norge. [Familjeöversikt] [Familjediagram]


  2. 5.  Drottning Åsa EYSTEINSDOTTERDrottning Åsa EYSTEINSDOTTER föddes 680§ i Opplandene, Oppland, Norge; dog 718 i Hyle, Voss, Hordaland, Norge.

    Noteringar:

    Also Known As: "Ása Eysteinsdóttir", "Åsa Øysteinsdotter", "Aasa Eysteinsdotter"
    Birthdate: 680
    Birthplace: Opplandene, Oppland, Norway
    Death: 718 (38)
    Hyle Vos, Voss Municipality, Hordaland, Norway

    Närstående:

    Dotter till Eystein "the Severe", king of Hedmark och Solveig Halfdansdotter, Eysteins Hardråde's wife

    Hustru till Halfdan Olafsson «Whiteshanks» Kvitbein

    Moder till Eystein «Fret/Fjert» Halfdansson och King Guthroth/Gudrød Halfdansson I
    Syster till Hogne Eysteinsson, Earl of Trondheim och Frode Eysteinsson

    Occupation: Drottning i Värmland, Drottning i Norge., "Upplendingadrottning".



    About Åsa (Aasa) Eysteinsdotter
    Åsa Eysteinsdotter var datter av Eystein Hardråde. Hun var gift med Halvdan Kvitbein og de to hadde sønnene Gudrød Halvdansson og Eystein Halvdansson.

    Åsas sønn Eystein ble gift med Hild Eiriksdotter og de to fikk sønnen Halvdan Eysteinsson den gavmilde/Milde.

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=&emne=nor&person=%C5sa%20%D8ysteinsdotter

    En del oppgir (708-739) som år for fødsel og død.

    English: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H%C3%A1lfdanar_saga_Eysteinssonar

    From "The Ynglinga Saga":

    "49. OF HALFDAN HVITBEIN.

    Halfdan Hvitbein became a great king. He was married to Aasa, a daughter of Eystein the Severe, who was king of the Upland people, and ruled over Hedemark. Halfdan and Aasa had two sons, Eystein and Gudrod. ..."

    Noted events in her life were:
    • She was a Drottning in Norway.

    Åsa married Halvdan "Hvitbeinn" Olofsson, son of Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson and Solveig Halvdansdatter av Solør, circa 700 in Norway. (Halvdan "Hvitbeinn" Olofsson was born about 680 in Norway and died about 715 in Toten, Oppland, Norway.)

    Father: Øystein HARDRÅDE

    Family 1 : Halvdan Olavsson KVITBEIN

    +Øystein HALVDANSSON

    Kilde: nermo.org

    Åsa married Halvdan "Kvitbein" Olofsson, son of Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson and Solveig Halvdansdatter Av Solør. (Halvdan "Kvitbein" Olofsson was born about 660 in Norway and died about 745 in Toten, Oppland, Norway.)

    Född: 680 , Norge

    Äktenskap: Halvdan " Hvitbeinn "Olofsson ca 700 i Norge

    Död: 718 , Norge åldern 38

    Ett annat namn för Åsa var Åsa Øysteinsdatter AV Oplandene .

    Allmänna hänvisningar:
    Från "The Ynglinga Saga " :

    " 49 . AV Halfdan HVITBEIN .

    Halfdan Hvitbein blev en stor konung . Han var gift med Aasa , en dotter till Eystein den svåra , som var kung i Uppland folket, och härskade över Hedemarken . Halfdan och Aasa fick två söner, Eystein och Gudröd . ... "

    Noterade händelser i hennes liv var:
    • Hon var en Drottning i Norge.

    Åsa gift Halvdan " Hvitbeinn "Olofsson, son till Olav " Tretelgja " Ingjaldsson och Solveig Halvdansdatter AV Solør , ca 700 i Norge. ( Halvdan " Hvitbeinn Olofsson föddes omkring 680 i Norge och dog omkring 715 i Toten , Oppland , Norge. )

    Källor

    1 Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/ ).

    2 Snorre Sturlasson (ca 1179 till 1241 ), http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/OMACL/ ( Om 1225 ) , "Den YNGLINGA Saga " .

    Åsa var datter av kong Øystein Hardråde som styrte i Oppland og Hedemark

    Han var gift med Åsa, dotter av opplendingskongen Øystein. Dei fekk to søner, Øystein og Gudrød.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    More than twenty years ago, a teaching colleague announced over lunch: "Osberg, I see your name in print." He held a sugar packet depicting a Viking Ship with the caption: The Oseberg Ship - A fine example of a Viking Longship. This launched me on a journey to discover not only the origins of my name but its intimate link to Viking history. Despite being proud of my Swedish ancestry (my great grandfather was a Swedish sea captain), my name derives from a small town in Norway (somewhere along the way my ancestors dropped an 'e'). The town of Oseberg was the site of the excavation of the Oseberg Ship, one of the few Viking Ships whose remains were reconstructed. The other is the Gokstad Ship. Buried along with the Oseberg Ship were numerous artifacts reflecting Viking art and culture. Of course, you know it was Leif Erickson, and not Columbus, who discovered America! See the Viking ship photos and links below to learn more about Viking Ships and the Vikings.

    The Oseberg Ship - A Fine Example

    of a Viking Longship

    (Click on the image above to

    access a larger image.)

    Oseberg Ship Facts:

    Excavated in 1904 in Oseberg, Vestfold County, Norway after being discovered by a farmer.

    One of the two most complete Viking ships unearthed in Norway (the other being the Gokstad), it is 21.5 meters long (nearly 70 feet).

    The Oseberg Ship burial, including bodies of two women, is considered the most richly furnished Scandinavian grave ever found. One of the women may have been the famous Queen Asa from which the name Oseberg derives: Asa's mound.

    Items buried included an ornate cart, beds, sledges, wooden chests, riding equipment, and twelve horses.

    Built in oak and contains 12 board planks and 15 oar ports on each side, indicating a crew of 35-40.

    The stem and stern were decorated with ornate wood carvings, with the ship likely used for voyages in the fjords along the coasts of Norway by people of high rank.

    The Oseberg/Gokstad finds were joined by the discovery of five Viking Ships buried in the Roskilde fjord near Skuldelev, Denmark in 1962.

    Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999

    Note: Page: 243a-15
    Note: Text: Asa, wife of "White Legs" - no last name
    Åsa Eysteinsdotter var datter av Eystein Hardråde. Hun var gift med Halvdan Kvitbein og de to hadde sønnene Gudrød Halvdansson og Eystein Halvdansson.

    Åsas sønn Eystein ble gift med Hild Eiriksdotter og de to fikk sønnen Halvdan Eysteinsson den gavmilde/Milde.

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=&emne=nor&person=%C5sa%20%D8ysteinsdotter

    En del oppgir (708-739) som år for fødsel og død.

    English: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H%C3%A1lfdanar_saga_Eysteinssonar

    From "The Ynglinga Saga":

    "49. OF HALFDAN HVITBEIN.

    Halfdan Hvitbein became a great king. He was married to Aasa, a daughter of Eystein the Severe, who was king of the Upland people, and ruled over Hedemark. Halfdan and Aasa had two sons, Eystein and Gudrod. ..."

    Noted events in her life were:
    • She was a Drottning in Norway.

    Åsa married Halvdan "Hvitbeinn" Olofsson, son of Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson and Solveig Halvdansdatter av Solør, circa 700 in Norway. (Halvdan "Hvitbeinn" Olofsson was born about 680 in Norway and died about 715 in Toten, Oppland, Norway.)

    Father: Øystein HARDRÅDE

    Family 1 : Halvdan Olavsson KVITBEIN

    +Øystein HALVDANSSON

    Kilde: nermo.org

    Åsa married Halvdan "Kvitbein" Olofsson, son of Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson and Solveig Halvdansdatter Av Solør. (Halvdan "Kvitbein" Olofsson was born about 660 in Norway and died about 745 in Toten, Oppland, Norway.)

    Född: 680 , Norge

    Äktenskap: Halvdan " Hvitbeinn "Olofsson ca 700 i Norge

    Död: 718 , Norge åldern 38

    Ett annat namn för Åsa var Åsa Øysteinsdatter AV Oplandene .

    Allmänna hänvisningar:
    Från "The Ynglinga Saga " :

    " 49 . AV Halfdan HVITBEIN .

    Halfdan Hvitbein blev en stor konung . Han var gift med Aasa , en dotter till Eystein den svåra , som var kung i Uppland folket, och härskade över Hedemarken . Halfdan och Aasa fick två söner, Eystein och Gudröd . ... "

    Noterade händelser i hennes liv var:
    • Hon var en Drottning i Norge.

    Åsa gift Halvdan " Hvitbeinn "Olofsson, son till Olav " Tretelgja " Ingjaldsson och Solveig Halvdansdatter AV Solør , ca 700 i Norge. ( Halvdan " Hvitbeinn Olofsson föddes omkring 680 i Norge och dog omkring 715 i Toten , Oppland , Norge. )

    Källor

    1 Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/ ).

    2 Snorre Sturlasson (ca 1179 till 1241 ), http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/OMACL/ ( Om 1225 ) , "Den YNGLINGA Saga " .

    Åsa var datter av kong Øystein Hardråde som styrte i Oppland og Hedemark

    Han var gift med Åsa, dotter av opplendingskongen Øystein. Dei fekk to søner, Øystein og Gudrød.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    More than twenty years ago, a teaching colleague announced over lunch: "Osberg, I see your name in print." He held a sugar packet depicting a Viking Ship with the caption: The Oseberg Ship - A fine example of a Viking Longship. This launched me on a journey to discover not only the origins of my name but its intimate link to Viking history. Despite being proud of my Swedish ancestry (my great grandfather was a Swedish sea captain), my name derives from a small town in Norway (somewhere along the way my ancestors dropped an 'e'). The town of Oseberg was the site of the excavation of the Oseberg Ship, one of the few Viking Ships whose remains were reconstructed. The other is the Gokstad Ship. Buried along with the Oseberg Ship were numerous artifacts reflecting Viking art and culture. Of course, you know it was Leif Erickson, and not Columbus, who discovered America! See the Viking ship photos and links below to learn more about Viking Ships and the Vikings.

    The Oseberg Ship - A Fine Example

    of a Viking Longship

    (Click on the image above to

    access a larger image.)

    Oseberg Ship Facts:

    Excavated in 1904 in Oseberg, Vestfold County, Norway after being discovered by a farmer.

    One of the two most complete Viking ships unearthed in Norway (the other being the Gokstad), it is 21.5 meters long (nearly 70 feet).

    The Oseberg Ship burial, including bodies of two women, is considered the most richly furnished Scandinavian grave ever found. One of the women may have been the famous Queen Asa from which the name Oseberg derives: Asa's mound.

    Items buried included an ornate cart, beds, sledges, wooden chests, riding equipment, and twelve horses.

    Built in oak and contains 12 board planks and 15 oar ports on each side, indicating a crew of 35-40.

    The stem and stern were decorated with ornate wood carvings, with the ship likely used for voyages in the fjords along the coasts of Norway by people of high rank.

    The Oseberg/Gokstad finds were joined by the discovery of five Viking Ships buried in the Roskilde fjord near Skuldelev, Denmark in 1962.

    Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999

    Note: Page: 243a-15 Note: Text: Asa, wife of "White Legs" - no last name
    Asa Eysteinsdatter
    born about 0708 Uppland, Norway

    father:

    Eystein "Haardaade" Throndsson King of Hedmark
    born about 0668 Trondheim, Sor-Trondelag, Norway died 0710 Norway

    mother: unknown

    siblings: Hodne? Eysteinsson born about 0704 Trondheim, Sor Trondelag, Norway

    Hogne Eysteinsson born about 0700 Trondheim, Sor-Trondelag, Norway
    Frode Eysteinsson born about 0702 Trondheim, Sor-Trondelag, Norway

    spouse:

    Halfdan "Hvitbein" Olafsson King in Uppsala
    born about 0704 Romerike, Buskerud, Norway married about 0735 Vestfold, Norway

    children:

    Eystein "Fret" Halfdansson
    born about 0736 Vestfold, Norway

    biographical and/or anecdotal:

    notes or source: LDS

    Sources
    1.[S1402] Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson (Reliability: 2).

    2.[S1410] Ancestral File™, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, ((http://www.familysearch.org)), ). (Reliability: 1).

