-
Sögubrot af
nokkrum fornkonungum (Fragment of a Saga
about Certain Ancient Kings) is a
fragmentary Icelandic text
dealing with some
legendary Swedish and...
- Unfortunately,
Sögubrot (meaning the "fragment") ends there. However, the Skjöldunga saga is
believed to be the
original story on
which Sögubrot is
based and...
-
According to
Sögubrot, Njal's Saga and the Lay of Hyndla,
Harald was the son of Hrœrekr
Ringslinger (slöngvanbaugi), the king of Zealand.
Sögubrot relates...
-
Norse sources, the clan
figure prominently in the
Heimskringla and in
Sögubrot,
where Hjörvard and his son Hjörmund
belong to it. It is also mentioned...
-
English sources regarding the 8th and 9th centuries. The
Ynglinga saga and
Sögubrot make
clear that his
homeland was Scania. The
sagas say that the Danish...
- or
Randver was a
legendary Danish king. In
Nordic legends,
according to
Sögubrot and the Lay of Hyndla, he was the son of Ráðbarðr the king of Garðaríki...
-
Zealand or Denmark, who
appears in
Gesta Danorum,
Gesta Danorum på danskæ,
Sögubrot, Njáls saga,
Hversu Noregr byggðist, Skjöldunga saga, and Bjarkarímur....
- century) was a
legendary king of Garðaríki, who
appears in
Sögubrot and the Lay of Hyndla.
Sögubrot tells that he
married the
fugitive princess Auðr the Deep-Minded...
- and
warlike interaction to be
conducted by water. In the
Icelandic text
Sögubrot af
nokkrum fornkonungum, Kolmården
between Svealand and Östergötland is...
- as the
Norse sagas Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks, Bósa saga ok Herrauðs and
Sǫgubrot af
nokkrum fornkonungum, but it is most
extensively described in the nationalistic...