Ragnar Lodbrok

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Ragnar Lodbrok ("Ragnar hairy-breeches") (Old Norse: Ragnarr loðbrók),[a] according to legends,[2] was a Viking hero and a Swedish and Danish king.[3]

Ragnar Lodbrok
Ragnar Lodbrok with sons Ivar and Ubba, 15th-century miniature in Harley MS 2278 folio 39r
DiedTraditional date: 865
Northumbria, England
Known forLegendary exploits and raids across Europe
TitleLegendary Viking Hero and King
PredecessorSigurd Ring (according to legend)
SuccessorSigurd Snake-in-the-Eye (according to legend)
Parents
  • Sigurd Ring (according to legend) (father)
  • Åsa, daughter of King Harald of the Red Moustache (according to legend) (mother)

He is known from Old Norse poetry of the Viking Age, Icelandic sagas, and near-contemporary chronicles. According to traditional literature, Ragnar distinguished himself by conducting many raids against the British Isles and the Carolingian Empire during the 9th century. He also appears in Norse legends, and according to the legendary sagas Tale of Ragnar's Sons and a Saga about Certain Ancient Kings,[4] Ragnar Lodbrok's father has been given as the legendary king of the Swedes, Sigurd Ring.[5][6]

Accounts

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Icelandic sagas

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A warrior with shaggy breeches, killing a beast, on one of the Torslunda plates. The man has been identified with Ragnar Lodbrok in an early Swedish version of the legend (Schück). More recently, it has been interpreted as showing a Germanic initiation ritual in which shaggy trousers played a role and which may subsequently have contributed to the legend of Ragnar Lodbrok.[7]

According to the Tale of Ragnar Lodbrok, Tale of Ragnar's Sons, Heimskringla, Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks, Sögubrot af nokkrum fornkonungum, and many other Icelandic sources, Ragnar was the son of the king of Sweden Sigurd Ring. Nearly all of the sagas agree that the Danish king Randver was Sigurd's father, with the Hervarar saga citing his wife as Åsa, the daughter of King Harald of the Red Moustache from Norway. The accounts further tell that Randver was a grandson of the legendary Scandinavian king Ivar Vidfamne by his daughter Aud (whom the Hervarar saga calls Alfhild).[8] After the death of King Ivar Vidfamne, Aud's eldest son by the Danish king Hrœrekr Ringslinger, Harald, conquered all of his grandfather's territory and became known as Harald Wartooth. Harald's nephew Sigurd Ring became the chief king of Sweden after Randver's death (Denmark according to the Hervarar saga), presumably as the subking of Harald. Sigurd and Harald fought the Battle of the Brávellir (Bråvalla) on the plains of Östergötland, where Harald and many of his men died. Sigurd then ruled Sweden and Denmark (being sometimes identified with a Danish king Sigfred who ruled from about 770 until his death prior to 804). He sired a son with the princess Alfhild of the petty kingdom of Álfheimr, Ragnar Lodbrok, who succeeded him.[9] Eysteinn Beli, who according to the Hervarar Saga was Harald Wartooth's son, ruled Sweden sometime after Sigurd until he was slain by the sons of Ragnar and Aslaug.[10]

In their accounts of his reign, the fornaldarsǫgur (Legendary sagas, or sagas of scandinavian prehistory),[11][12] tell more about Ragnar's marriages than about feats of warfare. According to the Sögubrot, "he was the biggest and fairest of men that human eyes have seen, and he was like his mother in appearance and took after her kin".[13] He first killed a giant snake that guarded the abode of the Geatish jarl Herrauð's daughter Thora Borgarhjort, thereby winning her as his wife. The unusual protective clothes that Ragnar wore when attacking the serpent, earned him the nickname Lodbrok.[a] His sons with Thora were Erik and Agnar. After Thora died, he discovered Kráka, a woman of outstanding beauty and wisdom living with a poor peasant couple in Norway, and married her. This marriage resulted in the sons Ivar the Boneless, Björn Ironside, Hvitserk, Ragnvald, and Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye.[14] Kráka was later revealed to actually be Aslaug, a secret daughter of the renowned hero Sigurd Fafnesbane. As the sons grew up to become renowned warriors, Ragnar, not wishing to be outdone, resolved to conquer England with merely two ships. He was however defeated by superior English forces and was thrown into a snake pit to die in agony.[15] The Saga of Ragnar Lodbrok, Tale of Ragnar's Sons, and Heimskringla all tell of the Great Heathen Army that invaded England at around 866, led by the sons of Ragnar Lodbrok to wreak revenge against King Ælla of Northumbria who is told to have captured and executed Ragnar.

