- Norway,
claiming she had been
wedded to
Folkvid against her will. The
archbishop annulled her
marriage to
Folkvid, and
Sverre gave her to his
trusted follower...
-
Folkvid was the
lawspeaker of Värmland
during the
second half of the 12th century. He was the
father of Håkon Galen, an earl
whose son Knut Håkonsson...
-
Norway and the
mother of King Inge II of Norway. She
married the
Swedish Folkvid the
Lawspeaker in 1177 but
abandoned him to
marry the
Norwegian Birkebeiner...
- son of
Folkvid the
Lawspeaker and
Cecilia Sigurdsdotter, an
illegitimate daughter of king
Sigurd Munn.
Cecilia had been
married off to
Folkvid the Lawspeaker...
- II's
daughter Cecilia to Bård, even
though Cecilia was
already married to
Folkvid the
Lawspeaker who was
still alive at the time. The
proposed marriage between...
- (Kristín Sigurðardóttir).
Cecilia Sigurdsdotter (died late 1180s).
Married Folkvid the Lawspeaker,
marriage later annulled.
Mother of
Haakon the Crazy. Remarried...
-
actions offered her a
welcome possibility to
divorce from the
marriage with
Folkvid the Lawspeaker, into
which she
claimed to have been
forced by
Erling Skakke...
- ala + at + sun + + sin + hiþin + bruþur + anutaʀ + uraiþr hik + runaʀ "
Folkvid raised all of
these stones after his son Heden, Anund's brother. Vred carved...
-
invited several neighbouring petty kings to a
feast at his hall, it was
Folkvid and
Hulvid who
barred the
doors of the hall and set it ablaze, as previously...
-
Blind ruled over the
central district Tiundaland. He was the
father of
Folkvid,
Gautvid and Hulvid. One
midwinter sacrifice at Uppsala, Ingjald, the king's...