Family tree Bas » Agne av Varmland (465-????)

Personal data Agne av Varmland 

  • He was born in the year 465.

    Waarschuwing Attention: Was younger than 16 years (0) when child (Alrek av Varmland) was born (??-??-445).

  • (Geschiedenis) .Source 1
    Agne, English: Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling.
    Agne being hanged by his wife Skjalf. Artwork by Hugo Hamilton, 1830
    King Agni's Barrow just southeast of Sollentuna Station in Sweden (photo: Jacob Truedson Demitz)

    Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.

    One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]

    A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]

    Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur. Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.

    Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk. Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his neck before he went to sleep.

    The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland, leaving her sons behind.

    Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and west of Stocksund.

    Þat tel ek undr,
    ef Agna her
    Skalfar ráð
    at sköpum þóttu,
    þar gœðing
    með gullmeni
    Loga dís
    at lopti hóf
    svalan hest
    Signýjar vers.[3][4]

    How do ye like the high-souled maid,
    Who, with the grim Fate-goddess' aid,
    Avenged her sire? – made Swithiod's king
    Through air in golden halter swing?
    How do ye like her, Agne's men?
    Think ye that any chief again
    Will court the fate your chief befell,
    To ride on wooden horse to hell?.[5][6]

    Ynglingatal then gives Alrekr and Eiríkr as Agne's successors.

    The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, older than Snorri's quotation:

    Qui [Dagr] genuit Alrik; hunc frater suus Erikr freno percussit ad mortem. Alricr autem genuit Hogna; istum uxor sua juxta locum Agnafit, qui nunc Stokholmr dicitur, propriis manibus interfecit suspendendo ad arborem cum catena aurea. Cujus filius Ingialdr [...][7]

    This man [Dag] engendered Alrek, who was beaten to death with a bridle by his brother, Eirik. Alrek was father to Agne, whose wife dispatched him with her own hands by hanging him on a tree with a golden chain near a place called Agnafit. His son, Ingjald, [...][8]

    Agne is incorrectly called Hogne.[7] Unlike Ynglingatal, Historia Norwegiæ does not give Dagr as Agne's predecessor, but Alrekr. Instead Alrekr is Agne's predecessor and Agne is succeeded by Yngvi (incorrectly called Ingialdr[7]). The even earlier source Íslendingabók cites the line of descent in Ynglingatal and it gives the same line of succession as Historia Norwegiæ: xii Alrekr. xiii Agni. xiiii Yngvi.[9]

    The location indicated by Snorri Sturluson as the place of Agne's death has a barrow called Agnehögen (Agne's barrow) in Lillhersby. The barrow was excavated by Oxenstierna and dated to c. 400.
  • He is buried in Agnafit, Zweden.
  • A child of Dag "de Wijze" van Zweden
  • This information was last updated on December 13, 2012.

Household of Agne av Varmland

He is married to Skjalf van Finland.

They got married


Child(ren):

  1. Alrek av Varmland  445-???? 

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    Sources

    1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne

    About the surname Av Varmland


    The Family tree Bas publication was prepared by .contact the author
    When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
    Andre Bas, "Family tree Bas", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-bas/I2623.php : accessed January 11, 2026), "Agne av Varmland (465-????)".