Danish sources

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The Chronicon Roskildense (c. 1138) mentions Lodbrok (Lothpardus) as father to the utterly cruel Norse King Ywar (rex crudelissimus Normannorum Ywar) and his brothers, Inguar (a double of Ywar), Ubbi, Byorn and Ulf, who rule the northern peoples. They call on the various Danish petty kings to help them ruin the realm of the Franks. Ywar successfully attacks the kingdoms of Britain, though not as an act of revenge as in the Icelandic sagas.[16] The chronicle of Sven Aggesen (c. 1190) is the first Danish text that mentions the full name, Regnerus Lothbrogh. His son Sigurd invades Denmark and kills its king, whose daughter he marries as he takes over the throne. Their son in turn is Knut, ancestor of the later Danish kings.[17]

Neither of these sources mentions Ragnar Lodbrok as a Danish ruler. The first to do so is Saxo Grammaticus in his work Gesta Danorum (c. 1200). This work mixes Norse legend with data about Danish history derived from the chronicle of Adam of Bremen (c. 1075).[18] Here Ragnar's father Sigurd Ring is a Norwegian prince married to a Danish princess, and different from the victor of Brávellir (who had flourished about thirteen generations earlier). Sigurd Ring and his cousin and rival Ring (that is, Sigfred and Anulo of recorded history, d. 812) are both killed in battle, whereupon Ragnar is elevated to the Danish kingship (identified by Saxo with Ragnfred, d. 814[19]).[20] His first deed is the defeat of the Swedish king Frö, who has killed Ragnar's grandfather. Ragnar is assisted in this by a ferocious shield-maiden named Ladgerda (Lagertha), whom Ragnar forces to marry him, after killing a bear and a great hound to win her hand. In this marriage he sires the son Fridleif and two daughters.[21] Ragnar later repudiates his marriage to Ladgerda and marries Thora Borgarhjort, a daughter of the Swedish king Herrauðr, after killing two venomous giant snakes that guard Thora's residence. His sons with Thora are Radbard, Dunvat, Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, Björn Ironside, Agnar and Ivar the Boneless. From a non-marital relationship with an unnamed woman (described only as a daughter of a man named Esbjørn), Ragnar fathered Ubbe. Another, final marriage, to Svanlaug (possibly another name for Aslaug) produces another three sons: Ragnvald, Eric Weatherhat and Hvitserk.[22]

The sons were installed as sub-kings in various conquered territories. Ragnar led a Viking expedition to England and killed its king, Hama, before killing the earls of Scotland and installing Sigurd Snake-in-the Eye and Radbard as governors. Norway was also subjugated, and Fridleif was made ruler there and in Orkney. Later on, Ragnar with three sons invaded Sweden where a new king called Sörle had appeared and withheld the heritage of Thora's sons. Sörle and his army were massacred and Björn Ironside was installed on the throne.[23] Some time later Björn was put in charge of Norway, while Ragnar appointed another son, Eric Weatherhat, as ruler in Sweden; he was subsequently killed by a certain Eysteinn. One of the sons, Ubbe, revolted against his father at the instigation of his maternal grandfather Esbjørn, and could only be defeated and captured with utmost effort.[24] Saxo moreover tells of repeated expeditions to the British Isles, one of which cost the lives of Dunvat and Radbard. Ælla, son of Hama, with the help of allies known collectively as the Galli – possibly a group of Norse-Gaels (who were known in Old Irish as Gall-Goídil),[25] expelled Ragnar's sub-ruler Ivar the Boneless from England and remained a persistent enemy.[26] Finally, the Scythians were forced to accept Hvitserk as their ruler. In the end Hvitserk was treacherously captured by the Hellespontian prince Daxon and burnt alive with his own admission. Hearing this, Ragnar led an expedition to Kievan Rus' and captured Daxon who was spared and exiled.[27]