    Åsa Eysteinsdotter var datter av Eystein Hardråde. Hun var gift med Halvdan Kvitbein og de to hadde sønnene Gudrød Halvdansson og Eystein Halvdansson.

    Åsas sønn Eystein ble gift med Hild Eiriksdotter og de to fikk sønnen Halvdan Eysteinsson den gavmilde/Milde.

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=&emne=nor&person=%C5sa%20%D8ysteinsdotter

    En del oppgir (708-739) som år for fødsel og død.

    English: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H%C3%A1lfdanar_saga_Eysteinssonar

    From "The Ynglinga Saga":

    "49. OF HALFDAN HVITBEIN.

    Halfdan Hvitbein became a great king. He was married to Aasa, a daughter of Eystein the Severe, who was king of the Upland people, and ruled over Hedemark. Halfdan and Aasa had two sons, Eystein and Gudrod. ..."

    Noted events in her life were: • She was a Drottning in Norway.

    Åsa married Halvdan "Hvitbeinn" Olofsson, son of Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson and Solveig Halvdansdatter av Solør, circa 700 in Norway. (Halvdan "Hvitbeinn" Olofsson was born about 680 in Norway and died about 715 in Toten, Oppland, Norway.)

    Father: Øystein HARDRÅDE

    Family 1 : Halvdan Olavsson KVITBEIN

    +Øystein HALVDANSSON

    Kilde: nermo.org

    Åsa married Halvdan "Kvitbein" Olofsson, son of Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson and Solveig Halvdansdatter Av Solør. (Halvdan "Kvitbein" Olofsson was born about 660 in Norway and died about 745 in Toten, Oppland, Norway.)

    Född: 680 , Norge

    Äktenskap: Halvdan " Hvitbeinn "Olofsson ca 700 i Norge

    Död: 718 , Norge åldern 38

    Ett annat namn för Åsa var Åsa Øysteinsdatter AV Oplandene .

    Allmänna hänvisningar: Från "The Ynglinga Saga " :

    " 49 . AV Halfdan HVITBEIN .

    Halfdan Hvitbein blev en stor konung . Han var gift med Aasa , en dotter till Eystein den svåra , som var kung i Uppland folket, och härskade över Hedemarken . Halfdan och Aasa fick två söner, Eystein och Gudröd . ... "

    Noterade händelser i hennes liv var: • Hon var en Drottning i Norge.

    Åsa gift Halvdan " Hvitbeinn "Olofsson, son till Olav " Tretelgja " Ingjaldsson och Solveig Halvdansdatter AV Solør , ca 700 i Norge. ( Halvdan " Hvitbeinn Olofsson föddes omkring 680 i Norge och dog omkring 715 i Toten , Oppland , Norge. )

    Källor

    1 Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/ ).

    2 Snorre Sturlasson (ca 1179 till 1241 ), http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/OMACL/ ( Om 1225 ) , "Den YNGLINGA Saga " .

    Åsa var datter av kong Øystein Hardråde som styrte i Oppland og Hedemark

    Han var gift med Åsa, dotter av opplendingskongen Øystein. Dei fekk to søner, Øystein og Gudrød.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    More than twenty years ago, a teaching colleague announced over lunch: "Osberg, I see your name in print." He held a sugar packet depicting a Viking Ship with the caption: The Oseberg Ship - A fine example of a Viking Longship. This launched me on a journey to discover not only the origins of my name but its intimate link to Viking history. Despite being proud of my Swedish ancestry (my great grandfather was a Swedish sea captain), my name derives from a small town in Norway (somewhere along the way my ancestors dropped an 'e'). The town of Oseberg was the site of the excavation of the Oseberg Ship, one of the few Viking Ships whose remains were reconstructed. The other is the Gokstad Ship. Buried along with the Oseberg Ship were numerous artifacts reflecting Viking art and culture. Of course, you know it was Leif Erickson, and not Columbus, who discovered America! See the Viking ship photos and links below to learn more about Viking Ships and the Vikings.

    The Oseberg Ship - A Fine Example

    of a Viking Longship

    (Click on the image above to

    access a larger image.)

    Oseberg Ship Facts:

    Excavated in 1904 in Oseberg, Vestfold County, Norway after being discovered by a farmer.

    One of the two most complete Viking ships unearthed in Norway (the other being the Gokstad), it is 21.5 meters long (nearly 70 feet).

    The Oseberg Ship burial, including bodies of two women, is considered the most richly furnished Scandinavian grave ever found. One of the women may have been the famous Queen Asa from which the name Oseberg derives: Asa's mound.

    Items buried included an ornate cart, beds, sledges, wooden chests, riding equipment, and twelve horses.

    Built in oak and contains 12 board planks and 15 oar ports on each side, indicating a crew of 35-40.

    The stem and stern were decorated with ornate wood carvings, with the ship likely used for voyages in the fjords along the coasts of Norway by people of high rank.

    The Oseberg/Gokstad finds were joined by the discovery of five Viking Ships buried in the Roskilde fjord near Skuldelev, Denmark in 1962.

    Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999

    Note: Page: 243a-15 Note: Text: Asa, wife of "White Legs" - no last name

    Åsa Eysteinsdotter var datter av Eystein Hardråde. Hun var gift med Halvdan Kvitbein og de to hadde sønnene Gudrød Halvdansson og Eystein Halvdansson.
    Åsas sønn Eystein ble gift med Hild Eiriksdotter og de to fikk sønnen Halvdan Eysteinsson den gavmilde/Milde.

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=&emne=nor&person=%C5sa%20%D8ysteinsdotter

    En del oppgir (708-739) som år for fødsel og død.

    English: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H%C3%A1lfdanar_saga_Eysteinssonar

    From "The Ynglinga Saga":

    "49. OF HALFDAN HVITBEIN.

    Halfdan Hvitbein became a great king. He was married to Aasa, a daughter of Eystein the Severe, who was king of the Upland people, and ruled over Hedemark. Halfdan and Aasa had two sons, Eystein and Gudrod. ..."

    Noted events in her life were: • She was a Drottning in Norway.

    Åsa married Halvdan "Hvitbeinn" Olofsson, son of Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson and Solveig Halvdansdatter av Solør, circa 700 in Norway. (Halvdan "Hvitbeinn" Olofsson was born about 680 in Norway and died about 715 in Toten, Oppland, Norway.)

    Father: Øystein HARDRÅDE

    Family 1 : Halvdan Olavsson KVITBEIN

    +Øystein HALVDANSSON

    Kilde: nermo.org

    Åsa married Halvdan "Kvitbein" Olofsson, son of Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson and Solveig Halvdansdatter Av Solør. (Halvdan "Kvitbein" Olofsson was born about 660 in Norway and died about 745 in Toten, Oppland, Norway.)

    Född: 680 , Norge

    Äktenskap: Halvdan " Hvitbeinn "Olofsson ca 700 i Norge

    Död: 718 , Norge åldern 38

    Ett annat namn för Åsa var Åsa Øysteinsdatter AV Oplandene .

    Allmänna hänvisningar: Från "The Ynglinga Saga " :

    " 49 . AV Halfdan HVITBEIN .

    Halfdan Hvitbein blev en stor konung . Han var gift med Aasa , en dotter till Eystein den svåra , som var kung i Uppland folket, och härskade över Hedemarken . Halfdan och Aasa fick två söner, Eystein och Gudröd . ... "

    Noterade händelser i hennes liv var: • Hon var en Drottning i Norge.

    Åsa gift Halvdan " Hvitbeinn "Olofsson, son till Olav " Tretelgja " Ingjaldsson och Solveig Halvdansdatter AV Solør , ca 700 i Norge. ( Halvdan " Hvitbeinn Olofsson föddes omkring 680 i Norge och dog omkring 715 i Toten , Oppland , Norge. )

    Källor

    1 Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/ ).

    2 Snorre Sturlasson (ca 1179 till 1241 ), http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/OMACL/ ( Om 1225 ) , "Den YNGLINGA Saga " .

    Åsa var datter av kong Øystein Hardråde som styrte i Oppland og Hedemark

    Han var gift med Åsa, dotter av opplendingskongen Øystein. Dei fekk to søner, Øystein og Gudrød.

    Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.

    More than twenty years ago, a teaching colleague announced over lunch: "Osberg, I see your name in print." He held a sugar packet depicting a Viking Ship with the caption: The Oseberg Ship - A fine example of a Viking Longship. This launched me on a journey to discover not only the origins of my name but its intimate link to Viking history. Despite being proud of my Swedish ancestry (my great grandfather was a Swedish sea captain), my name derives from a small town in Norway (somewhere along the way my ancestors dropped an 'e'). The town of Oseberg was the site of the excavation of the Oseberg Ship, one of the few Viking Ships whose remains were reconstructed. The other is the Gokstad Ship. Buried along with the Oseberg Ship were numerous artifacts reflecting Viking art and culture. Of course, you know it was Leif Erickson, and not Columbus, who discovered America! See the Viking ship photos and links below to learn more about Viking Ships and the Vikings.

    The Oseberg Ship - A Fine Example

    of a Viking Longship

    (Click on the image above to

    access a larger image.)

    Oseberg Ship Facts:

    Excavated in 1904 in Oseberg, Vestfold County, Norway after being discovered by a farmer.

    One of the two most complete Viking ships unearthed in Norway (the other being the Gokstad), it is 21.5 meters long (nearly 70 feet).

    The Oseberg Ship burial, including bodies of two women, is considered the most richly furnished Scandinavian grave ever found. One of the women may have been the famous Queen Asa from which the name Oseberg derives: Asa's mound.

    Items buried included an ornate cart, beds, sledges, wooden chests, riding equipment, and twelve horses.

    Built in oak and contains 12 board planks and 15 oar ports on each side, indicating a crew of 35-40.

    The stem and stern were decorated with ornate wood carvings, with the ship likely used for voyages in the fjords along the coasts of Norway by people of high rank.

    The Oseberg/Gokstad finds were joined by the discovery of five Viking Ships buried in the Roskilde fjord near Skuldelev, Denmark in 1962.

    Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999

    Note: Page: 243a-15 Note: Text: Asa, wife of "White Legs" - no last name

    Asa Eysteinsdatter born about 0708 Uppland, Norway

    father:

    Eystein "Haardaade" Throndsson King of Hedmark born about 0668 Trondheim, Sor-Trondelag, Norway died 0710 Norway

    mother: unknown

    siblings: Hodne? Eysteinsson born about 0704 Trondheim, Sor Trondelag, Norway

    Hogne Eysteinsson born about 0700 Trondheim, Sor-Trondelag, Norway Frode Eysteinsson born about 0702 Trondheim, Sor-Trondelag, Norway

    spouse:

    Halfdan "Hvitbein" Olafsson King in Uppsala born about 0704 Romerike, Buskerud, Norway married about 0735 Vestfold, Norway

    children:

    Eystein "Fret" Halfdansson born about 0736 Vestfold, Norway

    biographical and/or anecdotal:

    notes or source: LDS

    read more

    Om Åsa (Aasa) Eysteinsdotter (Norsk)
    Asa var dronning i Solør

    Åsa var datter av Øystein Hardråde. Hun var gift med Halvdan Kvitbein og de hadde sønnene Øystein og Gudrød .

    Kilde Om Opplandskongene Oversatt fra norrønt av Kjell Tore Nilssen og Arni Olafsson

    Halfdan Hvitbein og var konge over Solør etter kong Sølvi. Han fikk Åsa, datter til kong Eystein Illråde av Heid. Denne Eystein la under seg Eynafylket i

    http://www.norsesaga.no/om-opplandskongene.html

    Barn:
    1. 2. Kung Eystein "fret/fjert" HALFDANSSON föddes 725 i Vestfold, Norge; dog 780 i Holtum, Vestfold, Norge.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Kung Olof TRÄTÄLJAKung Olof TRÄTÄLJA föddes ca 682 i Värmland, Sverige (son till Kung Ingjald ILLRÅDE ANUNDSSON och Drottning Gauthild ALGAUTSDOTTER AV GÖTALAND); dog ca 710 i Romerike, Buskerud, Norge; begravdes i Säffle, Värmland, Sverige.

