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Sweyn Haakonsson

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Earl of the house of Hlaðir and co-ruler of Norway
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Division of Norway after the Battle of Svolder according to theHeimskringla.

Sweyn Haakonsson (Old Norse:Sveinn Hákonarson,Norwegian:Svein Håkonsson)[1] (died c. 1016) was anearl of the house of Hlaðir and co-ruler of Norway from 1000 to c. 1015. He was the son of earlHákon Sigurðarson. He is first mentioned in connection with thebattle of Hjörungavágr, where theHeimskringla says he commanded 60 ships. After thebattle of Svolder in the year 1000, Sveinn became co-ruler of Norway with his half-brother,Eiríkr Hákonarson. After Eiríkr went to England in 1014, Sveinn was co-ruler withHákon Eiríksson. In 1015,[2]Óláfr Haraldsson arrived in Norway and claimed the throne. He defeated Sveinn and his allies in thebattle of Nesjar. Sveinn retreated to Sweden, intending to muster a force to retake Norway but he died of an illness before he could return.

Sveinn married Hólmfríðr, who was either the daughter or sister of kingÓláfr of Sweden. They had the daughter Sigríðr, who was married to Áslákr, son ofErlingr Skjálgsson. Another daughter, Gunnhildr, was married toSveinn Úlfsson.

Only one court-poet,Bersi Skáldtorfuson, is recorded as being in Sveinn's service and very little of his poetry has survived throughout history.

The written sources mentioning Sveinn were all written over 150 years after his death. The Swedish historian Staffan Hellberg in 1972 claimed to be able to show that Sveinn was a fictitious person, and that he had never lived.[3] The debate about this formed part of the wider debate about the value of the 12th and 13th century sagas for 11th century history and earlier, and is an example of the saga skepticism, particularly widespread in Swedish academia. Hellberg's conclusions remain speculative.

Notes

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  1. ^Anglicized and modern Scandinavian forms includeSvein,Sweyn,Svend andSven.
  2. ^Or 1014 or 1016, the sources are hard to reconcile.
  3. ^Hellberg, Staffan (1972).Slaget vid Nesjar och "Sven jarl Håkonsson". Scripta Islandica, Uppsala 1972, pp. 21–30 (in Swedish).

References

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  • Finlay, Alison (editor and translator) (2004).Fagrskinna, a Catalogue of the Kings of Norway. Brill Academic Publishers.ISBN 90-04-13172-8
  • Hollander, Lee M. (editor and translator). (1991).Heimskringla : History of the Kings of Norway. University of Texas Press.ISBN 0-292-73061-6
I. Independent Norway

Foreign and non-royal
rulers initalics, disputed
monarchs in brackets
872–1387
Kalmar Union
1387–1523
Denmark–Norway
1524–1814
II. Independent Norway
1814
Union with Sweden
1814–1905
III. Independent Norway
Since 1905
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