Unlike the Icelandic sources, Saxo's account of Ragnar Lodbrok's reign is largely a catalog of successful Viking invasions over an enormous geographical area. Among the seaborne expeditions was one against the Bjarmians and Finns (Saami) in the Arctic north. The Bjarmian use of magic spells caused foul weather and the sudden death of many Danish invaders, and the Finnish archers on skis turned out to be a formidable foe. Eventually these two tribes were put to flight and the Bjarmian king was slain.[28] The historical king Harald Klak is by Saxo (based on a passage in Adam's chronicle) made into another persistent enemy of Ragnar, who several times incited the Jutes and Scanians to rebel, but was regularly defeated. After the last victory over Harald, Ragnar learned that King Ælla had massacred Ragnar's men on Ireland. Incensed, he attacked the English king with his fleet but was captured and thrown to his death in the snake pit - the fate ascribed by tradition to the early Burgundian king Gunnar, as recounted in the Icelandic sagas. In spite of all his praise for Ragnar Lodbrok, Saxo also considers his fate as God's rightful vengeance for the contempt he had shown the Christian religion.[29]

Poetic and epigraphic sources

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While the narrative Norse sources date from the 12th and 13th centuries, there are also many older poems that mention him and his kin. The Ragnarsdrápa, ostensibly composed by Bragi Boddason in the 9th century, praises a Ragnar, son of Sigurd, for a richly decorated shield that the poet has received. The shield depicts the assault on Jörmunrek, the Hjaðningavíg tale, the ploughing of Gefjon, and Thor's struggle with the Midgard Serpent. Recent scholarship has suggested that the poem is in fact from c. 1000 and celebrates the Norse reconquest of England. The four tales depicted on the shield would then symbolize four aspects of the Lodbrok saga (the initial defeat of the sons of Lodbrok in England due to recklessness, Ivar the Boneless's deceitful approach to King Ælla, Ivar's cunning snatching of land from Ælla, Ragnar's struggle against the giant serpent in order to win Thora).[30] The Knutsdrapa of Sigvat Thordarson (c. 1038) mentions the death of Ælla at the hands of Ivar in York, who "carved the eagle on Ælla's back".[31] From this the story of the atrocious revenge of Lodbrok's sons already seems to be present. The reference to a "blood eagle" punishment has however been much debated by modern scholars.[32] Another lay, Krakumal, put in the mouth of the dying Ragnar in the snake pit, recounts the exploits of Ragnar and mentions battles over a wide geographical area, several relating to the British isles. The poem's name, "Kráka's lay", alludes to Ragnar's wife's Kráka,[33] though modern philologists commonly date it to the 12th century in its present form.[34]

There is one runic inscription mentioning Lodbrok, carved on the prehistorical tumulus of Maeshowe on Orkney in the early 12th century. It reads: "This howe was built a long time before Lodbrok's. Her sons, they were bold; scarcely ever were there such tall men of their hands".[35] The expression "her sons" has given rise to the theory that Lodbrok was originally thought of as a woman,[36] mother of the historically known sons.[32]

Frankish accounts of a 9th-century Viking leader

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The Siege of Paris and the Sack of Paris of 845 were the culmination of a Viking invasion of the kingdom of the West Franks. The Viking forces were led by a Norse chieftain named "Reginherus", or Ragnar.[37] This Ragnar has often been tentatively identified with the legendary saga figure Ragnar Lodbrok,[38] but the accuracy of this is disputed by historians.[39][40] Ragnar Lodbrok is also sometimes identified with a Ragnar who was awarded land in Torhout, Flanders, by Charles the Bald in about 841 but eventually lost the land as well as the favour of the King.[41] Ragnar's Vikings raided Rouen on their way up the Seine in 845 and in response to the invasion, determined not to let the royal Abbey of Saint-Denis (near Paris) be destroyed, Charles assembled an army which he divided into two parts, one for each side of the river.[42][39] Ragnar attacked and defeated one of the divisions of the smaller Frankish army, took 111 of their men as prisoners and hanged them on an island on the Seine to honour the Norse god Odin, as well as to incite terror in the remaining Frankish forces.[37][39] Ragnar's fleet made it back to his overlord, the Danish King Horik I, but Ragnar soon died from a violent illness that also spread in Denmark.[43]