    Noteringar:

    Also Known As: "Olof "Wood cutter""
    Birthdate: cirka 682
    Birthplace: Värmland, Sweden
    Death: cirka 710 (20-36)
    Romerike, Buskerud, Norway (Innebränd i sitt hus av uppretade svear.)
    Begravningsort: Säffle, Värmland, Sverige

    Närstående:

    Son till Ingjald Illråde, kung av Sverige och Gauthild Algautsdotter, av Götaland

    Make till Solveig Halfdansdatter, fra Solør

    Fader till Ingjald Olofsson, king of Värmland; Åsa Olafsdatter, Trondheim och Halfdan Olafsson «Whiteshanks» Kvitbein

    Bror till Åsa Ingjaldsdotter «the Wicked» Illråde

    Occupation: King of Norway (Vestfold) 680-710, Konge i Varmtland, Konge i Värmland, "Konungur i Svithjod" - Konge i Sverige, Konge af Sverige, Kongen av Sverige, Roi de Vestfold (1er, vers 650-vers 680), Roi de Värmland, King of Värmland, King of Varmland



    About King Olof Ingjaldsson
    Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olof_Tr%C3%A4t%C3%A4lja

    Olof Trätälja, var en kung av Ynglingaätten. Han omtalas i Snorre Sturlassons Ynglingasaga i Heimskringla och då som son till Ingjald Illråde. Han uppfostrades i Västergötland hos sin fosterfar. Han bosätter sig i Värmland där han bryter mark och skapar sig ett välde. Efter en hungersnöd offras han till Oden och bränns inne i sitt hus. En annan version är att han for till Norge. Han ska ha varit gift med Solveig.

    Säffle har Olof Trätälja i sitt vapen och en gravhög kallas Olof Trätäljas hög.

    Varken Olof Trätälja eller Ynglingaätten är historiskt säkerställda.

    Olof trätälja

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ur Snorre Sturlasons Heims-Kringla, Ynglingasagan, kapitel 45, citeras följande (översättning av Emanuel S Ekman 1765): "Nu som Olof, Konung Ingjalds Son, fick höra sin Faders frånfälle, drog han af med det folk, som honom följa wille; ty at all den gemene man gorde endräkteliga upror, til at förderfwa hela Kung Ingjalds släckt och alla hans wänner. Olof reste först up til Nerike, men så snart som de swenske fingo det weta, fick han icke längre där wara. Sedan drog han wäster öfwer marken, til den ån, som rinner nordan ifrån uti Wänern, och kallas elfwen (fellur i vöni oc Elfur heitir). Ther dwaldes the, och begynte at rödja marken, hugga skogen, bränna och bygga, hwaraf innom en liten tid blefwo stora härader, som kallades Wärmeland, som blef et godt och fruktsamt landskap. Men som det spordes til Swrie om bemälte Olof, at han uthögg skogen och rögde markena, tå kallade de honom Trätelja, och tyckte hans förehafwande wara mycket förakteligt."

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Om Åke Ohlmarks bok "Stamträd över Europas furstehus" har mycket sagts. Att den bitvis är rena sägner är ingen hemlighet. Här finns ett stamträd över Olav trätälja, konung i Värmland. Tro't den som vill... Olav trätälja Konung i Värmland Gift med Solveig från Soleyjar (Solør) Ingjald illråde i Uppsala 640-655 Gift med Gauthild av Götland Bröt-Anund 610-640 Yngvar 595-610 Eystein 575-595 Adils den mäktige 525-575 Gift med Yrsa Ottar vendelkråka 517-525 Egil tunnadolg 495-517 Aun den gamle c 450-495 Jorund c 430-450 Yngve c 415-430 Alrek c 400-415 Agne c 375-400 Gift med Skjalf från Finland Dag den vise c 355-375 Dyggve c 345-355 Domar c 310-345 Gift med Drott, syster till Dan den storslagne av Danmark Domalde c 300-310 Visbur c 250-300 Vanlande i Skuttunge c 225-250 Sveigder c 200-225 Fjolner c 175-200 Yngve-Frö c 150-175 Freja c 100-150 Frej c 50-100 Njord c 0-50 Odin Troligen beteckning för ursvearnas första tid i Uppland, i så fall ca 200-t f.Kr. till Kr.f.

    Olaf Tree Feller (Old Norse: Ólafr trételgja, Swedish: Olof Trätälja, Norwegian: Olav Tretelgja) was the son of the Swedish king Ingjald Ill-ruler of the House of Yngling according to Ynglingatal His mother was Gauthild, a princess of West Götaland, whose maternal grandfather was Olof the Sharp-sighted, the king of Nerike.

    His mother sent him to his foster-father Bove in West Götaland, where he grew up with his foster-brother Saxe who was surnamed Flette.

    When Olof heard of his father's death, he assembled the men who were willing to follow him and went to his kinsmen in Nerike, because after his father's atrocities, the Swedes had grown hostile towards the Ynglings.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof and his kin had sought refuge in Nerike, they were attacked and had to head west through deep and mountainous forests (Kilsbergen) to Lake Vänern and the estuary of Klarälven (where Karlstad is presently situated). Here, they settled and cleared land. Soon they had created a whole province called Värmland, where they could make good living.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof was clearing land, they were amused and called him the Tree-feller. Olof married a woman named Solveig who was a daughter of Halfdan Guldtand of Soleyar. Olof and Solveigh had two sons, Ingjald Olofsson and Halfdan Hvitbeinn, who were brought up in Soleyar in the house of his mother's uncle Sölve.

    Because of king Ivar Vidfamne and his harsh rule many Swedes emigrated to Värmland, and they became so numerous that the province could not sustain them. The land was afflicted by famine of which the Swedes accused the king. It was an old tradition in Sweden of holding the king responsible for the wealth of the land (see Domalde). The Swedes accused Olof of neglecting his sacrifices to the gods and believed that this was the cause of the famine.

    The Swedish settlers thus rebelled against Olof, surrounded his house on the shores of lake Vänern and burnt him inside it. Thus he was sacrificed to Odin, like his ancestor Domalde.

    Olaf Ingjaldsson "Tree Feller" Trätälja, Kung av Värmland

    Olaf Tree Feller http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olof_Tr%C3%A4t%C3%A4lja Olof Trätälja http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olof_Tr%C3%A4t%C3%A4lja Olav Tretelgja http://nn.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olav_Tretelgja
    Olaf Trätälja "Tree Feller" (Old Norse: Ólafr trételgja, Swedish: Olof Trätälja, Norwegian: Olav Tretelgja, all meaning Olaf Woodwhittler) was the son of the Swedish king Ingjald Ill-ruler of the House of Yngling according to Ynglingatal.

    Continue: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olof_Tr%C3%A4t%C3%A4lja

    Olof Trätälja var en kung av Ynglingaätten. Han omtalas i Snorre Sturlassons Ynglingasaga i Heimskringla och då som son till Ingjald Illråde. Han uppfostrades i Västergötland hos sin fosterfar. Han bosatte sig i Värmland där han bröt mark och skapade sig ett välde. När man i Svitjod fick höra att Olof röjde skogar kallade man honom spefullt för "trätälja" eftersom han ägnade sig åt en sådan "smädlig" verksamhet.

    "Då for han västerut genom skogarna till den å som norrifrån faller ut i Vänern och heta Älv. Där slog han och hans folk sig ner och började röja skogen och svedja och bränna och sedan bebygga landet och där vart brått stora härad, som de kallade Värmland. Där var gott land."

    Efter en hungersnöd offras han till Oden och bränns inne i sitt hus. Olof fick skulden eftersom han inte blotade. En annan version är att han for till Norge. Han ska ha varit gift med Solveig.

    Säffle kommun har tidigare använt Olof Trätälja i sin logotyp och en gravhög i Säffle kallas Olof Trätäljas hög. Gravhögen med det romantiska namnet från Erik Fernows tid hette egentligen Knutshögen.

    Varken Olof Trätälja eller Ynglingaätten är historiskt säkerställda. Det finns också arkeologiska bevis för att Värmland var bebott innan Olof skulle ha nyröjt.

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_Kvitbein Halvdans far [Olav Tretelgja] ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Olaf Tree Feller (Old Norse: Ólafr trételgja, Swedish: Olof Trätälja, Norwegian: Olav Tretelgja) was the son of the Swedish king Ingjald Ill - ruler of the House of Yngling according to Ynglingatal. His mother was Gauthild, a princess of West Götaland, whose maternal grandfather was Olof the Sharp-sighted, the king of Nerike. His mother sent him to his foster-father Bove in West Götaland, where he grew up with his foster-brother Saxe who was surnamed Flette.

    When Olof heard of his father's death, he assembled the men who were willing to follow him and went to his kinsmen in Nerike, because after his father's atrocities, the Swedes had grown hostile towards the Ynglings.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof and his kin had sought refuge in Nerike, they were attacked and had to head west through deep and mountainous forests (Kilsbergen) to Lake Vänern and the estuary of Klarälven (where Karlstad is presently situated). Here, they settled and cleared land. Soon they had created a whole province called Värmland, where they could make good living.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof was clearing land, they were amused and called him the Tree-feller. Olof married a woman named Solveig who was a daughter of Halfdan Guldtand of Soleyar. Olof and Solveigh had two sons, Ingjald Olofsson and Halfdan Hvitbeinn, who were brought up in Soleyar in the house of his mother's uncle Sölve.

    Because of king Ivar Vidfamne and his harsh rule many Swedes emigrated to Värmland, and they became so numerous that the province could not sustain them. The land was afflicted by famine of which the Swedes accused the king. It was an old tradition in Sweden of holding the king responsible for the wealth of the land (see Domalde). The Swedes accused Olof of neglecting his sacrifices to the gods and believed that this was the cause of the famine.

    The Swedish settlers thus rebelled against Olof, surrounded his house on the shores of lake Vänern and burnt him inside it. Thus he was sacrificed to Odin, like his ancestor Domalde. (Source: Wikipedia)

    sacraficed to Woden by his own people during fammine
    46. OF OLAF THE TREE-FELLER.
    When Olaf, King Ingjald's son, heard of his father's end, he went with the men who chose to follow him to Nerike; for all the Swedish community rose with one accord to drive out Ingjald's family and all his friends. Now, when the Swedes got intelligence of him he could not remain there, but went on westwards, through the forest, to a river which comes from the north and falls into the Venner lake, and is called Klar river. There they sat themselves down, turned to and cleared the woods, burnt, and then settled there. Soon there were great districts; which altogether were called Vermeland; and a good living was to be made there. Now when it was told of Olaf, in Sweden, that he was clearing the forests, they laughed at his proceedings, and called him the Tree-feller. Olaf got a wife called Solva, or Solveig, a daughter of Halfdan Guldtand, westward in Soleyar. Halfdan was a son of Solve Solvarson, who was a son of Solve the Old, who first settled on these islands. Olaf Tree-feller's mother was called Gauthild, and her mother was Alov, daughter of Olaf the Sharp-sighted, king in Nerike. Olaf and Solva had two sons: Ingjald and Halfdan. Halfdan was brought up in Soleyar, in the house of his mother's brother Solve, and was called Halfdan Hvitbein.

    47. OLAF THE TREE-FELLER'S DEATH.

    There were a great many people who fled the country from Sweden, on account of King Ivar; and when they heard that King Olaf had got good lands in Vermeland, so great a number came there to him that the land could not support them. Then there came dear times and famine, which they ascribed to their king; as the Swedes used always to reckon good or bad crops for or against their kings. The Swedes took it amiss that Olaf was sparing in his sacrifices, and believed the dear times must proceed from this cause. The Swedes therefore gathered together troops, made an expedition against King Olaf, surrounded his house and burnt him in it, giving him to Odin as a sacrifice for good crops. This happened at the Venner lake. Thus tells Thjodolf of it: --

    "The temple wolf, by the lake shores, The corpse of Olaf now devours. The clearer of the forests died At Odin's shrine by the lake side. The glowing flames stripped to the skin The royal robes from the Swedes' king. Thus Olaf, famed in days of yore, Vanished from earth at Venner's shore."

