- these: The
Knútsdrápa by Óttarr
svarti The
Knútsdrapa by
Sigvatr Þórðarson
Eight poetic fragments thought to
derive from a
single Knútsdrapa by Hallvarðr...
- Þórðarson, who, some time
between 1020 and 1038,
wrote a
skaldic verse named Knútsdrápa that
recounts and
establishes Ivar the
Boneless as
having killed Ælla...
- The
Knútsdrápa by the
skald Óttarr
svarti (Óttar the Black) is one of the Old
Norse poems composed for King Cnut. Knútsdrápur (plural of
Knútsdrápa) are...
-
Chronicon and the
Encomium Emmae, do not
mention this. Even so, in a
Knútsdrápa by the
skald Óttarr svarti,
there is a
statement that Cnut was "of no...
-
poetry the
fragments are
conjectured to be all from the same poem, a
Knútsdrápa ("Lay of Canute"), and
arranged in a
suggested order. The
first complete...
-
deeds of Jarl Eiríkr Hákonarson by Eyjólfr dáðaskáld,
partially preserved Knútsdrápa ‒ the
deeds of King Cnut the Great,
three poems by
Sigvatr Þórðarson,...
- Ragnar's
struggle against the
giant serpent in
order to win Thora). The
Knutsdrapa of
Sigvat Thordarson (c. 1038)
mentions the
death of Ælla at the hands...
-
Great Britain: Angles,
Frisians and Britons, and the
Danish author of
Knútsdrápa celebrating the 11th-century
Canute the
Great used "Frisians" as a synonym...
-
about Tryggvi’) — on
Tryggve the
Pretender A poem
about Queen Astrid Knútsdrápa (‘Drápa of Knút’) — in
memory of King
Canute the
Great Bersöglisvísur...
- of
Leikn of points" (haukr
Leiknar odda) that is "hawk of valkyrie" (
Knútsdrápa, 6).
Leikn is also
listed in the þulur.
Orchard 1997, p. 194. de Vries...