Later continental accounts

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Among the oldest texts to mention the name Lodbrok is the Norman history of William of Jumièges from c. 1070. According to William, the Danish kings of old had the custom to expel the younger sons from the kingdom to have them out of the way. It was during the time this practice was in fashion that King Lodbrok succeeded his unnamed father on the Danish throne. After gaining power he honoured the said custom and ordered his junior son Björn Ironside to leave his realm. Björn thus left Denmark with a considerable fleet and started to ravage in West Francia and later the Mediterranean.[44] Roughly contemporary with William is Adam of Bremen whose history of the Archbishopric of Hamburg-Bremen contains many traditions about Viking Age Scandinavia. In a passage referring to the Viking raids of the late 9th century, he mentions the Danish or Norse pirates Horich, Orwig, Gotafrid, Rudolf and Inguar (Ivar). This Ivar is in particular seen as a cruel persecutor of Christians, and a son of Lodbrok (Inguar, filius Lodparchi).[45]

Anglo-Saxon and Irish accounts of the father of Ivar and Halfdan

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According to the contemporary Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and Asser's Life of Alfred, in 878 the "brother of Hingwar and Healfden", with a naval fleet, a contingent of the Great Heathen Army invaded Devon in England and fought the Battle of Cynwit. There the Vikings lost, their king slain and many dead, with few escaping to their ships. After the battle the Saxons took great plunder, and among other things the banner called "Raven".[46] The early 12th century Annals of St Neots further state that "they say that the three sisters of Hingwar and Hubba, daughters of Lodebroch (Lodbrok), wove that flag and got it ready in one day. They say, moreover, that in every battle, wherever the flag went before them, if they were to gain the victory a live crow would appear flying on the middle of the flag; but if they were doomed to be defeated it would hang down motionless, and this was often proved to be so."[47] This is among the earlier references to the legendary hero Ragnar Lodbrok.

The Irish Cogad Gáedel re Gallaib from the 12th century, with information deriving from earlier annals, mentions king Halfdan (d. 877) under the name "mac Ragnaill".[48] The form Ragnall may refer to either Ragnvald or Ragnar, and the entry is a strong indication that the name of Ivar's and Halfdan's father was really Ragnar or a similar name.[49] The early 11th century Three Fragments contains a passage that gives a semi-legendary background to the capture of York by the Vikings in 866. The two younger sons of Halfdan, King of Lochlann, expelled the eldest son Ragnall who sailed to the Orkney islands with his three sons and settled there. Two of the sons later raided the English and Franks, proceeding to plunder in the Mediterranean. One of them learnt from a vision that Ragnall had fought a battle where the third son had been slain and in which he himself had most likely perished. The two Viking sons then returned home with a lot of dark-skinned captives.[50] It has been hypothesized that this is an Irish version of Ragnar Lodbrok's saga, the Mediterranean expedition being a historical event taking place in 859-61.[51]

Ragnar's sons

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The saga as published by Norstedts in a large-size illustrated version (1880).