    *********************
    Events in the life of _Oláfr Trételgju Ingjaldsson

    event 1 . ·went with the men who chose to follow him, when heard of his father's end, to Nerike; for all the Swedish community rose with one accord to drive out Ingjald's family and all his friends † death 1 . ·Then there came dear times and famine, which they ascribed to their king; as the Swedes used always to reckon good or bad crops for or against their kings. The Swedes took it amiss that Olaf was sparing in his sacrifices, and believed the dear times must proceed from this cause. The Swedes therefore gathered together troops, made an expedition against King Olaf, surrounded his house and burnt him in it, giving him to Odin as a sacrifice for good crops. This happened at the Venner lake. Thus tells Thjodolf of it: -- "The temple wolf, by the lake shores, The corpse of Olaf now devours. The clearer of the forests died At Odin's shrine by the lake side. The glowing flames stripped to the skin The royal robes from the Swedes' king. Thus Olaf, famed in days of yore, Vanished from earth at Venner's shore." event 1 . ·attracted a great many of his countrymen, who were fleeing Sweden on account of Ivar, and they settled in the bountiful Varmeland, but in so great a number that the land could no longer support them, and they blamed him event ·is said to have sacrificed his own people in time of famine event 1 . ·raised in the care of his foster-father Bove, in West Gotland, where he was brought up along with Saxe, Bove's son, who had the surname of Flette event 1 . ·forced to leave Nerike, when the Swedes heard he was there, and he went on westwards, through the forest, to a river which comes from the north and falls into the Venner lake, and is called Klar river. There they sat themselves down, turned to and cleared the woods, burnt, and then settled there, and soon there were great districts, and altogether they were called Vermeland event 1 . ·given the name "Tree Feller" by the Swedes who laughed at his proceedings, that he was clearing forests instead of ruling,

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_Kvitbein

    sitat av tjodolv

    Olav Sveigde, Olafur Eysteinsson g. Solva Solveig : Konge i Sverige, Bosted: Romerike, Buskerud, Noregi Rømte fra Sverige til Norge under blodhevn-epidemien som herjet under 'illråde'nes regjeringstid. fikk tilnavnet Tretelja da han ryddet skoger og befolket det de kalte Värmland. Den kjente Raknehaugen på Romerike er muligens hans grav. Den er datert til ca 600 e.Kr. Haugen er enestående for Norden, består av omkring 4.000 kubikkmeter tømmer som er dekket med sand og jord. Det øverste tømmerlaget alene består av omtrent 25.000 tømmerstokker.
    Född: 650 Abt , Norge Äktenskap : Solveig Halvdansdatter AV Solør ca 670 i Norge Död : Abt 690 , Norge åldern omkring 40 Orsaken till hans död var han brändes till döds.

    Allmänna hänvisningar:
    Olof Trätälja , Olaf Tretelgju eller Olav Tree Feller var son till den svenska kungen Ingjald Ill - härskare av huset Yngling enligt Heimskringla . Hans mor var Gauthild , en prinsessa av Västra Götaland, vars morfar var Olof den skarpsynt , konungen i Nerike .

    Hans mamma skickade honom till sin fosterfader Bove i västra Götaland, där han växte upp med sin fosterbror Sachsen som ock Flette .

    När Olof hört talas om faderns död , samlade han de män som var villiga att följa honom och gick till sin befolkning i Nerike , för efter faderns övergrepp hade svenskarna blivit främmande för Ynglings .

    När svenskarna fick veta att Olof och hans anhöriga hade sökt skydd i Nerike var de attackerades och tvingades huvud västerut genom djupgående och bergiga skogar ( Kilsbergen ) till Vänern och mynningen i Klarälven (där Karlstad nu ligger) . Här bosatte de sig och röjde . Snart hade de skapat en hel provins som kallas Värmland , där de skulle kunna göra bra boende.

    När svenskarna fick veta att Olof var clearing land , de var roade och kallade honom Tree- huggare . Olof gifte sig med en kvinna vid namn Solveig som var dotter till Halfdan Guldtand av Soleyar . Olof och Solveig hade två söner , Ingjald Olofsson och Halfdan Hvitbeinn , som vuxit upp i Soleyar i huset av hans mors morbror Sölve .

    På grund av kung Ivar Vidfamne och hans hårda regel många svenskar utvandrade till Värmland , och de blev så många att provinsen inte kunde upprätthålla dem. Landet var drabbat av hungersnöd som svenskarna anklagade kungen. Det var en gammal tradition i Sverige att hålla kungen som ansvarar för den rikedom av marken. Svenskarna anklagade Olof för att försumma sina offer till gudarna och trodde att detta var orsaken till svält.

    De svenska nybyggarna därmed gjorde uppror mot Olof , omringade hans hus vid stranden av sjön Vänern och brände honom i den. Således är han offrades till Oden , som hans förfader Domalde .

    Noterade händelser i hans liv var:
    • Han var en Konung i Norge.

    Olav gifte sig med Solveig Halvdansdatter AV Solør , dotter till Halvdan Gulltann och okända, ca 670 i Norge. ( Solveig Halvdansdatter AV Solør föddes omkring 650 i Solør , Norge och dog omkring 695 i Norge. )

    Källor 1 Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/ ).

    2 Snorre Sturlasson (ca 1179 till 1241 ), http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/OMACL/ ( Om 1225 ) , "Den YNGLINGA Saga " .

    Olav Tretelgja var ein konge or Ynglingeætta, son av Ingjald Illråde. Han er den første som etter segna fekk odel i Noreg[manglar kjelde].

    Olav laut røme frå Svitjod eller Svealand etter at far hans fall, av di sveane ikkje ville ha meir med ynglingane å gjere. Han vart jaga til skogbygdene i Värmland, som han rydda, og slik fekk han og namnet sitt, av di han sjølv var med og hogg tømmer der. Olav ekta dottera til kong Halvdan Gulltann i Solør, Solveig, og dei fekk sønene Ingjald og Halvdan Kvitbein.

    Olav vart innebrend av di sviane i Värmland trudde han gav dei dårlege år. Motsett dei førre ynglingekongane nekta han å blote. Seinare vart det røynd at uåra kom av stor folkevekst i landet, og kongen hadde ikkje skulda. Folk valde då Halvdan, sonen til Olav, til konge for seg.

    Henta frå «http://nn.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olav_Tretelgja»

    Olav var oppvokst på Grønnland, hanflyket til Sveige. Dermed gikk det såkalte Uppsalaveldet i Sveige ut av Ynglingeætta i rett linje, etter mane genrasjoner.Olav flyktet til Vermland

    Blev ca 60 år.
    Född: omkring 630 Värmland Död: 690 Säffle

    Noteringar Småkung i Värmland, Svitjod. Född 630 i Gamla Uppsala (C). Död 690 i Svitjod, Säffle (S). Eftersom svearna hade bestämt sig att fördriva faderns ätt fortsatte Olav till Värmland och röjde skog, brände och byggde och blev därigenom kung i Värmland. Många svear strömmade till Värmland. Det blev därför svår hungersnöd och svält. De inflyttade svearna skyllde detta på sin kung och påstod att denne inte blotat tillräcligt mycket. Därför samlade de en här och belägrade Olavs hus och brände honom inne. Detta skedde vid Vänern. Makarna hade två söner Ingjald och Halfdan. Ingjald blev kung i Värmland. (Källa: Ynglingasagan) Vattenvägen från Säffle till Arvika kallas även Vikingaleden och detta får man väl också tillskriva Olof Trätälja. Ett arrangemang under sommaren med anknytning till detta är Vikingaveckan som inleds i Säffle och fortsätter i Arvika. Ingjald Illråde var far till Olof Trätälja och efter Ingjalds död skall Olof ha blivit fördriven av Ivar Vidfamne. Olof tog då sin tillflykt till Värmland där han grundade ett nytt rike och bröt ny mark. Det var denna nybyggargärning som gav honom tillnamnet Trätälja. Olof Trätälja är begravd i Säffle och hans gravhög vid gamla vattentornet är Värmlands största gravhög. (Källa: Thomas Jansson)

    Heimskringla

    His mother was Gauthild, a princess of West Götaland, whose maternal grandfather was Olof the Sharp-sighted, the king of Nerike.

    His mother sent him to his foster-father Bove in West Götaland, where he grew up with his foster-brother Saxe who was surnamed Flette.

    When Olof heard of his father's death, he assembled the men who were willing to follow him and went to his kinsmen in Nerike, because after his father's atrocities, the Swedes had grown hostile towards the Ynglings.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof and his kin had sought refuge in Nerike, they were attacked and had to head west through deep and mountainous forests (Kilsbergen) to Lake Vänern and the estuary of Klarälven (where Karlstad is presently situated). Here, they settled and cleared land. Soon they had created a whole province called Värmland, where they could make good living.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof was clearing land, they were amused and called him the Tree-feller. Olof married a woman named Solveig who was a daughter of Halfdan Guldtand of Soleyar. Olof and Solveigh had two sons, Ingjald Olofsson and Halfdan Hvitbeinn, who were brought up in Soleyar in the house of his mother's uncle Sölve.

    Because of king Ivar Vidfamne and his harsh rule many Swedes emigrated to Värmland, and they became so numerous that the province could not sustain them. The land was afflicted by famine of which the Swedes accused the king. It was an old tradition in Sweden of holding the king responsible for the wealth of the land (see Domalde). The Swedes accused Olof of neglecting his sacrifices to the gods and believed that this was the cause of the famine.

    The Swedish settlers thus rebelled against Olof, surrounded his house on the shores of lake Vänern and burnt him inside it. Thus he was sacrificed to Odin, like his ancestor Domalde.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olof_Tr%C3%A4t%C3%A4lja

    The kingly line [of Norway], which Snorri [Sturlusson, 13th century historian] traces claimed descent from the ancient Yngling kings who ruled at Uppsala in Sweden. Their legendary Yngling ancestor was Olof Tretelgia Ingjaldsson, who had escaped the aftermath of his father's conflagration by fleeing to Norway.
    King Olof earned his nickname, which means "the Woodcutter", by clearing the forest and cultivating the land. He named his new domain Varmland and such a large group of Swedes followed him there "that the land could not give them sustenance."

    After a season of bad harvests, the woodcutting king was sacrificed to Odin so that his people might have good crops. He was succeeded by his son Halfdan Whiteleg, who is said to have extended his rule over much of southern Norway.

    [Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flander & Kiev] Title: Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flanders, and Kiev, by Rupert Alen & Anna Dahlquist, 1997, King's River Publ.

    Olaf Ingjaldsson King Of Värmland 1 Birth: About 682 in , , Värmland, Sweden 2 3 Death: About 730 2 3 Sex: M Father: Ingjald "Braut" Onundsson King Of Uppsala b. 661 in , , Uppsala, Sweden Mother: Gauthild Algautsdotter b. About 664 in , , , Sweden
    Unknown: , , Värmland, Sweden 4 1 3

    Changed: 20 Mar 2001 00:00

    Spouses & Children Solveig Halfdansdatter (Wife) b. About 670 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway)
    1 2 3 Marriage: Abt 701 in (, Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway) 6 Nov 2004 14:29 Children: Asa Olafsdatter b. About 706 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway Ingiald Olafsdatter b. About 702 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway Halfdan "Hvitbein" Olafsson King Of Uppsala b. 725 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway

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    Notes Individual:
    Name Suffix: King of Värmland Name Suffix: "The Wood Cutter" REFN: HWS8568 Ancestral File Number: FLHG-WS OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\c_crown.gifCHAN20 Mar 2001

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    Sources lbert F. Schmuhl, "Title: "Royal Lines & Adamic Genealogy: Genealogical Research of A
    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Author: Schmuhl, Albert F. Publication: e-mail documentation, March 1997, Albert F. Schmuhl, Americ a Online Posting: Genealogy Forum Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral Fileâ„¢ v4.19" Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Publication: 3 Feb 2001

    Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson" Author: Larson, Kirk Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Desce ndants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library Title: "Héraldique européenne" Author: Arnaud Bunel Publication: Coats of Arms for European Royalty and Nobility (http://www .heraldique-europeenne.org, Arnaud Bunel, 1998) , Internet"Armigerous" (ahr-MIJ-ehr-us) adjective

    Bearing or entitled to bear heraldicarms.

    The reason the notion of a family crest was brought into th e languagewas that those who were armigerous (entitled to bear arms) used to put their crest or achieveme

    Olaf Traitelia was slain by enemies. Reigned as king from 680-710

    The kingly line [of Norway], which Snorri [Sturlusson, 13th century historian] traces claimed descent from the ancient Yngling kings who ruled at Uppsala in Sweden. Their legendary Yngling ancestor was Olof Tretelgia Ingjaldsson, who had escaped the aftermath of his father's conflagration by fleeing to Norway.

    Her King Olof earned his nickname, which means "the Woodcutter", by clearing the forest and cultivating the land. He named his new domain Varmland and such a large group of Swedes followed him there "that the land could not give them sustenance."
    Note: After a season of bad harvests, the woodcutting king was sacrificed to Odin so that his people might have good crops. He was succeeded by his son Halfdan Whiteleg, who is said to have extended his rule over much of southern Norway.
    Note: [Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flander & Kiev]
    Note: Title: Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flanders, and Kiev, by Rupert Alen & Anna Dahlquist, 1997, King's River Publ.
    Note: Page: 6
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olof_Tr%C3%A4t%C3%A4lja

    Sacrificed (burnt in his house) for better crops by a troop of Sedes.
    His mother was Gauthild, a princess of West Götaland, whose maternal grandfather was Olof the Sharp-sighted, the king of Nerike.
    His mother sent him to his foster-father Bove in West Götaland, where he grew up with his foster-brother Saxe who was surnamed Flette.

    When Olof heard of his father's death, he assembled the men who were willing to follow him and went to his kinsmen in Nerike, because after his father's atrocities, the Swedes had grown hostile towards the Ynglings.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof and his kin had sought refuge in Nerike, they were attacked and had to head west through deep and mountainous forests (Kilsbergen) to Lake Vänern and the estuary of Klarälven (where Karlstad is presently situated). Here, they settled and cleared land. Soon they had created a whole province called Värmland, where they could make good living.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof was clearing land, they were amused and called him the Tree-feller. Olof married a woman named Solveig who was a daughter of Halfdan Guldtand of Soleyar. Olof and Solveigh had two sons, Ingjald Olofsson and Halfdan Hvitbeinn, who were brought up in Soleyar in the house of his mother's uncle Sölve.

    Because of king Ivar Vidfamne and his harsh rule many Swedes emigrated to Värmland, and they became so numerous that the province could not sustain them. The land was afflicted by famine of which the Swedes accused the king. It was an old tradition in Sweden of holding the king responsible for the wealth of the land (see Domalde). The Swedes accused Olof of neglecting his sacrifices to the gods and believed that this was the cause of the famine.

    The Swedish settlers thus rebelled against Olof, surrounded his house on the shores of lake Vänern and burnt him inside it. Thus he was sacrificed to Odin, like his ancestor Domalde.

    [edit] Ynglingatal and Historia Norwegiae However, Historia Norwegiae says that Olof succeeded his father and ruled as the king of Sweden in peace until his death.

    Ejus filius Olavus cognomento tretelgia diu et pacifice functus regno plenus dierum obiit in Swethia.[1]

    His son, Olav, known as Tretelgje, accomplished a long and peaceful reign, and died in Sweden, replete in years.[2]
    The lines of Ynglingatal appear to say that he was a Swedish prince (svía jöfri), and that he was burnt inside his hall and disappeared from Gamla Uppsala.

    Ok við vág, viðar (telgju) hræ Ólafs hofgyldir svalg, ok glóðfjálgr gervar leysti sonr Fornjóts af Svía jöfri. Sá áttkonr frá Uppsölum Lofða kyns fyrir löngu hvarf.[3]

    [edit] Archaeology Source Along the lower parts of the river Byälven in Värmland, there are three large barrows, which legend attributes to Olof Trätälja. Moreover, there are many hillforts near this river and the northern shore of Lake Vänern testifying to a violent period. Archaeological excavations from one of the hillforts, Villkorsberget, show that it was burnt in a period corresponding to Olof (510–680).

    [edit] Notes 1.^ Storm, Gustav (editor) (1880). Monumenta historica Norwegiæ: Latinske kildeskrifter til Norges historie i middelalderen, Monumenta Historica Norwegiae (Kristiania: Brøgger), p. 102. 2.^ Ekrem, Inger (editor), Lars Boje Mortensen (editor) and Peter Fisher (translator) (2003). Historia Norwegie. Museum Tusculanum Press. ISBN 8772898135, p. 79. 3.^ The original text at Heimskringla Norrøne Tekster og Kvad The Ynglings were the oldest known Scandinavian dynasty. It can refer to the clans of the Scylfings (Old Norse Skilfingar, the semi-legendary royal Swedish clan during the Age of Migrations, with kings such as Eadgils, Onela and Ohthere. When Beowulf and Ynglingatal were composed sometime in the eighth to tenth centuries, the respective scop and skald expected his audience to have a great deal of background information about these kings, which is shown in the allusiveness of the references. Ynglings also refers to the Fairhair dynasty, descending from the kings of Oppland, Norway. According to surviving early sources, such as Ynglingatal and Íslendingabók, these kings were descended from the Swedish Scylfings of Uppland, Sweden. The House of Munsö, a Swedish dynasty also falls under the definition of Yngling. The earliest kings of this dynasty that historians generally agree are historical are Eirik the Victorious and Olof Skötkonung.

    Some early kings were likely mythical, whereas others may have been real. Egil, Ottar, Ale and Adils are mentioned in several sources and are very likely to have been real kings.

    Olov "Trätälja" Injarsson. Kung av Värmland, Han förknippas med de sista av Ynglingaätten, som offrade människor. Han föll själv offer omkring 690 och brändes till döds, han blotades vid Vänern i Skaraborg; son till Injar-illråde Aunundsson av Uppsala -6) och Gauthild Algutsdotter av Götaland; Gift med Solvieg "Solva" Haraldsdotter av Soleyar, född på Solör, Norge, död 695 i Norge. Hon var dotter till Harald "Guldtand" av Soleyar; barn: Halvdan "Vitben" Olovsson -8)

    http://hem.passagen.se/arkis/vendelkraka.htm

    From http://www.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy/ps05/ps05_092.htm
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    46. OF OLAF THE TREE-FELLER.

    When Olaf, King Ingjald's son, heard of his father's end, he went

    with the men who chose to follow him to Nerike; for all the

    Swedish community rose with one accord to drive out Ingjald's

    family and all his friends. Now, when the Swedes got

    intelligence of him he could not remain there, but went on

    westwards, through the forest, to a river which comes from the

    north and falls into the Venner lake, and is called Klar river.

    There they sat themselves down, turned to and cleared the woods,

    burnt, and then settled there. Soon there were great districts;

    which altogether were called Vermeland; and a good living was to

    be made there. Now when it was told of Olaf, in Sweden, that he

    was clearing the forests, they laughed at his proceedings, and

    called him the Tree-feller. Olaf got a wife called Solva, or

    Solveig, a daughter of Halfdan Guldtand, westward in Soleyar.

    Halfdan was a son of Solve Solvarson, who was a son of Solve the

    Old, who first settled on these islands. Olaf Tree-feller's

    mother was called Gauthild, and her mother was Alov, daughter of

    Olaf the Sharp-sighted, king in Nerike. Olaf and Solva had two

    sons: Ingjald and Halfdan. Halfdan was brought up in Soleyar, in

    the house of his mother's brother Solve, and was called Halfdan

    Hvitbein.

    47. OLAF THE TREE-FELLER'S DEATH.

    There were a great many people who fled the country from Sweden,

    on account of King Ivar; and when they heard that King Olaf had

    got good lands in Vermeland, so great a number came there to him

    that the land could not support them. Then there came dear times

    and famine, which they ascribed to their king; as the Swedes used

    always to reckon good or bad crops for or against their kings.

    The Swedes took it amiss that Olaf was sparing in his sacrifices,

    and believed the dear times must proceed from this cause. The

    Swedes therefore gathered together troops, made an expedition

    against King Olaf, surrounded his house and burnt him in it,

    giving him to Odin as a sacrifice for good crops. This happened

    at the Venner lake. Thus tells Thjodolf of it: --

    "The temple wolf, by the lake shores,

    The corpse of Olaf now devours.

    The clearer of the forests died

    At Odin's shrine by the lake side.

    The glowing flames stripped to the skin

    The royal robes from the Swedes' king.

    Thus Olaf, famed in days of yore,

    Vanished from earth at Venner's shore."

    *********************
    Events in the life of _Oláfr Trételgju Ingjaldsson

    event 1 .

    ·went with the men who chose to follow him, when heard of his father's end, to Nerike; for all the Swedish community rose with one accord to drive out Ingjald's family and all his friends

    † death 1 .

    ·Then there came dear times and famine, which they ascribed to their king; as the Swedes used always to reckon good or bad crops for or against their kings. The Swedes took it amiss that Olaf was sparing in his sacrifices, and believed the dear times must proceed from this cause. The Swedes therefore gathered together troops, made an expedition against King Olaf, surrounded his house and burnt him in it, giving him to Odin as a sacrifice for good crops. This happened at the Venner lake. Thus tells Thjodolf of it: -- "The temple wolf, by the lake shores, The corpse of Olaf now devours. The clearer of the forests died At Odin's shrine by the lake side. The glowing flames stripped to the skin The royal robes from the Swedes' king. Thus Olaf, famed in days of yore, Vanished from earth at Venner's shore."

    event 1 .

    ·attracted a great many of his countrymen, who were fleeing Sweden on account of Ivar, and they settled in the bountiful Varmeland, but in so great a number that the land could no longer support them, and they blamed him

    event

    ·is said to have sacrificed his own people in time of famine

    event 1 .

    ·raised in the care of his foster-father Bove, in West Gotland, where he was brought up along with Saxe, Bove's son, who had the surname of Flette

    event 1 .

    ·forced to leave Nerike, when the Swedes heard he was there, and he went on westwards, through the forest, to a river which comes from the north and falls into the Venner lake, and is called Klar river. There they sat themselves down, turned to and cleared the woods, burnt, and then settled there, and soon there were great districts, and altogether they were called Vermeland

    event 1 .

    ·given the name "Tree Feller" by the Swedes who laughed at his proceedings, that he was clearing forests instead of ruling,

    Chassé d'Uppland, il crée son royaume de Vestfold en Norvège
    Olaf Tree Feller (Old Norse: Óláfr trételgja, Swedish: Olof Trätälja, Norwegian: Olav Tretelgja, all meaning Olaf Woodwhittler) was the son of the Swedish king Ingjald Ill-ruler of the House of Yngling according to Ynglingatal.
    Heimskringla

    His mother was Gauthild, a princess of West Götaland, whose maternal grandfather was Olof the Sharp-sighted, the king of Nerike.

    His mother sent him to his foster-father Bove in West Götaland, where he grew up with his foster-brother Saxe who was surnamed Flette.

    When Olof heard of his father's death, he assembled the men who were willing to follow him and went to his kinsmen in Nerike, because after his father's atrocities, the Swedes had grown hostile towards the Ynglings.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof and his kin had sought refuge in Nerike, they were attacked and had to head west through deep and mountainous forests (Kilsbergen) to Lake Vänern and the estuary of Klarälven (where Karlstad is presently situated). Here, they settled and cleared land. Soon they had created a whole province called Värmland, where they could make good living.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof was clearing land, they were amused and called him the Tree-feller. Olof married a woman named Solveig who was a daughter of Halfdan Guldtand of Soleyar. Olof and Solveigh had two sons, Ingjald Olofsson and Halfdan Hvitbeinn, who were brought up in Soleyar in the house of his mother's uncle Sölve.

    Because of king Ivar Vidfamne and his harsh rule many Swedes emigrated to Värmland, and they became so numerous that the province could not sustain them. The land was afflicted by famine of which the Swedes accused the king. It was an old tradition in Sweden of holding the king responsible for the wealth of the land (see Domalde). The Swedes accused Olof of neglecting his sacrifices to the gods and believed that this was the cause of the famine.

    The Swedish settlers thus rebelled against Olof, surrounded his house on the shores of lake Vänern and burnt him inside it. Thus he was sacrificed to Odin, like his ancestor Domalde.

    Ynglingatal and Historia Norwegiae

    However, Historia Norwegiae says that Olof succeeded his father and ruled as the king of Sweden in peace until his death.

    Ejus filius Olavus cognomento tretelgia diu et pacifice functus regno plenus dierum obiit in Swethia.[1]

    His son, Olav, known as Tretelgje, accomplished a long and peaceful reign, and died in Sweden, replete in years.[2]

    The lines of Ynglingatal appear to say that he was a Swedish prince (svía jöfri), and that he was burnt inside his hall and disappeared from Gamla Uppsala.

    Ok við vág, viðar (telgju) hræ Ólafs hofgyldir svalg, ok glóðfjálgr gervar leysti sonr Fornjóts af Svía jöfri. Sá áttkonr frá Uppsölum Lofða kyns fyrir löngu hvarf.[3]
    Archaelogy

    Along the lower parts of the river Byälven in Värmland, there are three large barrows, which legend attributes to Olof Trätälja. Moreover, there are many hillforts near this river and the northern shore of Lake Vänern testifying to a violent period. Archaeological excavations from one of the hillforts, Villkorsberget, show that it was burnt in a period corresponding to Olof (510–680).

    Olof Trätälja, var en kung av Ynglingaätten. Han omtalas i Snorre Sturlassons Ynglingasaga i Heimskringla och då som son till Ingjald Illråde. Han uppfostrades i Västergötland hos sin fosterfar. Han bosätter sig i Värmland där han bryter mark och skapar sig ett välde. Efter en hungersnöd offras han till Oden och bränns inne i sitt hus. En annan version är att han for till Norge. Han ska ha varit gift med Solveig.
    Säffle har Olof Trätälja i sitt vapen och en gravhög kallas Olof Trätäljas hög.

    Varken Olof Trätälja eller Ynglingaätten är historiskt säkerställda.

    Olof trätälja

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ur Snorre Sturlasons Heims-Kringla, Ynglingasagan, kapitel 45, citeras följande (översättning av Emanuel S Ekman 1765): "Nu som Olof, Konung Ingjalds Son, fick höra sin Faders frånfälle, drog han af med det folk, som honom följa wille; ty at all den gemene man gorde endräkteliga upror, til at förderfwa hela Kung Ingjalds släckt och alla hans wänner. Olof reste först up til Nerike, men så snart som de swenske fingo det weta, fick han icke längre där wara. Sedan drog han wäster öfwer marken, til den ån, som rinner nordan ifrån uti Wänern, och kallas elfwen (fellur i vöni oc Elfur heitir). Ther dwaldes the, och begynte at rödja marken, hugga skogen, bränna och bygga, hwaraf innom en liten tid blefwo stora härader, som kallades Wärmeland, som blef et godt och fruktsamt landskap. Men som det spordes til Swrie om bemälte Olof, at han uthögg skogen och rögde markena, tå kallade de honom Trätelja, och tyckte hans förehafwande wara mycket förakteligt."

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Om Åke Ohlmarks bok "Stamträd över Europas furstehus" har mycket sagts. Att den bitvis är rena sägner är ingen hemlighet. Här finns ett stamträd över Olav trätälja, konung i Värmland. Tro't den som vill... Olav trätälja Konung i Värmland Gift med Solveig från Soleyjar (Solør) Ingjald illråde i Uppsala 640-655 Gift med Gauthild av Götland Bröt-Anund 610-640 Yngvar 595-610 Eystein 575-595 Adils den mäktige 525-575 Gift med Yrsa Ottar vendelkråka 517-525 Egil tunnadolg 495-517 Aun den gamle c 450-495 Jorund c 430-450 Yngve c 415-430 Alrek c 400-415 Agne c 375-400 Gift med Skjalf från Finland Dag den vise c 355-375 Dyggve c 345-355 Domar c 310-345 Gift med Drott, syster till Dan den storslagne av Danmark Domalde c 300-310 Visbur c 250-300 Vanlande i Skuttunge c 225-250 Sveigder c 200-225 Fjolner c 175-200 Yngve-Frö c 150-175 Freja c 100-150 Frej c 50-100 Njord c 0-50 Odin Troligen beteckning för ursvearnas första tid i Uppland, i så fall ca 200-t f.Kr. till Kr.f.

    Olaf Tree Feller (Old Norse: Ólafr trételgja, Swedish: Olof Trätälja, Norwegian: Olav Tretelgja) was the son of the Swedish king Ingjald Ill-ruler of the House of Yngling according to Ynglingatal His mother was Gauthild, a princess of West Götaland, whose maternal grandfather was Olof the Sharp-sighted, the king of Nerike.

    His mother sent him to his foster-father Bove in West Götaland, where he grew up with his foster-brother Saxe who was surnamed Flette.

    When Olof heard of his father's death, he assembled the men who were willing to follow him and went to his kinsmen in Nerike, because after his father's atrocities, the Swedes had grown hostile towards the Ynglings.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof and his kin had sought refuge in Nerike, they were attacked and had to head west through deep and mountainous forests (Kilsbergen) to Lake Vänern and the estuary of Klarälven (where Karlstad is presently situated). Here, they settled and cleared land. Soon they had created a whole province called Värmland, where they could make good living.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof was clearing land, they were amused and called him the Tree-feller. Olof married a woman named Solveig who was a daughter of Halfdan Guldtand of Soleyar. Olof and Solveigh had two sons, Ingjald Olofsson and Halfdan Hvitbeinn, who were brought up in Soleyar in the house of his mother's uncle Sölve.

    Because of king Ivar Vidfamne and his harsh rule many Swedes emigrated to Värmland, and they became so numerous that the province could not sustain them. The land was afflicted by famine of which the Swedes accused the king. It was an old tradition in Sweden of holding the king responsible for the wealth of the land (see Domalde). The Swedes accused Olof of neglecting his sacrifices to the gods and believed that this was the cause of the famine.

    The Swedish settlers thus rebelled against Olof, surrounded his house on the shores of lake Vänern and burnt him inside it. Thus he was sacrificed to Odin, like his ancestor Domalde.

    Olaf Ingjaldsson "Tree Feller" Trätälja, Kung av Värmland ---------------- Olaf Tree Feller http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olof_Tr%C3%A4t%C3%A4lja Olof Trätälja http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olof_Tr%C3%A4t%C3%A4lja Olav Tretelgja http://nn.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olav_Tretelgja

    Olaf Trätälja "Tree Feller" (Old Norse: Ólafr trételgja, Swedish: Olof Trätälja, Norwegian: Olav Tretelgja, all meaning Olaf Woodwhittler) was the son of the Swedish king Ingjald Ill-ruler of the House of Yngling according to Ynglingatal.

    Continue: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olof_Tr%C3%A4t%C3%A4lja ---------

    Olof Trätälja var en kung av Ynglingaätten. Han omtalas i Snorre Sturlassons Ynglingasaga i Heimskringla och då som son till Ingjald Illråde. Han uppfostrades i Västergötland hos sin fosterfar. Han bosatte sig i Värmland där han bröt mark och skapade sig ett välde. När man i Svitjod fick höra att Olof röjde skogar kallade man honom spefullt för "trätälja" eftersom han ägnade sig åt en sådan "smädlig" verksamhet.

    "Då for han västerut genom skogarna till den å som norrifrån faller ut i Vänern och heta Älv. Där slog han och hans folk sig ner och började röja skogen och svedja och bränna och sedan bebygga landet och där vart brått stora härad, som de kallade Värmland. Där var gott land."

    Efter en hungersnöd offras han till Oden och bränns inne i sitt hus. Olof fick skulden eftersom han inte blotade. En annan version är att han for till Norge. Han ska ha varit gift med Solveig.

    Säffle kommun har tidigare använt Olof Trätälja i sin logotyp och en gravhög i Säffle kallas Olof Trätäljas hög. Gravhögen med det romantiska namnet från Erik Fernows tid hette egentligen Knutshögen.

    Varken Olof Trätälja eller Ynglingaätten är historiskt säkerställda. Det finns också arkeologiska bevis för att Värmland var bebott innan Olof skulle ha nyröjt.

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_Kvitbein Halvdans far [Olav Tretelgja] ble ofret til Odin av de svenske nybyggerne i Värmland på grunn av uår, men da de senere oppdaget at uåret var grunnet i overbefolning og ikke kongens handlinger valgte noen å krysse Eidskogen og slå seg ned i Solør. Her tok de Halvdan til konge siden han var sønn av deres gamle konge, Olav. De svenskene som ble igjen i Värmland tok hans bror Ingjald til konge.

    Olaf Tree Feller (Old Norse: Ólafr trételgja, Swedish: Olof Trätälja, Norwegian: Olav Tretelgja) was the son of the Swedish king Ingjald Ill - ruler of the House of Yngling according to Ynglingatal. His mother was Gauthild, a princess of West Götaland, whose maternal grandfather was Olof the Sharp-sighted, the king of Nerike. His mother sent him to his foster-father Bove in West Götaland, where he grew up with his foster-brother Saxe who was surnamed Flette.

    When Olof heard of his father's death, he assembled the men who were willing to follow him and went to his kinsmen in Nerike, because after his father's atrocities, the Swedes had grown hostile towards the Ynglings.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof and his kin had sought refuge in Nerike, they were attacked and had to head west through deep and mountainous forests (Kilsbergen) to Lake Vänern and the estuary of Klarälven (where Karlstad is presently situated). Here, they settled and cleared land. Soon they had created a whole province called Värmland, where they could make good living.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof was clearing land, they were amused and called him the Tree-feller. Olof married a woman named Solveig who was a daughter of Halfdan Guldtand of Soleyar. Olof and Solveigh had two sons, Ingjald Olofsson and Halfdan Hvitbeinn, who were brought up in Soleyar in the house of his mother's uncle Sölve.

    Because of king Ivar Vidfamne and his harsh rule many Swedes emigrated to Värmland, and they became so numerous that the province could not sustain them. The land was afflicted by famine of which the Swedes accused the king. It was an old tradition in Sweden of holding the king responsible for the wealth of the land (see Domalde). The Swedes accused Olof of neglecting his sacrifices to the gods and believed that this was the cause of the famine.

    The Swedish settlers thus rebelled against Olof, surrounded his house on the shores of lake Vänern and burnt him inside it. Thus he was sacrificed to Odin, like his ancestor Domalde. (Source: Wikipedia) -------------------- sacraficed to Woden by his own people during fammine -------------------- 46. OF OLAF THE TREE-FELLER.

    When Olaf, King Ingjald's son, heard of his father's end, he went with the men who chose to follow him to Nerike; for all the Swedish community rose with one accord to drive out Ingjald's family and all his friends. Now, when the Swedes got intelligence of him he could not remain there, but went on westwards, through the forest, to a river which comes from the north and falls into the Venner lake, and is called Klar river. There they sat themselves down, turned to and cleared the woods, burnt, and then settled there. Soon there were great districts; which altogether were called Vermeland; and a good living was to be made there. Now when it was told of Olaf, in Sweden, that he was clearing the forests, they laughed at his proceedings, and called him the Tree-feller. Olaf got a wife called Solva, or Solveig, a daughter of Halfdan Guldtand, westward in Soleyar. Halfdan was a son of Solve Solvarson, who was a son of Solve the Old, who first settled on these islands. Olaf Tree-feller's mother was called Gauthild, and her mother was Alov, daughter of Olaf the Sharp-sighted, king in Nerike. Olaf and Solva had two sons: Ingjald and Halfdan. Halfdan was brought up in Soleyar, in the house of his mother's brother Solve, and was called Halfdan Hvitbein.

    47. OLAF THE TREE-FELLER'S DEATH.

    There were a great many people who fled the country from Sweden, on account of King Ivar; and when they heard that King Olaf had got good lands in Vermeland, so great a number came there to him that the land could not support them. Then there came dear times and famine, which they ascribed to their king; as the Swedes used always to reckon good or bad crops for or against their kings. The Swedes took it amiss that Olaf was sparing in his sacrifices, and believed the dear times must proceed from this cause. The Swedes therefore gathered together troops, made an expedition against King Olaf, surrounded his house and burnt him in it, giving him to Odin as a sacrifice for good crops. This happened at the Venner lake. Thus tells Thjodolf of it: --

    "The temple wolf, by the lake shores, The corpse of Olaf now devours. The clearer of the forests died At Odin's shrine by the lake side. The glowing flames stripped to the skin The royal robes from the Swedes' king. Thus Olaf, famed in days of yore, Vanished from earth at Venner's shore."

