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Sigurd Syr ( Old Norse : Sigurðr Sýr ) (died c. 1018) was a Norwegian petty king of Ringerike , a region in Buskerud . He was notable in Norwegian history largely through his association with Kings Harald Hardrada and Olaf II of Norway . By his marriage with Åsta Gudbrandsdatter after her first husband Harald Grenske had died, Sigurd Syr was stepfather of King Olaf II and the father of King Harald III.

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47-484: (Redirected from Syr ) Syr or SYR may refer to: Sigurd Syr (c. 970-1018), Norwegian petty king Sonic Youth Recordings South Yarra railway station , Melbourne South Yorkshire Railway (1849–1864) Sýr , a name of Freyja in Norse mythology The IATA airport code for Syracuse Hancock International Airport Syr Darya , a major river of Central Asia Syre ,

94-406: A thing had been called by Queen Gyda , sister of Olaf Cuaran , King of Dublin . Gyda was the widow of an earl , and was searching for a new husband. A great many men had come, but Gyda singled out Olaf, though he was wearing his bad weather clothes, and the other men wore their finest clothing. They were to be married, but another man, Alfvine, took objection, and challenged Olaf and his men to

141-767: A combined armada from Denmark , Sweden and the Jarls of Lade . Finally surrounded on his flagship the Ormrinn Langi (Long Serpent), Danish sources report that when all was lost he committed suicide by throwing himself into the sea, "the end befitting his life", according to Adam of Bremen. Saxo Grammaticus says that Olaf preferred suicide to death at the hands of the enemy and jumped overboard in full armour rather than see his foes victorious. The Norwegian and Icelandic accounts are more complex and more favourable to Olaf. Hallfreðr 's memorial poem for his lord had already alluded to rumours that Olaf escaped death at Svolder. The sagas offer

188-539: A friend. Olaf decided that it was better for him to seek his fortune elsewhere, and set out for the Baltic. Heimskringla states that after leaving Novgorod, Olaf raided settlements and ports with success. In 982 he was caught in a storm and made port in Wendland , where he met Queen Geira , a daughter of King Burizleif . She ruled the part of Wendland in which Olaf had landed, and Olaf and his men were given an offer to stay for

235-443: A good man, for you never worshipped gods or paid them any reverence. But rather you disgraced them, and for that reason your works will be multiplied for good and profitable ends. Still you are very deficient in those qualities that would allow you to be in these regions and make you deserving to live here in eternity, because you do not know your Creator and you do not know who the true God is." In 988, Olaf sailed to England, because

282-442: A marriage while Olaf and his troops were still there. Later, during one of their conversations, Olaf asked Geira if there were any towns that she had lost control over. She replied, "Lord, I can name for you the towns that have escaped from our control; we have suffered their arrogance for a long time." Following this conversation, Olaf went out and recaptured these towns for Geira. Following this, and their marriage, Olaf would stay in

329-521: A native. He asked the boy about his family, and the boy told him he was Olaf, son of Tryggve Olafson and Astrid Eiriksdattir. Sigurd then went to Reas and bought Olaf and Thorgils out from slavery, and took the boys with him to Novgorod to live under the protection of Vladimir. Still according to Heimskringla , one day in the Novgorod marketplace Olaf encountered Klerkon, his enslaver and the murderer of his foster father. Olaf killed Klerkon with an axe blow to

376-503: A river in Luxembourg Syria , ISO 3166-1 abbreviation ICAO designator for Syrian Air , a Syrian airline William F. Walsh Regional Transportation Center , Syracuse, New York Cheese , called Syr or Sýr in some Slavic languages See also [ edit ] Sir (disambiguation) WSYR (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with

423-455: A variety of possibilities. Ágrip reports: "But of the fall of King Óláfr nothing was known. It was seen that as the fighting lessened he stood, still alive, on the high-deck astern on the Long Serpent , which had thirty-two rowing places. But when Eiríkr went to the stern of the ship in search of the king, a light flashed before him as though it were lightning, and when the light disappeared,

470-571: Is recorded in the Flateyjarbók , and in the early 15th-century Bergsbók . The account in this article is primarily based on the late sagas. There is uncertainty about both the date and the place of Olaf's birth. The earliest Norwegian written source, the Historia Norwegiæ of the late twelfth century, states that Olaf was born in the Orkney Islands after his mother fled there to escape

517-464: Is sparse. He is mentioned in some contemporary English sources, and some skaldic poems. The oldest narrative source mentioning him briefly is Adam of Bremen 's Gesta Hammaburgensis ecclesiae pontificum of circa 1070. In the 1190s, two Latin versions of " Óláfs saga Tryggvasonar " were written in Iceland , by Oddr Snorrason and Gunnlaugr Leifsson – these are now lost, but are thought to form

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564-496: Is that he was a great-grandson of King Harald Fairhair , through Harald's son Sigurd Rise. Doubt has been cast on his connection with Sigurd Rise, a relatively obscure son of Harald Fairhair by a Sami girl named Snæfrithr Svásadottir . Sigurd Syr's father Halfdan may not have been King Harald's grandson Halfdan of Hadafylke . There are no contemporary attestations of such a Halfdan. It is not very likely that this lineage represent historical realities. Many modern historians regard

611-402: Is unknown; P.A. Munch suggested that it was because his attention was so focused on farming and that his nickname meant "One who digs or roots in the soil of the field". Since Sigurd was a respected man of high birth, the epithet was most probably an honorable title. He was also promised the throne of England and his son Harald went to get it for him when he died. Sigurd Syr was baptized into

658-612: The Oxford National Dictionary of Biography , states that Olaf was already baptized and that the 994 event at Andover was a confirmation of his faith, part of a Danegeld treaty in which he agreed to no longer raid in England. Following the death of Geira, it states in The Saga of Olaf that he travelled to Russia. During his stay here, he had a dream in which God spoke to him. The voice he heard said, "Hear me, you who promise to be

705-485: The Fairhair genealogy as in large part invented. According to Heimskringla , Sigurd Syr was a prudent man, taciturn and generally modest, although very wealthy. He was known as a good caretaker of his property, personally involved in managing it, and wise and peaceful. He may well have owned several large farms. His nickname "Syr" can be translated as meaning "sow or swine" (related to Old Norse svīn ). The reason for this

752-592: The Hebrides . After four years he landed on one of the Scilly Isles . He heard of a seer who lived there. Desiring to test the seer, he sent one of his men to pose as Olaf. But the seer was not fooled. So Olaf went to see the hermit, now convinced he was a real fortune teller. And the seer told him: Thou wilt become a renowned king, and do celebrated deeds. Many men wilt thou bring to faith and baptism, and both to thy own and others' good; and that thou mayst have no doubt of

799-706: The King of Denmark ; they also swore allegiance to him. He then demanded that they all be baptized, and most reluctantly they agreed. In 997, Olaf founded his seat of government in Trondheim , where he had first held a thing with the revolters against Haakon. It was a suitable site because the River Nid twisted itself before going into the fjord, creating a peninsula that could be easily defended against terrestrial attacks by only one short wall. Both his Wendish and his Irish wife had brought Olaf wealth and good fortune, but, according to

846-555: The Christian faith in 998. According to the Heimskringla , "King Olaf Tryggvason came to Ringerike to spread Christianity, Sigurd Syr and his wife allowed themselves to be baptized". Sigurd Syr was not personally politically ambitious. He was not fond of the pomp and ceremony of nobility, but played his expected part. He fully supported his stepson Olaf's ambitions to leadership and command. In 1014, he successfully petitioned his peers,

893-499: The Haughty , queen of Sweden , but negotiations failed because of her steadfast pagan faith. Instead, he made an enemy of her, and did not hesitate to involve himself in a quarrel with King Sweyn I of Denmark by marrying Sweyn's sister Tyra, who had fled from her heathen husband Burislav , the semi-legendary "King of Wends ", in defiance of her brother's authority. Olaf continued to promote Christianity throughout his reign. He baptized

940-596: The Mediterranean. Both King Ethelred the Unready and Olaf's sister Astrid allegedly received gifts from Olaf long after he was presumed dead. The latest sighting reported by Oddr took place in 1046. Olaf routinely used force to compel conversion to Christianity, including execution and torture of those who refused. Raud the Strong refused to convert and, after a failed attempt using a wooden pin to pry open his mouth to insert

987-475: The Sagas, his last wife, Tyra , was his undoing, for it was on an expedition undertaken in 1000 to wrest her lands from Burislav that he was waylaid off the island Svolder by the combined Swedish, Danish, and Wendish fleets, together with the ships of Earl Haakon's sons. It has been suggested that Olaf's ambition was to rule a united Christian Scandinavia , and it is known that he made overtures of marriage to Sigrid

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1034-612: The Scandinavian duel or holmgang . Olaf and his men fought Alfvine's crew and won every battle, but did not kill any of them; instead, they bound them. Alfvine was told to leave the country and never come back again. Gyda and Olaf married, and spent half their time in England and the other half in Ireland. In 995, rumours began to surface in Norway of a king in Ireland of Norwegian blood. This caught

1081-450: The Wise who had one eye torn out—his torturers were supposed to blind him but his stoic bearing during the torture led them to run away after doing only half the job—and Raud the Strong who had a venomous snake forced into body through his mouth by a red hot iron. Ultimately, Olaf's efforts at widespread conversion failed. He died at the sea Battle of Svolder when his forces were defeated by

1128-611: The alleged assassin. After questioning the purported killer and hearing him confess, King Harald had the man hanged , citing the familial bond between him and Tryggvi and his duty to avenge the latter's death. For some time after the Battle of Svolder, there were rumors that Olaf had survived his leap into the sea and had made his way to safety. Accounts reported by Oddr Snorrason included sightings of Olaf in Rome , Jerusalem , and elsewhere in Europe and

1175-457: The basis of later Norse versions. Snorri Sturluson gives an extensive account of Olaf in the Heimskringla saga of circa 1230, using Oddr Snorrason's saga as his primary source. Modern historians do not assume that these late sources are accurate, and their credibility is debated. The most detailed account is named Óláfs saga Tryggvasonar en mesta ("Greatest Saga of Óláfr Tryggvason") and

1222-529: The country until the untimely death of Geira. Holy Roman Emperor Otto II assembled a great army of Saxons , Franks , Frisians , and Wends to fight the Norse pagan Danes . Olaf was part of this army because his father-in-law was king of Wendland. Otto's army met the armies of King Harald Bluetooth and Haakon Jarl , the ruler of Norway under the Danish king, at Danevirke , a great wall near Schleswig . Otto's army

1269-420: The ear of Jarl Haakon, who sent Thorer Klakka to Ireland, posing as a merchant, to see if he was the son of Tryggve Olafson. Haakon told Thorer that if it were him, to lure him to Norway, so Haakon could have him under his power. Thorer befriended Olaf and told him of the situation in Norway, that Jarl Haakon had become unpopular with the populace, because he often took daughters of the elite as concubines , which

1316-603: The early 11th century, a Viking chieftain named Tryggvi invaded Norway, claiming to be the son of Olaf and Gyda. His invasion was defeated by forces loyal to Cnut the Great 's son Svein Knutsson . An account preserved in Morkinskinna relates that Tryggvi was killed by a farmer after the battle. Many years later, when Harald Hardrada was king of Norway, he passed by the site of the battle. The king met an old friend of his who pointed out

1363-631: The explorer Leif Ericson , who took a priest with him back to Greenland to convert the rest of his kin. Olaf also converted the people and Earl of the Orkney Islands to Christianity. At that time, the Orkney Islands were part of Norway. While Olaf sent missionaries to other lands and baptized dignitaries who visited Norway to spread Christianity, within his own kingdom he used forced conversion through means such as exile, hostage taking, mutilation, torture, and death for those who refused as well as destroying pagan temples. Noted victims include Thorlief

1410-436: The great-grandson of Harald Fairhair , first King of Norway. He is numbered as Olaf I . Olaf was important in the conversion of the Norse to Christianity, but he did so forcibly within his own kingdom. He is said to have built the first Christian church in Norway in 995, and to have founded the city of Trondheim in 997. A statue dedicated to him is located in the city's central plaza. Historical information on Olaf

1457-454: The head. A mob followed the young boy as he fled to his protector Queen Allogia , with the intent of killing him for his misdeed. Only after Allogia had paid blood money for Olaf did the mob calm down. As Olaf grew older, Vladimir made him chief over his men-at-arms, but after a couple years the king became wary of Olaf and his popularity with his soldiers. Fearing he might be a threat to the safety of his reign, Vladimir stopped treating Olaf as

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1504-420: The killers of Olaf's father. Another late 12th-century source, Ágrip af Nóregskonungasögum , states that Olaf's mother fled to Orkney with Olaf when he was three years old for the same reason. All the sagas agree that Olaf eventually came to Kievan Rus' , specifically the court of Vladimir the Great of Kiev . The version in Heimskringla is the most elaborate, but also the latest, and introduces elements to

1551-516: The king himself was gone." Other sagas suggest that one way or another Olaf made his way to the shore; perhaps by swimming, perhaps with the help of angels, most likely rescued by one of the Wendish ships present. After his escape, Olaf supposedly sought salvation for his soul abroad, perhaps joining a monastery. Mesta describes a series of "sightings" of him in the Holy Land, the last in the 1040s. In

1598-404: The man who informed her to invite them to her kingdom, telling him that she would have them over for a feast. Once Olaf and his men arrived, Queen Geira welcomed them in, held a feast for them, and engaged in very meaningful conversation with Olaf. This conversation led to Olaf and his men staying for a few days, and a relationship starting between the two leaders. Eventually these two would agree to

1645-490: The other Norwegian local kings, for their support in his stepson's cause when Olav wanted to build an army in Norway. According to the sagas, Sigurd Syr and his wife Åsta Gudbrandsdatter were good and noble rulers and had the following children together: Olaf Tryggvason Olaf Tryggvason (960s – 9 September 1000) was King of Norway from 995 to 1000. He was the son of Tryggvi Olafsson , king of Viken ( Vingulmark , and Rånrike ), and, according to later sagas,

1692-422: The possession of a man named Klerkon, together with his foster father Thorolf and his son Thorgils. Klerkon considered Thorolf too old to be useful as a slave and killed him, and then sold the two boys to a man named Klerk for a ram. Olaf was then sold to a man called Reas for a fine cloak. Six years later, Sigurd Eirikson traveled to Estonia to collect taxes for King Vladimir. He saw a boy who did not appear to be

1739-400: The rebels they accepted him as their king, and together they started to search for Haakon. They eventually came to the farm where Haakon and Kark were hiding, but did not find them. Olaf held a meeting just outside the swine-sty and promised a great reward for the man who killed Haakon. The two men in the hole heard this speech, and Haakon became distrustful of Kark, fearing he would kill him for

1786-407: The reward. He could not leave the pigsty, nor could he stay awake indefinitely, and when he fell asleep Kark decapitated Haakon with a knife. The next day Kark went to Olaf and presented him the head of Haakon. King Olaf did not reward him, and instead decapitated him. After his confirmation as King of Norway, Olaf traveled to the parts of Norway that had not been under the rule of Haakon, but that of

1833-589: The story that are not found in earlier sources. It states that Olaf was born shortly after the murder of his father in 963, while other sources suggest a date between 964 and 969. The later dates cast doubt over Olaf's claim to be of Harald Fairhair's kin, and the legitimacy of his claim to the throne. Snorri Sturluson claims in Olaf Tryggvson's saga that Olaf was born on an islet in Fjærlandsvatnet, where his mother Astrid Eiriksdottir, daughter of Eirik Bjodaskalle,

1880-667: The title SYR . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=SYR&oldid=1253954567 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Sigurd Syr The traditional view of Sigurd Halvdansson Syr's pedigree, as presented in various Icelandic poems and historical sagas culminating in Snorri Sturluson 's Heimskringla ,

1927-431: The truth of this answer, listen to these tokens. When thou comest to thy ships many of thy people will conspire against thee, and then a battle will follow in which many of thy men will fall, and thou wilt be wounded almost to death, and carried upon a shield to thy ship; yet after seven days thou shalt be well of thy wounds, and immediately thou shalt let thyself be baptized. After the meeting mutineers attacked Olaf, and he

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1974-524: The winter. Olaf accepted and after courting the Queen, they were married. Olaf began to reclaim the baronies which while under Geira's rule had refused to pay taxes. After these successful campaigns, he began raiding again both in Skåne and Gotland . Olaf Tryggvason's relationship with Geira began when Geira was warned that there were a large number of ships sitting in the harbor outside of her kingdom. Queen Geira told

2021-513: The young boy, but to no avail. After a short scuffle Astrid (with her son) fled again. This time their destination was Gardarike ( Kiev ), where Astrid's brother Sigurd was in the service of Vladimir the Great . Olaf was three years old when they set sail on a merchant ship for Novgorod . The journey was not successful: in the Baltic Sea they were captured by Estonian vikings , and the people aboard were either killed or taken as slaves. Olaf became

2068-590: Was hiding from her husband's killers, led by Harald Greycloak , the son of Eirik Bloodaxe . Greycloak and his brothers had seized the throne from Haakon the Good . Astrid fled to her father's home in Oppland, then went on to Sweden where she thought she and Olaf would be safe. Greycloak sent emissaries to the king of Sweden, and asked for permission to take the boy back to Norway, where he would be raised by Greycloak's mother Gunhild. The Swedish king gave them men to help them claim

2115-420: Was his right as ruler. He quickly grew tired of them and sent them home after a week or two. He had also been weakened by his fighting with the Danish king, due to his rejection of the Christian faith. Olaf seized this opportunity, and sailed for Norway. When he arrived many men had already revolted against Haakon, who was forced to hide in a hole dug in a pigsty , together with his slave, Kark . When Olaf met

2162-657: Was unable to break the fortification, so he changed tactics and sailed around it to Jutland with a large fleet. Otto won a large battle there, and forced Harald and Haakon with their armies to convert to Christianity. The constituents of Otto's army then returned to their homelands. Harald held to his new religion, but Haakon returned to worshipping the pagan gods when he came home. After Olaf had spent three years in Wendland, his wife Geira died. He felt so much sorrow from her death that he could no longer bear to stay in Wendland, and set out to plunder in 984. He raided from Friesland to

2209-537: Was wounded but survived, and as a result he converted to Christianity. David Hugh Farmer, in the Oxford Dictionary of Saints , writes 'it is tempting' to identify the seer with Saint Lide who lived on the island of St Helen's in the Isles of Scilly . By another account, Saint Ælfheah of Canterbury baptized him near Andover , Hampshire , England in 994. However, Henrietta Leyser, the author of Ælfheah's entry in

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