The Great Heathen Army is said to have been led by the sons of Ragnar Lodbrok, to wreak revenge against King Ælla of Northumbria who had previously executed Ragnar by casting him into a pit full of venomous snakes.[52] Among the organizers were at least some of the brothers: Ivar the Boneless, Ubba, Halfdan, Björn Ironside, Hvitserk, and Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, all of whom are known as historical figures, save the slightly more dubious Hvitserk.[53] Ivar the Boneless was the leader of the Great Heathen Army from 865 to 870, but he disappears from English historical accounts after 870.[54] The Anglo-Saxon chronicler Æthelweard records Ivar's death as 870.[55] Halfdan Ragnarsson became the leader of the Great Heathen Army in about 870 and he led it in an invasion of Wessex.[56] A great number of Viking warriors arrived from Scandinavia, as part of the Great Summer Army, led by King Bagsecg of Denmark, bolstering the ranks of Halfdan's army.[57]

According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the Danes battled the West Saxons nine times, including the Battle of Ashdown on 8 January 871, where Bagsecg was killed.[58] Halfdan accepted a truce from the future Alfred the Great, newly crowned king of Wessex.[59] After Bagsecg's death Halfdan was the only remaining king of the invading host. He may also have been a King of part of Denmark (Jutland?), since a co-ruler Halfdan is mentioned in Frankish sources in 873.[60] According to late sagas Björn Ironside became King of Sweden and Uppsala, although this presents chronological inconsistencies.[61] Björn had two sons, Erik and Refil Björnsson. His son Erik became the next king of Sweden, and was succeeded in turn by Erik Refilsson, the son of Refil.[62] Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye is perhaps the same person as Sigfred, brother of Halfdan, who was king in Denmark together with Halfdan in 873.[63] According to the sagas Sigurd became King of Zealand, Skåne and the lesser Danish Isles.[64] Sigfred-Sigurd possibly succeeded his brother Halfdan as King of entire Denmark in about 877, and may be the Viking king Sigfred who was killed in West Francia in 887.[65]

Sources and historical accuracy

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Ragnar receives Kráka (Aslaug), as imagined by August Malmström.
 
19th-century artist's impression of Ælla of Northumbria's execution of Ragnar Lodbrok

Whereas Ragnar's sons Ivar the Boneless, Halfdan Ragnarsson, Björn Ironside, Ubba and Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye are historical figures, opinion regarding their father is divided. Contemporary academia regards most of the stories about him to be fiction. According to Hilda Ellis Davidson, writing in 1979, "Certain scholars in recent years have come to accept at least part of Ragnar's story as based on historical fact."[66]

The most significant medieval sources that mention Ragnar include:

In her commentary on Saxo's Gesta Danorum, Davidson notes that Saxo's coverage of Ragnar's legend in book IX of the Gesta appears to be an attempt to consolidate many of the confusing and contradictory events and stories known to the chronicler into the reign of one king, Ragnar. That is why many acts ascribed to Ragnar in the Gesta can be associated, through other sources, with various figures, some of whom are more historically tenable.[66]

The candidates scholars like to associate with the "historical Ragnar" include:

  • the Reginherus or Ragnar who besieged Paris in 845
  • the Danish King Horik I (d. 854)
  • King Reginfrid (d. 814), a king who ruled part of Denmark in tandem with his brother Harald Klak, but was expelled by Horik I and his brothers and later fell in a battle against them
  • possibly the Ragnall (Ragnvald or Ragnar) of the Irish Annals[67]

Attempts to reliably associate the legendary Ragnar with one or several of those men have failed because of the difficulty in reconciling the various accounts and their chronology. But the tradition of a Viking hero named Ragnar (or similar) who wreaked havoc in mid-9th-century Europe and who fathered many famous sons is remarkably persistent, and some aspects of it are strengthened by relatively reliable sources, such as Irish historical tradition and, indirectly, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.[25]

In literature and media

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Ragnar Lodbrok features prominently in the following works:

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b "Ragnar" (meaning Raven) and "Lodbrok" (meaning "leather trousers" or "hairy breeches").[1]