    *********************
    Events in the life of _Oláfr Trételgju Ingjaldsson

    event 1 . ·went with the men who chose to follow him, when heard of his father's end, to Nerike; for all the Swedish community rose with one accord to drive out Ingjald's family and all his friends † death 1 . ·Then there came dear times and famine, which they ascribed to their king; as the Swedes used always to reckon good or bad crops for or against their kings. The Swedes took it amiss that Olaf was sparing in his sacrifices, and believed the dear times must proceed from this cause. The Swedes therefore gathered together troops, made an expedition against King Olaf, surrounded his house and burnt him in it, giving him to Odin as a sacrifice for good crops. This happened at the Venner lake. Thus tells Thjodolf of it: -- "The temple wolf, by the lake shores, The corpse of Olaf now devours. The clearer of the forests died At Odin's shrine by the lake side. The glowing flames stripped to the skin The royal robes from the Swedes' king. Thus Olaf, famed in days of yore, Vanished from earth at Venner's shore." event 1 . ·attracted a great many of his countrymen, who were fleeing Sweden on account of Ivar, and they settled in the bountiful Varmeland, but in so great a number that the land could no longer support them, and they blamed him event ·is said to have sacrificed his own people in time of famine event 1 . ·raised in the care of his foster-father Bove, in West Gotland, where he was brought up along with Saxe, Bove's son, who had the surname of Flette event 1 . ·forced to leave Nerike, when the Swedes heard he was there, and he went on westwards, through the forest, to a river which comes from the north and falls into the Venner lake, and is called Klar river. There they sat themselves down, turned to and cleared the woods, burnt, and then settled there, and soon there were great districts, and altogether they were called Vermeland event 1 . ·given the name "Tree Feller" by the Swedes who laughed at his proceedings, that he was clearing forests instead of ruling,

    http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_Kvitbein

    sitat av tjodolv -------------------- Olav Sveigde, Olafur Eysteinsson g. Solva Solveig : Konge i Sverige, Bosted: Romerike, Buskerud, Noregi Rømte fra Sverige til Norge under blodhevn-epidemien som herjet under 'illråde'nes regjeringstid. fikk tilnavnet Tretelja da han ryddet skoger og befolket det de kalte Värmland. Den kjente Raknehaugen på Romerike er muligens hans grav. Den er datert til ca 600 e.Kr. Haugen er enestående for Norden, består av omkring 4.000 kubikkmeter tømmer som er dekket med sand og jord. Det øverste tømmerlaget alene består av omtrent 25.000 tømmerstokker.

    Född: 650 Abt , Norge Äktenskap : Solveig Halvdansdatter AV Solør ca 670 i Norge Död : Abt 690 , Norge åldern omkring 40 Orsaken till hans död var han brändes till döds.

    Allmänna hänvisningar:
    Olof Trätälja , Olaf Tretelgju eller Olav Tree Feller var son till den svenska kungen Ingjald Ill - härskare av huset Yngling enligt Heimskringla . Hans mor var Gauthild , en prinsessa av Västra Götaland, vars morfar var Olof den skarpsynt , konungen i Nerike .

    Hans mamma skickade honom till sin fosterfader Bove i västra Götaland, där han växte upp med sin fosterbror Sachsen som ock Flette .

    När Olof hört talas om faderns död , samlade han de män som var villiga att följa honom och gick till sin befolkning i Nerike , för efter faderns övergrepp hade svenskarna blivit främmande för Ynglings .

    När svenskarna fick veta att Olof och hans anhöriga hade sökt skydd i Nerike var de attackerades och tvingades huvud västerut genom djupgående och bergiga skogar ( Kilsbergen ) till Vänern och mynningen i Klarälven (där Karlstad nu ligger) . Här bosatte de sig och röjde . Snart hade de skapat en hel provins som kallas Värmland , där de skulle kunna göra bra boende.

    När svenskarna fick veta att Olof var clearing land , de var roade och kallade honom Tree- huggare . Olof gifte sig med en kvinna vid namn Solveig som var dotter till Halfdan Guldtand av Soleyar . Olof och Solveig hade två söner , Ingjald Olofsson och Halfdan Hvitbeinn , som vuxit upp i Soleyar i huset av hans mors morbror Sölve .

    På grund av kung Ivar Vidfamne och hans hårda regel många svenskar utvandrade till Värmland , och de blev så många att provinsen inte kunde upprätthålla dem. Landet var drabbat av hungersnöd som svenskarna anklagade kungen. Det var en gammal tradition i Sverige att hålla kungen som ansvarar för den rikedom av marken. Svenskarna anklagade Olof för att försumma sina offer till gudarna och trodde att detta var orsaken till svält.

    De svenska nybyggarna därmed gjorde uppror mot Olof , omringade hans hus vid stranden av sjön Vänern och brände honom i den. Således är han offrades till Oden , som hans förfader Domalde .

    Noterade händelser i hans liv var:
    • Han var en Konung i Norge.

    Olav gifte sig med Solveig Halvdansdatter AV Solør , dotter till Halvdan Gulltann och okända, ca 670 i Norge. ( Solveig Halvdansdatter AV Solør föddes omkring 650 i Solør , Norge och dog omkring 695 i Norge. )

    Källor 1 Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/ ).

    2 Snorre Sturlasson (ca 1179 till 1241 ), http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/OMACL/ ( Om 1225 ) , "Den YNGLINGA Saga " .

    Olav Tretelgja var ein konge or Ynglingeætta, son av Ingjald Illråde. Han er den første som etter segna fekk odel i Noreg[manglar kjelde].

    Olav laut røme frå Svitjod eller Svealand etter at far hans fall, av di sveane ikkje ville ha meir med ynglingane å gjere. Han vart jaga til skogbygdene i Värmland, som han rydda, og slik fekk han og namnet sitt, av di han sjølv var med og hogg tømmer der. Olav ekta dottera til kong Halvdan Gulltann i Solør, Solveig, og dei fekk sønene Ingjald og Halvdan Kvitbein.

    Olav vart innebrend av di sviane i Värmland trudde han gav dei dårlege år. Motsett dei førre ynglingekongane nekta han å blote. Seinare vart det røynd at uåra kom av stor folkevekst i landet, og kongen hadde ikkje skulda. Folk valde då Halvdan, sonen til Olav, til konge for seg.

    Henta frå «http://nn.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olav_Tretelgja»

    Olav var oppvokst på Grønnland, hanflyket til Sveige. Dermed gikk det såkalte Uppsalaveldet i Sveige ut av Ynglingeætta i rett linje, etter mane genrasjoner.Olav flyktet til Vermland -------------------- Blev ca 60 år.

    Född: omkring 630 Värmland Död: 690 Säffle

    Noteringar Småkung i Värmland, Svitjod. Född 630 i Gamla Uppsala (C). Död 690 i Svitjod, Säffle (S). Eftersom svearna hade bestämt sig att fördriva faderns ätt fortsatte Olav till Värmland och röjde skog, brände och byggde och blev därigenom kung i Värmland. Många svear strömmade till Värmland. Det blev därför svår hungersnöd och svält. De inflyttade svearna skyllde detta på sin kung och påstod att denne inte blotat tillräcligt mycket. Därför samlade de en här och belägrade Olavs hus och brände honom inne. Detta skedde vid Vänern. Makarna hade två söner Ingjald och Halfdan. Ingjald blev kung i Värmland. (Källa: Ynglingasagan) Vattenvägen från Säffle till Arvika kallas även Vikingaleden och detta får man väl också tillskriva Olof Trätälja. Ett arrangemang under sommaren med anknytning till detta är Vikingaveckan som inleds i Säffle och fortsätter i Arvika. Ingjald Illråde var far till Olof Trätälja och efter Ingjalds död skall Olof ha blivit fördriven av Ivar Vidfamne. Olof tog då sin tillflykt till Värmland där han grundade ett nytt rike och bröt ny mark. Det var denna nybyggargärning som gav honom tillnamnet Trätälja. Olof Trätälja är begravd i Säffle och hans gravhög vid gamla vattentornet är Värmlands största gravhög. (Källa: Thomas Jansson)

    Heimskringla

    His mother was Gauthild, a princess of West Götaland, whose maternal grandfather was Olof the Sharp-sighted, the king of Nerike.

    His mother sent him to his foster-father Bove in West Götaland, where he grew up with his foster-brother Saxe who was surnamed Flette.

    When Olof heard of his father's death, he assembled the men who were willing to follow him and went to his kinsmen in Nerike, because after his father's atrocities, the Swedes had grown hostile towards the Ynglings.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof and his kin had sought refuge in Nerike, they were attacked and had to head west through deep and mountainous forests (Kilsbergen) to Lake Vänern and the estuary of Klarälven (where Karlstad is presently situated). Here, they settled and cleared land. Soon they had created a whole province called Värmland, where they could make good living.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof was clearing land, they were amused and called him the Tree-feller. Olof married a woman named Solveig who was a daughter of Halfdan Guldtand of Soleyar. Olof and Solveigh had two sons, Ingjald Olofsson and Halfdan Hvitbeinn, who were brought up in Soleyar in the house of his mother's uncle Sölve.

    Because of king Ivar Vidfamne and his harsh rule many Swedes emigrated to Värmland, and they became so numerous that the province could not sustain them. The land was afflicted by famine of which the Swedes accused the king. It was an old tradition in Sweden of holding the king responsible for the wealth of the land (see Domalde). The Swedes accused Olof of neglecting his sacrifices to the gods and believed that this was the cause of the famine.

    The Swedish settlers thus rebelled against Olof, surrounded his house on the shores of lake Vänern and burnt him inside it. Thus he was sacrificed to Odin, like his ancestor Domalde.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olof_Tr%C3%A4t%C3%A4lja -------------------- The kingly line [of Norway], which Snorri [Sturlusson, 13th century historian] traces claimed descent from the ancient Yngling kings who ruled at Uppsala in Sweden. Their legendary Yngling ancestor was Olof Tretelgia Ingjaldsson, who had escaped the aftermath of his father's conflagration by fleeing to Norway.

    King Olof earned his nickname, which means "the Woodcutter", by clearing the forest and cultivating the land. He named his new domain Varmland and such a large group of Swedes followed him there "that the land could not give them sustenance."

    After a season of bad harvests, the woodcutting king was sacrificed to Odin so that his people might have good crops. He was succeeded by his son Halfdan Whiteleg, who is said to have extended his rule over much of southern Norway.

    [Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flander & Kiev] Title: Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flanders, and Kiev, by Rupert Alen & Anna Dahlquist, 1997, King's River Publ. -------------------- Olaf Ingjaldsson King Of Värmland 1 Birth: About 682 in , , Värmland, Sweden 2 3 Death: About 730 2 3 Sex: M Father: Ingjald "Braut" Onundsson King Of Uppsala b. 661 in , , Uppsala, Sweden Mother: Gauthild Algautsdotter b. About 664 in , , , Sweden

    Spouses & Children
    Solveig Halfdansdatter (Wife) b. About 670 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway)
    1 2 3 Marriage: Abt 701 in (, Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway) 6 Nov 2004 14:29 Children: Asa Olafsdatter b. About 706 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway Ingiald Olafsdatter b. About 702 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway Halfdan "Hvitbein" Olafsson King Of Uppsala b. 725 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Notes
    Individual:
    Name Suffix: King of Värmland Name Suffix: "The Wood Cutter" REFN: HWS8568 Ancestral File Number: FLHG-WS OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\c_crown.gifCHAN20 Mar 2001

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Sources
    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Title: "Royal Lines & Adamic Genealogy: Genealogical Research of A
    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Author: Schmuhl, Albert F. Publication: e-mail documentation, March 1997, Albert F. Schmuhl, Americ a Online Posting: Genealogy Forum Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral Fileâ„¢ v4.19" Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Publication: 3 Feb 2001

    Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson" Author: Larson, Kirk Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Desce ndants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library Title: "Héraldique européenne" Author: Arnaud Bunel Publication: Coats of Arms for European Royalty and Nobility (http://www .heraldique-europeenne.org, Arnaud Bunel, 1998) , Internet"Armigerous" (ahr-MIJ-ehr-us) adjective

    Bearing or entitled to bear heraldicarms.

    The reason the notion of a family crest was brought into th e languagewas that those who were armigerous (entitled to bear arms) used to put their crest or achieveme

    Olaf Traitelia was slain by enemies. Reigned as king from 680-710

    The kingly line [of Norway], which Snorri [Sturlusson, 13th century historian] traces claimed descent from the ancient Yngling kings who ruled at Uppsala in Sweden. Their legendary Yngling ancestor was Olof Tretelgia Ingjaldsson, who had escaped the aftermath of his father's conflagration by fleeing to Norway.

