| Gunhild |
Website Links For Sigrid |
Information AboutGunhild |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT SIGRID THE HAUGHTY | |
| 968 births | |
| 1014 deaths | |
| polish nobility | |
| viking age women | |
| swedish queens | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
|
In 980 (possibly 985 ) she married Eric VI Of Sweden . She may have given birth to Olof Skötkonung who later became King Of Sweden , but some doubt that. After 994 she married Sweyn I Of Denmark under the name ''Gunhilda''. From this second marriage she probably had five children, including Canute The Great and Harold II Of Denmark . WHO WAS SHE? The information in Scandinavian sources is different from that of contemporary chroniclers, which suggest that she was a Slav. Scandinavian sources According to the Norse Sagas , Sigrid the Haughty was the daughter of the powerful Swedish Viking Skoglar Toste . She married Eric The Victorious , King of Sweden , and together they had a son Olof Skötkonung . She later divorced Eric and was given Götaland as a fief. After Eric's death, she married Sweyn Forkbeard , King of Denmark . Prior to this marriage, Olaf Trygvasson , the king of Norway had proposed to her, but she was offended by him when he demanded that she convert to Christianity. This affront made her work towards Olaf's undoing by allying Sweden and Denmark against Norway . She was successful when Olaf fell fighting against Sweden and Denmark in the naval Battle Of Swold in the year 1000 . Sigrid was given the cognomen ''Haughty'' when she had Harald Grenske burnt to death in order to discourage other petty kings to dare proposing to her. The Danish historian Saxo Grammaticus confirms the Norse sagas, when he writes that Eric the Victorious' widow Syritha had married Sweyn Forkbeard after having spurned Olaf Trygvasson. Contemporary chroniclers However, a theory holds that she was the daughter of a mythical Burislav (possibly Mieszko I Of Poland and Dubrawka ). The medieval chroniclers seem to support the hypothesis that her father was Mieszko I. Several chronicles state that the mother of Canute was either a Pole or possibly a member of a closely related Slavic tribe:
Moreover, the fact that Canute's mother was Boleslaw's sister may explain some mysterious facts which appear in medieval chronicles, such as the involvement of Polish troops in invasions of England. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow composed a poem with the title ''Queen Sigrid the Haughty'' of which this is the first verse. :Queen Sigrid the Haughty sat proud and aloft :In her chamber, that looked over meadow and croft. :Heart's dearest, :Why dost thou sorrow so? EXTERNAL LINK |