Citations

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  1. ^ Hughes, David (2007). The British Chronicles. Vol. 1. Heritage. p. 274. ISBN 978-0-7884-4490-6.
  2. ^ Harrison 1993, p. 16.
  3. ^ Du Chaillu, Paul B. (2015). The Viking Age Vol. 2 (of 2) (Illustrations): The early history, manners, and customs of the ancestors of the English-speaking nations. The Viking Age Series. J.J. Little & Co. p. 291. ISBN 978-0599543584. Archived from the original on 5 April 2023. Retrieved 1 June 2020. Gutenberg Project version Archived 28 January 2020 at the Wayback Machine, published 13 December 2017.
  4. ^ Sögubrot 1200.
  5. ^ Lindbergh, Katarina Harrison (2017). Nordisk mytologi: Från a till Ö. Svenska Historiska Media Förlag. ISBN 978-9175453705. Archived from the original on 5 April 2023. Retrieved 20 October 2020.
  6. ^ Butler, Josh "The Real Ragnar Lothbrok." Archived 20 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine Historic UK. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  7. ^ McTurk (1991) Studies in 'Ragnar's Saga Lodbrokar' and Its Major Scandinavian Analogues. Society for the Study of Mediaeval Languages Lit. p. 10, 15, 36, 37
  8. ^ Tolkien, Christopher; Turville-Petre, G., eds. (1956). "Hervarar Saga ok Heidreks" (PDF). Viking Society for Northern Research. London: 68–9. Archived (PDF) from the original on 1 August 2019. Retrieved 20 October 2019.
  9. ^ "Sögubrot, Chapter 10". Archived from the original on 8 September 2010.
  10. ^ "The Tale of Ragnar's Sons, Chapter 2". Germanicmythology.com. Archived from the original on 22 September 2013. Retrieved 20 October 2019.
  11. ^ "Stories for all time: The Icelandic fornaldarsögur". Fasnl.ku.dk. Archived from the original on 23 February 2022. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
  12. ^ "fornaldarsögur, chapter 25". Researchgate.net.
  13. ^ " Sögubrot, Chapter 10". Archived from the original on 8 September 2010.
  14. ^ "Ragnars Saga Lodbrokar, Chapters 4 and 7". Archived from the original on 25 October 2019. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  15. ^ "Ragnars Saga Lodbrokar, Chapter 15". Archived from the original on 25 October 2019. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  16. ^ "Chronicon Roskildense, p. 16". 1917.
  17. ^ "Sven Aggeson, p. 106". 1917.
  18. ^ "Storm (1877), p. 387-9". 1871. Archived from the original on 4 November 2020. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  19. ^ "Storm (1877), p. 399". Historisk Tidskrift. 1871. Archived from the original on 26 October 2020. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  20. ^ "Saxo Grammaticus, Book 9, p. 539–41". 1905.
  21. ^ "Saxo Grammaticus, Book 9, p. 542-3". 1905.
  22. ^ "Saxo Grammaticus, Book 9, p. 545, 550". 1905.
  23. ^ "Saxo Grammaticus, Book 9, p. 551". 1905.
  24. ^ "Saxo Grammaticus, Book 9, p. 557". 1905.
  25. ^ a b Smyth (1977).
  26. ^ "Saxo Grammaticus, Book 9, p. 560-1". 1905.
  27. ^ "Saxo Grammaticus, Book 9, p. 558-9". 1905.
  28. ^ "Saxo Grammaticus, Book 9, p. 558-9". 1905.
  29. ^ "Saxo Grammaticus, Book 9, p. 562-3". 1905.
  30. ^ "Ragnarsdrápa", Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde, Vol. 24, p. 115.
  31. ^ Smyth (1977), p. 193–4.
  32. ^ a b "Kings and kingship in Viking Northumbria". 26 September 2008. Archived from the original on 26 September 2008. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
  33. ^ "Krákumál", Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde, Vol. 17 (2001), p. 299-300.
  34. ^ Smyth (1977), p. 73-80.
  35. ^ Smyth (1977), p. 81.
  36. ^ Gustav Storm (1877). "Ragnar Lodbrok og Lodbrokssønnerne; studie i dansk oldhistorie og nordisk sagnhistorie". Historisk Tidskrift. Archived from the original on 27 October 2020. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  37. ^ a b Kohn 2006, p. 588.
  38. ^ Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde, Vol. 24, p. 111, 113, 116.
  39. ^ a b c Jones 2001, p. 212.
  40. ^ Sprague 2007, p. 225.
  41. ^ Sawyer 2001, p. 40.
  42. ^ Duckett 1988, p. 181.
