Hij heeft/had een relatie met NUK Vifilsdatter, Queen of Ringerike.
Kind(eren):
Kings of Ringerike
Ringerike was founded by its eponymous ruler Hring, who was the son of Raum the Old.[12] One of the more significant historic people who have lived in Ringerike, was the king Halfdan the Black, father of Harald Fairhair, who united Norway into a single kingdom. In the early Viking Era before Harald Fairhair became the first king of Norway, Ringerike was a petty kingdom. Dagling was a legendary clan of Ringerike.
Map of the historical Uplands.
In the Ynglinga saga, Snorri Sturluson writes that the clan was descended from Dag the Great whose daughter Dageid married the Swedish king Alaric and was the mother of Yngvi and Alf, both legendary Swedish kings of the House of Yngling. One of the sons of Dag the Great was Óli, who was the father of Dag, Óleif, Hring (the old king Ring of Frithiof's Saga), Olaf, Helgi, and Sigurd Hjört,[12] who was a petty king of Ringerike.
Sigurd Hjört was the father of Ragnhild Sigurdsdotter, the mother of Harald Fairhair. Following Harald's consolidation of Norway in the late 9th century, the kingdom appears to have been ruled by a series of local jarls and client kings. A later sub-king of Ringerike, Sigurd Syr, was the father of Harald Hardråde and the step father of Olav King Haraldson, the saint, both kings of Norway. When King Olaf Tryggvason came to Ringerike to spread the novel Roman Catholic religion of the new feudal empire of Charlemagne, Sigurd Syr and his wife allowed themselves to be baptized.[13] Forced conversion to Christendom was a novelty, put into legal code by Charlemagne.
Administrative history
Ringerike was in its beginnings, the southwesternmost district of the historical Uplands.[6] In c. 1320, it was together with Hadeland, Land and Toten, a part of the county (or syssel) Haðafylki.[6][14] Ringerike was in c. 1640 grouped with Hallingdal in the district Buskerud og Hallingdal Fogderi.[15] In 1866, the district was divided into the Buskerud district, which included Krødsherad, Modum, and Sigdal, along with Lower Buskerud, excluding Kongsberg.[16] The rest of Ringerike, remained the same as it commonly is today.[16]
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