    Her King Olof earned his nickname, which means "the Woodcutter", by clearing the forest and cultivating the land. He named his new domain Varmland and such a large group of Swedes followed him there "that the land could not give them sustenance."
    Note: After a season of bad harvests, the woodcutting king was sacrificed to Odin so that his people might have good crops. He was succeeded by his son Halfdan Whiteleg, who is said to have extended his rule over much of southern Norway. Note: [Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flander & Kiev] Note: Title: Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flanders, and Kiev, by Rupert Alen & Anna Dahlquist, 1997, King's River Publ. Note: Page: 6
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olof_Tr%C3%A4t%C3%A4lja -------------------- Sacrificed (burnt in his house) for better crops by a troop of Sedes. -------------------- His mother was Gauthild, a princess of West Götaland, whose maternal grandfather was Olof the Sharp-sighted, the king of Nerike.

    His mother sent him to his foster-father Bove in West Götaland, where he grew up with his foster-brother Saxe who was surnamed Flette.

    When Olof heard of his father's death, he assembled the men who were willing to follow him and went to his kinsmen in Nerike, because after his father's atrocities, the Swedes had grown hostile towards the Ynglings.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof and his kin had sought refuge in Nerike, they were attacked and had to head west through deep and mountainous forests (Kilsbergen) to Lake Vänern and the estuary of Klarälven (where Karlstad is presently situated). Here, they settled and cleared land. Soon they had created a whole province called Värmland, where they could make good living.

    When the Swedes learnt that Olof was clearing land, they were amused and called him the Tree-feller. Olof married a woman named Solveig who was a daughter of Halfdan Guldtand of Sol

    Död:
    Innebränd i sitt hus av uppretade svear.

    Olof gift Drottning Solveig HALFDANSDATTER. Solveig föddes 688 i Solør (Soleyum), Norge; dog 704 i Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norge. [Familjeöversikt] [Familjediagram]


  2. 9.  Drottning Solveig HALFDANSDATTER föddes 688 i Solør (Soleyum), Norge; dog 704 i Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norge.

    Noteringar:

    Also Known As: "Sölva Hálfdanardóttir", "Solveig Halfdansdatter", "Sölveig Halfdansdóttir", "Solveig /Halfdansdotter/"
    Birthdate: 688
    Birthplace: Solør (Soleyum), Norway
    Death: 704 (16) Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway

    Närstående:
    Dotter till Halfdan Solvesson «goldtooth» Gulltann och ?? (not Moalda Digri)

    Hustru till Kung Olof Trätälja

    Moder till Ingjald Olofsson, king of Värmland; Åsa Olafsdatter, Trondheim och Halfdan Olafsson «Whiteshanks» Kvitbein

    Syster till Solve Halvdansson, King of Solør (Norway)

    Occupation: Drottning i Värmland, Drottning i Norge., "Sviadrottning" feltdronning (?), Drottning, Datter til Halvdan Gulltann

    About Solveig Halfdansdatter, fra Solør
    Olof and Solveigh had two sons, Ingjald Olofsson and Halfdan Hvitbeinn, who were brought up in Soleyar in the house of his mother's uncle Sölve.

    Solveig Halvdansdotter (Sölva Halfdansdóttir)

    ( = Solva Halvdansdotter / Sölveig Halfdansdóttir)

    In English: Solveig daughter of Halvdan

    Solveig er datter av Halvdan Solvesson Gulltann (Goldtooth). [Grunn til dobbelt navn for øyeblikket er å unngå feilflettinger, vil bli endret senere.]

    Solveig giftet seg med Olav Ingjaldsøn Tretelja Konge av Sverige, sønn av Ingjald Ildråde Konge av Sverige og Gauthild av Gotland.

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=&emne=nor&person=S%F6lva%20Halfdansd%F3ttir

    Solveig er datter av Halvdan Gulltann Solvesson

    Gift med Olof Trätälja Ingjaldsson

    Mor til Halvdan Kvitbein Olafsson

    Solveig married Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson, son of Ingjald Illråde Anundsson and Gauthild Algautsdotter, about 670 in Norway. (Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson was born about 650 in Norway and died about 690 in Norway.)

    Solveig Halvdansdatter Av Solør

    * Born: Abt 650, Solør, Norway
    * Marriage: Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson Abt 670, Norway
    * Died: Abt 695, Norway, about age 45
    Solveig married Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson, son of Ingjald Illråde Anundsson and Gauthild Algautsdotter, about 670 in Norway. (Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson was born about 650 in Norway and died about 690 in Norway.) The cause of his death was he was burned to death.

    BIRTH: Solør

    Father: Halvdan Solvesson GULLTANN

    Mother: Gudrød

    Family 1 : Olav Ingjaldsøn TRETELJA

    +Halvdan Olavsson KVITBEIN

    Kilde: nermo.org

    Solveig Halfdansdatter 290 SmartMatches

    Birth: About 670 in <, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway> 1 2 3

    Death:

    Sex: F

    Father: Halfdan "Gold Tooth" Solfasson b. About 645 in (, Soleyum, Stockholm, Sweden)

    Mother: Halfdan Solfasson b. About 649 in (, Soleyum, Stockholm, Sweden)

    Spouses & Children
    Eystein Haardaade King Of Hedmark (Husband) b. About 668 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway)
    1 2

    Marriage: Abt 699 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway) 6 Nov 2004 14:29

    Children:

    Hogna Eysteinsson b. About 700 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway)

    Frode Eysteinsson b. About 702 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway)

    Asa Eysteinsdatter Princess Of Hedmark b. About 710 in (, , Uppsala, Sweden)

    Hodne Eysteinsson b. About 704 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway)

    Olaf Ingjaldsson King Of Värmland (Husband) b. About 682 in , , Värmland, Sweden

    4 1 2

    Marriage: Abt 701 in (, Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway) 6 Nov 2004 14:29

    Children:

    Asa Olafsdatter b. About 706 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway

    Ingiald Olafsdatter b. About 702 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway

    Halfdan "Hvitbein" Olafsson King Of Uppsala b. 725 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Notes
    Individual:
    REFN: HWS8569

    Ancestral File Number: FLHG-X0

    (Research):See attached sources.CHAN23 Jul 2002CHAN20 Mar 2001

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Sources
    Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral Fileâ„¢ v4.19"
    Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

    Publication: 3 Feb 2001

    Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson"

    Author: Larson, Kirk

    Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Desce

    ndants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library

    Title: "Pedigree Resource File - CD-Rom"

    Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

    Publication: 12 Feb 2001

    Text: Alternate Title: Family History Resource File

    Page: Compact Disc #31 Pin #157553

    Quality: 3

    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Title: "Royal Lines & Adamic Genealogy: Genealogical Research of A

    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Author: Schmuhl, Albert F.

    Publication: e-mail documentation, March 1997, Albert F. Schmuhl, Americ

    a Online Posting: Genealogy Forum

    Asa Eysteinsdottir and her husband Halfdan "White-leg" both have mothers named Solveig Halfdandsdottir. Apparently they are two different people. The ancestry of Asa's mother is unknown.

    Olof and Solveigh had two sons, Ingjald Olofsson and Halfdan Hvitbeinn, who were brought up in Soleyar in the house of his mother's uncle Sölve.
    Solveig Halvdansdotter (Sölva Halfdansdóttir)

    ( = Solva Halvdansdotter / Sölveig Halfdansdóttir)

    In English: Solveig daughter of Halvdan

    Solveig er datter av Halvdan Solvesson Gulltann (Goldtooth). [Grunn til dobbelt navn for øyeblikket er å unngå feilflettinger, vil bli endret senere.]

    Solveig giftet seg med Olav Ingjaldsøn Tretelja Konge av Sverige, sønn av Ingjald Ildråde Konge av Sverige og Gauthild av Gotland.

    http://lind.no/nor/index.asp?lang=&emne=nor&person=S%F6lva%20Halfdansd%F3ttir

    Solveig er datter av Halvdan Gulltann Solvesson

    Gift med Olof Trätälja Ingjaldsson

    Mor til Halvdan Kvitbein Olafsson

    Solveig married Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson, son of Ingjald Illråde Anundsson and Gauthild Algautsdotter, about 670 in Norway. (Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson was born about 650 in Norway and died about 690 in Norway.)

    Solveig Halvdansdatter Av Solør

    * Born: Abt 650, Solør, Norway
    * Marriage: Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson Abt 670, Norway
    * Died: Abt 695, Norway, about age 45
    Solveig married Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson, son of Ingjald Illråde Anundsson and Gauthild Algautsdotter, about 670 in Norway. (Olav "Tretelgja" Ingjaldsson was born about 650 in Norway and died about 690 in Norway.) The cause of his death was he was burned to death.

    BIRTH: Solør

    Father: Halvdan Solvesson GULLTANN

    Mother: Gudrød

    Family 1 : Olav Ingjaldsøn TRETELJA

    +Halvdan Olavsson KVITBEIN

    Kilde: nermo.org

    Solveig Halfdansdatter 290 SmartMatches

    Birth: About 670 in <, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway> 1 2 3

    Death:

    Sex: F

    Father: Halfdan "Gold Tooth" Solfasson b. About 645 in (, Soleyum, Stockholm, Sweden)

    Mother: Halfdan Solfasson b. About 649 in (, Soleyum, Stockholm, Sweden)

    Spouses & Children
    Eystein Haardaade King Of Hedmark (Husband) b. About 668 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway)
    1 2

    Marriage: Abt 699 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway) 6 Nov 2004 14:29

    Children:

    Hogna Eysteinsson b. About 700 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway)

    Frode Eysteinsson b. About 702 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway)

    Asa Eysteinsdatter Princess Of Hedmark b. About 710 in (, , Uppsala, Sweden)

    Hodne Eysteinsson b. About 704 in (, Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway)

    Olaf Ingjaldsson King Of Värmland (Husband) b. About 682 in , , Värmland, Sweden

    4 1 2

    Marriage: Abt 701 in (, Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway) 6 Nov 2004 14:29

    Children:

    Asa Olafsdatter b. About 706 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway

    Ingiald Olafsdatter b. About 702 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway

    Halfdan "Hvitbein" Olafsson King Of Uppsala b. 725 in , Ringerike, Buskerud, Norway

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Notes
    Individual:
    REFN: HWS8569

    Ancestral File Number: FLHG-X0

    (Research):See attached sources.CHAN23 Jul 2002CHAN20 Mar 2001

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    Sources
    Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral Fileâ„¢ v4.19"
    Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

    Publication: 3 Feb 2001

    Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson"

    Author: Larson, Kirk

    Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Desce

    ndants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library

    Title: "Pedigree Resource File - CD-Rom"

    Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

    Publication: 12 Feb 2001

    Text: Alternate Title: Family History Resource File

    Page: Compact Disc #31 Pin #157553

    Quality: 3

    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Title: "Royal Lines & Adamic Genealogy: Genealogical Research of A

    lbert F. Schmuhl, "Author: Schmuhl, Albert F.

    Publication: e-mail documentation, March 1997, Albert F. Schmuhl, Americ

    a Online Posting: Genealogy Forum

    Asa Eysteinsdottir and her husband Halfdan "White-leg" both have mothers named Solveig Halfdandsdottir. Apparently they are two different people. The ancestry of Asa's mother is unknown.

    BIOGRAFI:
    Nicknames: "Sölva Hálfdanardóttir", "Solveig Halfdansdatter", "Sölveig Halfdansdóttir", "Solveig /Halfdansdotter/"

    Birthdate: cirka 650

    Birthplace: Solør, Hedmark, Norway

    Death: Died 704 in Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway

    Occupation: Drottning i Värmland, Drottning i Norge., "Sviadrottning" feltdronning (?), Drottning

    Solveig er datter av Halvdan Gulltann Solvesson

    Gift med Olof Trätälja Ingjaldsson

    Mor til Halvdan Kvitbein Olafsson

    Sölveig Halvdansdatter (daughter of Halvdan Guldtann i Solor Solvasson)841, 842, 843 was born Abt. 684 in Trodheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway, and died date unknown. She married (1) King Eystein "Hårdråde" Trondsson. She married (2) King Olaf "Treeshaver" på Vårmland on Abt. 701 in Romerike, Buskerud, Norway

    Barn:
    1. 4. Kung Halfdan "Kvitbein" OLAFSSON föddes ca 710 i (Svitjod), Värmland, Sverige; dog ca 750 i Østre Toten, Oppland, Norge; begravdes i Tjølling ved Sandefjord, Norge.