  43. ^ "Storm (1877), p. 438". Historisk Tidskrift. 1871. Archived from the original on 14 June 2020. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  44. ^ Guillaume de Jumièges, Histoire des ducs de Normandie, p. 11-3. Chez Mancel. 1826. Archived from the original on 27 October 2020. Retrieved 20 October 2019.
  45. ^ "Adam von Bremen, Hamburgische Kirchengeschichte, p. 39-40". Hannover, Hahn. 1917.
  46. ^ Garmonsway, G.N. (1972), The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. London: Dent, p. 75-7.
  47. ^ Garmonsway, G.N. (1972), The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. London: Dent, p. 77.
  48. ^ Todd, James Henthorn (28 February 1867). "Cogadh Gaedhel re Gallaibh = The war of the Gaedhil with the Gaill, or, The invasions of Ireland by the Danes and other Norsemen : the original Irish text, edited, with translation and introduction". London : Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer. Retrieved 28 February 2022 – via Internet Archive.
  49. ^ Smyth, Alfred P. (1977) Scandinavian kings in the British Isles 850–880. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 263 & 279
  50. ^ Smyth, Alfred P. (1977) Scandinavian kings in the British Isles 850–880. Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 62
  51. ^ Smyth, Alfred P. (1977) Scandinavian kings in the British Isles 850–880. Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 64-5.
  52. ^ Sagan om Ragnar Lodbrok och hans söner Norstedts, Stockholm 1880 pp. 82 ff
  53. ^ Holman 2003, p. 220.
  54. ^ Forte, Angelo; Oram, Richard; Pedersen, Frederik (2005). Viking Empires (First ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521829922
  55. ^ Giles, J. A., ed. (2010). Six Old English Chronicles: Ethelwerd's Chronicle, Asser's Life Of Alfred, Geoffrey Of Monmouth's British History, Gildas, Nennius And Richard Of Cirencester. Kessinger Publishing, LLC. ISBN 978-1163125991
  56. ^ Forte, A; Oram, RD; Pedersen, F (2005). Viking Empires. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-82992-2. p. 72
  57. ^ Hooper, Nicholas Hooper; Bennett, Matthew (1996). The Cambridge Illustrated Atlas of Warfare: the Middle Ages. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-44049-1. p. 22
  58. ^ Costambeys, M (2004). "Hálfdan (d. 877)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/49260
  59. ^ Forte, A; Oram, RD; Pedersen, F (2005). Viking Empires. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-82992-2. pp. 72–73
  60. ^ "Die Jahrbücher von Fulda und Xanten, p. 62". Archived from the original on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  61. ^ Carl Bernadotte et al. (1956), Sveriges hundra konungar. Stockholm: Biblioteksböcker, p. 81.
  62. ^ Tolkien, Christopher; Turville-Petre, G., eds. (1956). "Hervarar Saga ok Heidreks" (PDF). Viking Society for Northern Research. London: 69. Archived (PDF) from the original on 1 August 2019. Retrieved 20 October 2019.
  63. ^ Kings and kingship in Viking Northumbria, by Rory McTurk (University of Leeds) Archived 26 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  64. ^ "The Tale of Ragnar's Sons, Chapter 3". Archived from the original on 22 September 2013. Retrieved 20 October 2019.
  65. ^ P.A. Munch (1852), Det norske Folks Historie, Vol. I: 1. Christiania: Tonsberg, pp. 642–48.
  66. ^ a b Davidson p. 277
  67. ^ Davidson 1980, p. 277.
  68. ^ "Viking". Historicalnovels.info. Archived from the original on 17 January 2022. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
  69. ^ "Ragnar dans Vaillant/Pif". Bdoubliees.com. Archived from the original on 12 April 2022. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
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References

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Further reading

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Legendary titles
Preceded by King of Sweden
in West Norse tradition
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of Denmark Succeeded by
Preceded by King of Denmark
in Gesta Danorum
Succeeded by