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Sigurd Ring (Old Norse: Sigurðr Hringr, in some sources merely called Hringr [1]) according to legend was a king of the Swedes, [2] being mentioned in many old Scandinavian sagas. According to these sources he was granted rulership over Sweden as a vassal king under his uncle Harald Wartooth .
Sigurd killed twelve of Haki 4 's men and cut off one of his arms before he was killed. Haki 4 and his men then rode to Sigurd's home and took Sigurd's children captive. [182] Hálfdanar saga svarta, Ragnarssona þáttr: Sigurd Ring: Old Norse: Sigurðr Hringr, Hringr, Latin: Siuardus Ring, Ringo
Another visitor is Sigurd Ring (Sigvard Ring), the king of Sweden and Denmark, who falls in love with his daughter Alfsol. Considering the king too old for Alfsol they kill her by poisoning rather than letting Sigurd have her. The wrinkled old king kills both Alf's young sons in a duel but is severely wounded himself. [85]
Drawing of the Ramsund carving from c. 1030, illustrating the Völsunga saga on a rock in Sweden.At (1), Sigurd sits in front of the fire preparing the dragon's heart. The Völsunga saga (often referred to in English as the Volsunga Saga or Saga of the Völsungs) is a legendary saga, a late 13th-century prose rendition in Old Norse of the origin and decline of the Völsung clan (including the ...
Sigurd (Old Norse: Sigurðr ... and shows a ring that Sigurd took from Brynhild as proof. Brynhild then arranges to have Sigurd killed by Gunnar's brother Guthorm ...
Sigurd Ring had been married to their late sister Alfhild. There the fragment ends. [209] The continued story on Sigurd Ring is preserved in Ad catalogum, but there Sigurd is already present with his troops in Vestmar and engages in a fated love story with Alfsol. [210] Sögubrot, Ad catalogum regum Sveciæ annotanda: Eyvindr Old Norse: Eyvindr ...
It is not listed as a Sigurd runestone by the Rundata project, and only the bottom part remains. The inscription is reconstructed based upon a drawing made during a runestone survey in 1690 by Ulf Christoffersson, [14] and originally included several figures from the Sigurd story, including a bird, Ótr with the ring, and a horse. [14]
Another visitor is Sigurd Ring (Sigvard Ring), the king of Sweden and Denmark, who falls in love with his sister Alfsol. Considering the king too old for Alfsol the brothers kill her by poisoning rather than seeing Sigurd have her. The wrinkled old king kills both Yngvi and Alf 10 in a duel but is severely wounded himself. [244]