Showing posts with label Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye. Show all posts

12 January 2026

Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye

When Sigurd was three years old, two half-brothers were killed by the Swedish King Eysteinn Beli. His mother asked Sigurd's older brothers to avenge the deaths, but they (including Ivar the Boneless) feared that the Swedish king's magic was too powerful (they heard that he had a magic cow!). Three-year-old Sigurd wanted to attack, however, which encouraged the others to gather ships and men. They succeeded in killing Eysteinn.

In his Gesta Danorum ("Deeds of the Danish People"), Saxo Grammaticus writes that Sigurd was close to his father, Ragnar Lodbrok, traveling with Ragnar in Scotland and being named sub-ruler of conquered territories. We also learn that Sigurd went with Ragnar through the Kievan Rus all the way to the Hellespont.

When Ragnar died (killed by Ælla of Northumbria, prompting Ragnar's sons to launch the Great Heathen Army), Sigurd inherited the island of Zealand, the province of Scania and Halland, the Danish islands, and Viken (the strait between Norway, Sweden, and Jutland). He is also referred to in many records as the co-ruler of Denmark with his older brother Halfdan (who was away most of the time with the Great Heathen Army).

The "evidence" of co-rulership comes from Frankish sources that mention Sigfred and Halfdan as rulers in 873 (The names "Sigfrid" and "Sigurd" were often mixed up in literature). The known Danish King Harthacanute (not this one in England, but an earlier designated with a "I" in Denmark) was the son of "Sigurd" in the proper time frame.

What about Sigurd's nickname? It is said he was born with a mark in his left eye that looked like a snake. You might spot the difference in the 1670 engraving pictured above.

Some of the above comes from  Ragnarssona þáttr, "The Tale of Ragnar's sons." It mentions that, when word came of Ragnar's death, two of Ragnar's son, Björn Ironside and Hvitserk ("white shirt," believed to be a nickname of Halfdan) were playing tafl. That reference got me looking into tafl, a table game several forms of which have been played for centuries. I'll tell you more tomorrow.

11 January 2026

Halfdan Ragnarsson

Son of the legendary Ragnar Lodbrok and leader of the Great Heathen Army, Halfdan Ragnarsson went on to become King of Jorvik, of Dublin, and co-ruler of Denmark.

In 866, just a year after the Great Heathen Army had arrived on the shores of East Anglia, it had moved northward and invaded Northumbria, which at the time was caught up in a battle between Ælla of Northumbria and King Osberht of Northumbria. Halfdan's army captured Jorvik (York). An alliance between Ælla and Osberht to recapture York failed. A 12th-century monk, Symeon of Durham, wrote of the result:

Nearly all the Northumbrians were routed and destroyed, the two kings being slain; the survivors made peace with the pagans. After these events, the pagans appointed Egbert king under their own dominion; Egbert reigned for six years, over the Northumbrians beyond the Tyne.

Halfdan had less success further south: he battled the West Saxons nine times, unable to conquer them. He eventually made a truce with the King of Wessex, Alfred the Great. The army then retreated to London for the winter, during which time (871/72) coins were minted with Halfdan's name on them.

In 874 he conquered Mercia and its king, Burghred, and a puppet was put in place, according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle:

And the same year they gave Ceolwulf, an unwise king's thane, the Mercian kingdom to hold; and he swore oaths to them, and gave hostages, that it should be ready for them on whatever day they would have it; and he would be ready with himself, and with all those that would remain with him, at the service of the army.

The Annals of Ulster say the king of Dublin, Eystein Olafsson, was "deceitfully" killed by Albann, a name recognized to be Halfdan. His time as King of Dublin lasted only a couple years; he lost the spot when he returned to Northumbria. Records list him as King of Jorvik starting in 876.

Attempting to regain Dublin, he was opposed by the "Fair Heathens," Vikings who had established Ireland as their home long before the "Dark Heathens" which were Halfdan's interlopers. The fair Heathens defeated him, and he was killed.

So that explains Jorvik and Dublin, but how was e co-ruler of Denmark, and with whom? Tomorrow you will meet Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye!