|
Agne "Den Mäktige" Skjalfarbonde Dagsson,
född cirka 400 i Uppsala, död cirka 450
i Stoksund (nu Norrström). Kung av Sverige.
http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne_Skjalfarbonde Agne Skjalfarbonde var en svensk kung av Ynglingaätten, enligt Heimskringla.
Han var son till Dag den vise. Under ett plundringståg i Finland dödade han en hövding vid namn Froste samt förde dennes son
Loge och dotter Skjalf som fångar till Sverige.
När de hade kommit in i Mälaren och slagit läger ville Agne tvinga Skjalf att bli hans maka. Skjalf låtsade samtycka härtill, men
lät på bröllopsnatten sina män till hämnd för sin faders död hänga Agne i hans eget guldhalsband från grenen på ett träd, varefter
hon seglade bort.
Enligt sägnen ska platsen där Skjalf lät hänga Agne ha varit ön som därefter fick namnet Agnefit. Agnefit är ön där Staden mellan
broarna (Gamla Stan i Stockholm) ligger. Agne sägs vara höglagd i Agnehögen i Lillhersby. Han efterträddes av sina söner Erik
och Alrik.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne Agne, Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of
Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
Þat tel ek undr, ef Agna her Skalfar ráð at sköpum þóttu, þar gœðing með gullmeni Loga dís at lopti hóf svalan hest Signýjar
vers.[3][4]
How do ye like the high-souled maid, Who, with the grim Fate-goddess' aid, Avenged her sire? – made Swithiod's king Through
air in golden halter swing? How do ye like her, Agne's men? Think ye that any chief again Will court the fate your chief befell, To
ride on wooden horse to hell?.[5][6]
Ynglingatal then gives Alrekr and Eiríkr as Agne's successors.
The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, older than Snorri's quotation:
Qui [Dagr] genuit Alrik; hunc frater suus Erikr freno percussit ad mortem. Alricr autem genuit Hogna; istum uxor sua juxta locum
Agnafit, qui nunc Stokholmr dicitur, propriis manibus interfecit suspendendo ad arborem cum catena aurea. Cujus filius Ingialdr
[...][7] This man [Dag] engendered Alrek, who was beaten to death with a bridle by his brother, Eirik. Alrek was father to Agne,
whose wife dispatched him with her own hands by hanging him on a tree with a golden chain near a place called Agnafit. His son,
Ingjald, [...][8]
Agne is incorrectly called Hogne[7]. Unlike Ynglingatal, Historia Norwegiæ does not give Dagr as Agne's predecessor, but Alrekr.
Instead Alrekr is Agne's predecessor and Agne is succeeded by Yngvi (incorrectly called Ingialdr[7]). The even earlier source
Íslendingabók cites the line of descent in Ynglingatal and it gives the same line of succession as Historia Norwegiæ: xii Alrekr. xiii
Agni. xiiii Yngvi[9].
The location indicated by Snorri Sturluson as the place of Agne's death has a barrow called Agnehögen (Agne's barrow) in
Lillhersby. The barrow was excavated by Oxenstierna and dated to c. 400.
Konge i Uppsala (Sverige)
Agne, English: Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne
Notes for Agne Dagson Ble først hengt og så brent.
Agne var en berømt Kriger og laae stedse paa Vikingtog; hærjede Finland, og overvandt Finnernes Høvding Froste, som faldt i
Slaget. Agne bortførte hans Datter Skjalf, og giftede sig med hende. Hun bad ham feire sin Faders Gravøl, og Natten derpaa
ophængte hun Agne med det Guldkjæde, som han bar om Halsen, i Træet ved hans Telt. Pladsen hvor dette skede er holdt derefter
Navn af Agnefit eller Agnesstrand, hvorpaa siden Stockholm blev anlagt. Alrik og Erik den 1ste, Agnes Sønner og store
Stridsmænd, bleve Samkonger efter ham. Paa et Tog ragede de i Strid, toge Bidslerne af sine Heste, da de ingen Vaaben havde
med sig, sloges dermed og faldt begge.
Agne var ein konge av Ynglingeætta, son eller far av Alrek (eller son av Dag Dygveson). Forteljinga om han finst mellom anna i
Ynglingesoga.
Snorre Sturlason fortel at Agne fann seg kone i Finland, etter å ha drepe far hennar, Froste. Kona heitte Skjålv, og bror hennar
heitte Loge. På veg heim la han til ved Stokksund, ikkje langt frå innseglinga til Stockholm. Han hadde ein halsring av gull, som
før hadde vore ått av Visbur. Her gifta Agne seg med Skjålv, og budde til eit stort gilde. Då han var drukken, bad Skjålv at han
skulle akte på halsringen sin, og han feste ringen om halsen før han gjekk til sengs. Då han hadde sovna, tok Skjålv eit snøre og
feste i halsringen, og slengde snøret over ei grein. Så heiste mennene hennar Agne opp i treet etter ringen, og dette vart banen
hans. Etter dette vart staden kalla Agnafit, av di Agne vart bålførd på staden.
Tjodolv frå Kvine seier i Ynglingatal:
Underlegt er det um Agne-heren svik-fulle Skjålv skulle lika, då syster hans Loge upp i lufti drog kongen gode mer gullhalsbande,
han som ved Taur temja skulde hesten svale som Hagbard reid. Historia Norvegiæ fortel berre at kona til Agne "drap han med båe
hender" på Agnafit.
Kommentar [endre]
Forteljinga om Agne tykkjest vera mytologisk, og måten Agne døyr på minner i mangt om menneskeofring, slik dette vart utførd i
Uppsala etter skildringa hjå Adam av Bremen. Her kan ein og tenkje på at namnet Agne minner om grøde-offeret som er knytt til
vanekulten og Frøydyrkinga i desse områda. Namnet Skjålv (Skjolv), er og eit av namna til Frøya. Skilvingane, som er eit anna
namn på kongane av Ynglingeætta, tyder "ætlingar av Skjolv".
Froste og Loge er namn som finst i Fundinn Noregs. Her er Froste son av Fornjot, og Loge er bror til Kåre og Ler. Namna er
tydeleg mytiske, og knytt til vinteren, som "bur" i Finland. Dette "Finland" eller "Finnland" er tydeleg ikkje det geografiske
Finland, men eit mytisk land der vinteren rår. Det kan samanliknast med Finnmark, og "finnane" i forteljinga er mytiske
skapnader. Bak forteljinga om Agne kan ein soleis spore ein kamp mellom sommar og vinter, noko som fell naturleg inn i ein
grødekultus.
Halsringen som er skildra i forteljinga gjev minningar om ein keltisk torques, ein ring dei keltiske hovdingane ofte gjekk med.
Slike ringar er funne mange stader i søre Skandinavia i funn frå tidleg jernalder.
Henta frå «http://nn.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne»
Agne, Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling. Agne being hanged by his
wife Skjalf. Artwork by Hugo Hamilton, 1830 Agne's barrow in Sollentuna, Sweden.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d1/Konung_Agne_blir_om_na
tten_upph%C3%A4ngd_i_ett_tr%C3%A4d_by_Hugo_Hamilton.jpg/250px-Konung_Agne_blir_om_natten_upph%C3%A4ngd_i_
ett_tr%C3%A4d_by_Hugo_Hamilton.jpg&imgrefurl=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne&usg=__VKvUq6lFRleaFTBXk1sYDNsZ
xl8=&h=198&w=250&sz=26&hl=en&start=1&tbnid=O_krXTcuW2Z97M:&tbnh=88&tbnw=111&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dagni%
2Bking%2Bof%2Bsweden%26gbv%3D2%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG
Noteringar Sveakonung. Dag den vises son. Skilfingaätten = Yngre Ynglingaätten. Han hemförde med våld, från Finland, sin brud
Skjalf, dotter till Frosti. Men vid själva inseglingen till Mälaren lät hon sina män hänga Agne i ett träd med hans eget guldsmycke.
Han brändes på plats och ligger nu i Agnehögen i Lillhersby
Agni Dagsson 39 SmartMatches
Birth: About 424 in , , , Sweden 1 2
Death:
Sex: M
Father: Dag Dyggvasson b. About 403 in , , , Sweden
Mother: Dag Dyggvasson b. About 407 in , , , Sweden
Spouses & Children
Skjalf Frostasson (Wife) b. About 428 in , , , Finland
1 2
Marriage: Abt 444 6 Nov 2004 14:29
Children:
Alrek Agnasson King In Sweden b. About 445 in , , , Sweden
Eric Agnasson b. About 447 in , , , Sweden
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Notes
Individual:
REFN: HWS8897
Ancestral File Number: G6SZ-9WCHAN20 Mar 2001
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Sources
Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral Fileâ„¢ v4.19"
Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Publication: 3 Feb 2001
Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson"
Author: Larson, Kirk
Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Desce
ndants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library
Agne, Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne
http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne_Skjalfarbonde Agne Skjalfarbonde var en svensk kung av Ynglingaätten, enligt Heimskringla.
Han var son till Dag den vise. Under ett plundringståg i Finland dödade han en hövding vid namn Froste samt förde dennes son
Loge och dotter Skjalf som fångar till Sverige.
När de hade kommit in i Mälaren och slagit läger ville Agne tvinga Skjalf att bli hans maka. Skjalf låtsade samtycka härtill, men
lät på bröllopsnatten sina män till hämnd för sin faders död hänga Agne i hans eget guldhalsband från grenen på ett träd, varefter
hon seglade bort.
Enligt sägnen ska platsen där Skjalf lät hänga Agne ha varit ön som därefter fick namnet Agnefit. Agnefit är ön där Staden mellan
broarna (Gamla Stan i Stockholm) ligger. Agne sägs vara höglagd i Agnehögen i Lillhersby. Han efterträddes av sina söner Erik
och Alrik.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne Agne, Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of
Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
Þat tel ek undr, ef Agna her Skalfar ráð at sköpum þóttu, þar gœðing með gullmeni Loga dís at lopti hóf svalan hest Signýjar
vers.[3][4]
How do ye like the high-souled maid, Who, with the grim Fate-goddess' aid, Avenged her sire? – made Swithiod's king Through
air in golden halter swing? How do ye like her, Agne's men? Think ye that any chief again Will court the fate your chief befell, To
ride on wooden horse to hell?.[5][6]
Ynglingatal then gives Alrekr and Eiríkr as Agne's successors.
The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, older than Snorri's quotation:
Qui [Dagr] genuit Alrik; hunc frater suus Erikr freno percussit ad mortem. Alricr autem genuit Hogna; istum uxor sua juxta locum
Agnafit, qui nunc Stokholmr dicitur, propriis manibus interfecit suspendendo ad arborem cum catena aurea. Cujus filius Ingialdr
[...][7] This man [Dag] engendered Alrek, who was beaten to death with a bridle by his brother, Eirik. Alrek was father to Agne,
whose wife dispatched him with her own hands by hanging him on a tree with a golden chain near a place called Agnafit. His son,
Ingjald, [...][8]
Agne is incorrectly called Hogne[7]. Unlike Ynglingatal, Historia Norwegiæ does not give Dagr as Agne's predecessor, but Alrekr.
Instead Alrekr is Agne's predecessor and Agne is succeeded by Yngvi (incorrectly called Ingialdr[7]). The even earlier source
Íslendingabók cites the line of descent in Ynglingatal and it gives the same line of succession as Historia Norwegiæ: xii Alrekr. xiii
Agni. xiiii Yngvi[9].
The location indicated by Snorri Sturluson as the place of Agne's death has a barrow called Agnehögen (Agne's barrow) in
Lillhersby. The barrow was excavated by Oxenstierna and dated to c. 400. -------------------- Konge i Uppsala (Sverige)
Agne, English: Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne -------------------- Notes for Agne Dagson Ble først hengt og så brent.
Agne var en berømt Kriger og laae stedse paa Vikingtog; hærjede Finland, og overvandt Finnernes Høvding Froste, som faldt i
Slaget. Agne bortførte hans Datter Skjalf, og giftede sig med hende. Hun bad ham feire sin Faders Gravøl, og Natten derpaa
ophængte hun Agne med det Guldkjæde, som han bar om Halsen, i Træet ved hans Telt. Pladsen hvor dette skede er holdt derefter
Navn af Agnefit eller Agnesstrand, hvorpaa siden Stockholm blev anlagt. Alrik og Erik den 1ste, Agnes Sønner og store
Stridsmænd, bleve Samkonger efter ham. Paa et Tog ragede de i Strid, toge Bidslerne af sine Heste, da de ingen Vaaben havde
med sig, sloges dermed og faldt begge. -------------------- Agne var ein konge av Ynglingeætta, son eller far av Alrek (eller son av
Dag Dygveson). Forteljinga om han finst mellom anna i Ynglingesoga.
Snorre Sturlason fortel at Agne fann seg kone i Finland, etter å ha drepe far hennar, Froste. Kona heitte Skjålv, og bror hennar
heitte Loge. På veg heim la han til ved Stokksund, ikkje langt frå innseglinga til Stockholm. Han hadde ein halsring av gull, som
før hadde vore ått av Visbur. Her gifta Agne seg med Skjålv, og budde til eit stort gilde. Då han var drukken, bad Skjålv at han
skulle akte på halsringen sin, og han feste ringen om halsen før han gjekk til sengs. Då han hadde sovna, tok Skjålv eit snøre og
feste i halsringen, og slengde snøret over ei grein. Så heiste mennene hennar Agne opp i treet etter ringen, og dette vart banen
hans. Etter dette vart staden kalla Agnafit, av di Agne vart bålførd på staden.
Tjodolv frå Kvine seier i Ynglingatal:
Underlegt er det um Agne-heren svik-fulle Skjålv skulle lika, då syster hans Loge upp i lufti drog kongen gode mer gullhalsbande,
han som ved Taur temja skulde hesten svale som Hagbard reid. Historia Norvegiæ fortel berre at kona til Agne "drap han med båe
hender" på Agnafit.
Kommentar [endre]
Forteljinga om Agne tykkjest vera mytologisk, og måten Agne døyr på minner i mangt om menneskeofring, slik dette vart utførd i
Uppsala etter skildringa hjå Adam av Bremen. Her kan ein og tenkje på at namnet Agne minner om grøde-offeret som er knytt til
vanekulten og Frøydyrkinga i desse områda. Namnet Skjålv (Skjolv), er og eit av namna til Frøya. Skilvingane, som er eit anna
namn på kongane av Ynglingeætta, tyder "ætlingar av Skjolv".
Froste og Loge er namn som finst i Fundinn Noregs. Her er Froste son av Fornjot, og Loge er bror til Kåre og Ler. Namna er
tydeleg mytiske, og knytt til vinteren, som "bur" i Finland. Dette "Finland" eller "Finnland" er tydeleg ikkje det geografiske
Finland, men eit mytisk land der vinteren rår. Det kan samanliknast med Finnmark, og "finnane" i forteljinga er mytiske
skapnader. Bak forteljinga om Agne kan ein soleis spore ein kamp mellom sommar og vinter, noko som fell naturleg inn i ein
grødekultus.
Halsringen som er skildra i forteljinga gjev minningar om ein keltisk torques, ein ring dei keltiske hovdingane ofte gjekk med.
Slike ringar er funne mange stader i søre Skandinavia i funn frå tidleg jernalder.
Henta frå «http://nn.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne»
Agne, Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling. Agne being hanged by his
wife Skjalf. Artwork by Hugo Hamilton, 1830 Agne's barrow in Sollentuna, Sweden.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d1/Konung_Agne_blir_om_na
tten_upph%C3%A4ngd_i_ett_tr%C3%A4d_by_Hugo_Hamilton.jpg/250px-Konung_Agne_blir_om_natten_upph%C3%A4ngd_i_
ett_tr%C3%A4d_by_Hugo_Hamilton.jpg&imgrefurl=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne&usg=__VKvUq6lFRleaFTBXk1sYDNsZ
xl8=&h=198&w=250&sz=26&hl=en&start=1&tbnid=O_krXTcuW2Z97M:&tbnh=88&tbnw=111&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dagni%
2Bking%2Bof%2Bsweden%26gbv%3D2%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG -------------------- Noteringar Sveakonung. Dag den vises son.
Skilfingaätten = Yngre Ynglingaätten. Han hemförde med våld, från Finland, sin brud Skjalf, dotter till Frosti. Men vid själva
inseglingen till Mälaren lät hon sina män hänga Agne i ett träd med hans eget guldsmycke. Han brändes på plats och ligger nu i
Agnehögen i Lillhersby
Agni Dagsson 39 SmartMatches
Birth: About 424 in , , , Sweden 1 2
Death:
Sex: M
Father: Dag Dyggvasson b. About 403 in , , , Sweden
Mother: Dag Dyggvasson b. About 407 in , , , Sweden
Spouses & Children
Skjalf Frostasson (Wife) b. About 428 in , , , Finland
1 2
Marriage: Abt 444 6 Nov 2004 14:29
Children:
Alrek Agnasson King In Sweden b. About 445 in , , , Sweden
Eric Agnasson b. About 447 in , , , Sweden
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Notes
Individual:
REFN: HWS8897
Ancestral File Number: G6SZ-9WCHAN20 Mar 2001
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Sources
Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral Fileâ„¢ v4.19"
Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Publication: 3 Feb 2001
Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson"
Author: Larson, Kirk
Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Desce
ndants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library
Agne, Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne
Agne, English: Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur. Agne married Skjalf who became
pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
Þat tel ek undr, ef Agna her Skalfar ráð at sköpum þóttu, þar gœðing með gullmeni Loga dís at lopti hóf svalan hest Signýjar
vers.[3][4]
How do ye like the high-souled maid, Who, with the grim Fate-goddess' aid, Avenged her sire? – made Swithiod's king Through
air in golden halter swing? How do ye like her, Agne's men? Think ye that any chief again Will court the fate your chief befell, To
ride on wooden horse to hell?.[5][6]
Ynglingatal then gives Alrekr and Eiríkr as Agne's successors.
The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, older than Snorri's quotation:
Qui [Dagr] genuit Alrik; hunc frater suus Erikr freno percussit ad mortem. Alricr autem genuit Hogna; istum uxor sua juxta locum
Agnafit, qui nunc Stokholmr dicitur, propriis manibus interfecit suspendendo ad arborem cum catena aurea. Cujus filius Ingialdr
[...][7]
This man [Dag] engendered Alrek, who was beaten to death with a bridle by his brother, Eirik. Alrek was father to Agne, whose
wife dispatched him with her own hands by hanging him on a tree with a golden chain near a place called Agnafit. His son,
Ingjald, [...][8]
Agne is incorrectly called Hogne[7]. Unlike Ynglingatal, Historia Norwegiæ does not give Dagr as Agne's predecessor, but Alrekr.
Instead Alrekr is Agne's predecessor and Agne is succeeded by Yngvi (incorrectly called Ingialdr[7]). The even earlier source
Íslendingabók cites the line of descent in Ynglingatal and it gives the same line of succession as Historia Norwegiæ: xii Alrekr. xiii
Agni. xiiii Yngvi[9].
The location indicated by Snorri Sturluson as the place of Agne's death has a barrow called Agnehögen (Agne's barrow) in
Lillhersby. The barrow was excavated by Oxenstierna and dated to c. 400.[10]
10. AGNE - King from 220 to 260. Agne took an army to Finland where he defeated the chieftain Froste and took his daughter
Skjalv and her brother Loge. He married Skjalv and prepared a great burial feast in honor of her father, Froste. Agne now was in
possession of the gold ornament which Visbur had refused to return to his first wife. It was securely tied about Agne's neck, when
he fell into a drunken stupor after a great drinking bout at the burial feast. Skjalv, his wife, fastened a noose under the ornament
while Agne slept, and with the help of her men threw the rope over a branch of the tree above and hanged Agne. His son was:
11. ALRIK - King from 260 until 280.
Agne became king after his father. Once he was pillaging Finland. He subdued it and took the King Froste's daughter to wife. Her
name was Skjalv. After they had left Finalnd, she begged Agne to make a burial feast for her husband, during which he got drunk.
Skjalv's men helped her hang Agne, after which they escaped and returned to Finland.
Markhus says that Agne's son, Alrek was the son of Gunhild, the daughter of Hugleik Dansson. Wikipedia shows Skjalf as the
mother of both Alrek and Erik.
Agne ble også kalt Skelfir fra Voss. Han ble stamfar for Skelfingene i Uppsala, også kalt Ynglinger.
BIOGRAFI:
Nicknames: "Agne Skjalfarbonde", "Agni Skjálfarbondi", "Hogne", "Agni", "Agne", "Agni /Dagsson/"
Birthdate: cirka 400
Birthplace: Upsala, Sweden
Death: Died 450 in Stoksund, Now Norrstrom, Sweden
Occupation: Kung i Svealand, Roi d'Uppsal, Konge av Sverige, Kung. Hade erörat hövdingen Froste i fFnland och tog hans dotter
och son med hem., Kung
Agne Skjalfarbonde var en svensk kung av Ynglingaätten, enligt Heimskringla. Han var son till Dag den vise. Under ett
plundringståg i Finland dödade han en hövding vid namn Froste samt förde dennes son Loge och dotter Skjalf som fångar till
Sverige.
När de hade kommit in i Mälaren och slagit läger ville Agne tvinga Skjalf att bli hans maka. Skjalf låtsade samtycka härtill, men
lät på bröllopsnatten sina män till hämnd för sin faders död hänga Agne i hans eget guldhalsband från grenen på ett träd, varefter
hon seglade bort.
Enligt sägnen ska platsen där Skjalf lät hänga Agne ha varit ön som därefter fick namnet Agnefit. Agnefit är ön där Staden mellan
broarna (Gamla Stan i Stockholm) ligger. Agne sägs vara höglagd i Agnehögen i Lillhersby. Han efterträddes av sina söner Erik
och Alrik.
Birth: About 424 in , , , Sweden 1 2
Death:
Sex: M
Father: Dag Dyggvasson b. About 403 in , , , Sweden
Mother: Dag Dyggvasson b. About 407 in , , , Sweden
Spouses & Children
Skjalf Frostasson (Wife) b. About 428 in , , , Finland
1 2
Marriage: Abt 444 6 Nov 2004 14:29
Children:
Alrek Agnasson King In Sweden b. About 445 in , , , Sweden
Eric Agnasson b. About 447 in , , , Sweden
Levde på 375-400 talet. Han var grundläggare av den gotiska Skilfingaätten.
http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne_Skjalfarbonde Agne Skjalfarbonde var en svensk kung av Ynglingaätten, enligt Heimskringla.
Han var son till Dag den vise. Under ett plundringståg i Finland dödade han en hövding vid namn Froste samt förde dennes son
Loge och dotter Skjalf som fångar till Sverige.
När de hade kommit in i Mälaren och slagit läger ville Agne tvinga Skjalf att bli hans maka. Skjalf låtsade samtycka härtill, men
lät på bröllopsnatten sina män till hämnd för sin faders död hänga Agne i hans eget guldhalsband från grenen på ett träd, varefter
hon seglade bort.
Enligt sägnen ska platsen där Skjalf lät hänga Agne ha varit ön som därefter fick namnet Agnefit. Agnefit är ön där Staden mellan
broarna (Gamla Stan i Stockholm) ligger. Agne sägs vara höglagd i Agnehögen i Lillhersby. Han efterträddes av sina söner Erik
och Alrik.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne Agne, Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of
Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
Þat tel ek undr, ef Agna her Skalfar ráð at sköpum þóttu, þar gœðing með gullmeni Loga dís at lopti hóf svalan hest Signýjar
vers.[3][4] How do ye like the high-souled maid, Who, with the grim Fate-goddess' aid, Avenged her sire? – made Swithiod's king
Through air in golden halter swing? How do ye like her, Agne's men? Think ye that any chief again Will court the fate your chief
befell, To ride on wooden horse to hell?.[5][6] Ynglingatal then gives Alrekr and Eiríkr as Agne's successors.
The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, older than Snorri's quotation:
Qui [Dagr] genuit Alrik; hunc frater suus Erikr freno percussit ad mortem. Alricr autem genuit Hogna; istum uxor sua juxta locum
Agnafit, qui nunc Stokholmr dicitur, propriis manibus interfecit suspendendo ad arborem cum catena aurea. Cujus filius Ingialdr
[...][7] This man [Dag] engendered Alrek, who was beaten to death with a bridle by his brother, Eirik. Alrek was father to Agne,
whose wife dispatched him with her own hands by hanging him on a tree with a golden chain near a place called Agnafit. His son,
Ingjald, [...][8]
Agne is incorrectly called Hogne[7]. Unlike Ynglingatal, Historia Norwegiæ does not give Dagr as Agne's predecessor, but Alrekr.
Instead Alrekr is Agne's predecessor and Agne is succeeded by Yngvi (incorrectly called Ingialdr[7]). The even earlier source
Íslendingabók cites the line of descent in Ynglingatal and it gives the same line of succession as Historia Norwegiæ: xii Alrekr. xiii
Agni. xiiii Yngvi[9].
The location indicated by Snorri Sturluson as the place of Agne's death has a barrow called Agnehögen (Agne's barrow) in
Lillhersby. The barrow was excavated by Oxenstierna and dated to c. 400. -------------------- Konge i Uppsala (Sverige)
Agne, English: Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne -------------------- Notes for Agne Dagson Ble først hengt og så brent.
Agne var en berømt Kriger og laae stedse paa Vikingtog; hærjede Finland, og overvandt Finnernes Høvding Froste, som faldt i
Slaget. Agne bortførte hans Datter Skjalf, og giftede sig med hende. Hun bad ham feire sin Faders Gravøl, og Natten derpaa
ophængte hun Agne med det Guldkjæde, som han bar om Halsen, i Træet ved hans Telt. Pladsen hvor dette skede er holdt derefter
Navn af Agnefit eller Agnesstrand, hvorpaa siden Stockholm blev anlagt. Alrik og Erik den 1ste, Agnes Sønner og store
Stridsmænd, bleve Samkonger efter ham. Paa et Tog ragede de i Strid, toge Bidslerne af sine Heste, da de ingen Vaaben havde
med sig, sloges dermed og faldt begge. -------------------- Agne var ein konge av Ynglingeætta, son eller far av Alrek (eller son av
Dag Dygveson). Forteljinga om han finst mellom anna i Ynglingesoga.
Snorre Sturlason fortel at Agne fann seg kone i Finland, etter å ha drepe far hennar, Froste. Kona heitte Skjålv, og bror hennar
heitte Loge. På veg heim la han til ved Stokksund, ikkje langt frå innseglinga til Stockholm. Han hadde ein halsring av gull, som
før hadde vore ått av Visbur. Her gifta Agne seg med Skjålv, og budde til eit stort gilde. Då han var drukken, bad Skjålv at han
skulle akte på halsringen sin, og han feste ringen om halsen før han gjekk til sengs. Då han hadde sovna, tok Skjålv eit snøre og
feste i halsringen, og slengde snøret over ei grein. Så heiste mennene hennar Agne opp i treet etter ringen, og dette vart banen
hans. Etter dette vart staden kalla Agnafit, av di Agne vart bålførd på staden.
Tjodolv frå Kvine seier i Ynglingatal:
Underlegt er det um Agne-heren svik-fulle Skjålv skulle lika, då syster hans Loge upp i lufti drog kongen gode mer gullhalsbande,
han som ved Taur temja skulde hesten svale som Hagbard reid. Historia Norvegiæ fortel berre at kona til Agne "drap han med båe
hender" på Agnafit.
Kommentar [endre] Forteljinga om Agne tykkjest vera mytologisk, og måten Agne døyr på minner i mangt om menneskeofring,
slik dette vart utførd i Uppsala etter skildringa hjå Adam av Bremen. Her kan ein og tenkje på at namnet Agne minner om
grøde-offeret som er knytt til vanekulten og Frøydyrkinga i desse områda. Namnet Skjålv (Skjolv), er og eit av namna til Frøya.
Skilvingane, som er eit anna namn på kongane av Ynglingeætta, tyder "ætlingar av Skjolv".
Froste og Loge er namn som finst i Fundinn Noregs. Her er Froste son av Fornjot, og Loge er bror til Kåre og Ler. Namna er
tydeleg mytiske, og knytt til vinteren, som "bur" i Finland. Dette "Finland" eller "Finnland" er tydeleg ikkje det geografiske
Finland, men eit mytisk land der vinteren rår. Det kan samanliknast med Finnmark, og "finnane" i forteljinga er mytiske
skapnader. Bak forteljinga om Agne kan ein soleis spore ein kamp mellom sommar og vinter, noko som fell naturleg inn i ein
grødekultus.
Halsringen som er skildra i forteljinga gjev minningar om ein keltisk torques, ein ring dei keltiske hovdingane ofte gjekk med.
Slike ringar er funne mange stader i søre Skandinavia i funn frå tidleg jernalder.
Henta frå «http://nn.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne»
Agne, Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling. Agne being hanged by his
wife Skjalf. Artwork by Hugo Hamilton, 1830 Agne's barrow in Sollentuna, Sweden.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d1/Konung_Agne_blir_om_na
tten_upph%C3%A4ngd_i_ett_tr%C3%A4d_by_Hugo_Hamilton.jpg/250px-Konung_Agne_blir_om_natten_upph%C3%A4ngd_i_
ett_tr%C3%A4d_by_Hugo_Hamilton.jpg&imgrefurl=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne&usg=__VKvUq6lFRleaFTBXk1sYDNsZ
xl8=&h=198&w=250&sz=26&hl=en&start=1&tbnid=O_krXTcuW2Z97M:&tbnh=88&tbnw=111&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dagni%
2Bking%2Bof%2Bsweden%26gbv%3D2%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG -------------------- Noteringar Sveakonung. Dag den vises son.
Skilfingaätten = Yngre Ynglingaätten. Han hemförde med våld, från Finland, sin brud Skjalf, dotter till Frosti. Men vid själva
inseglingen till Mälaren lät hon sina män hänga Agne i ett träd med hans eget guldsmycke. Han brändes på plats och ligger nu i
Agnehögen i Lillhersby
Agni Dagsson 39 SmartMatches
Birth: About 424 in , , , Sweden 1 2
Death:
Sex: M
Father: Dag Dyggvasson b. About 403 in , , , Sweden
Mother: Dag Dyggvasson b. About 407 in , , , Sweden
Spouses & Children Skjalf Frostasson (Wife) b. About 428 in , , , Finland 1 2
Marriage: Abt 444 6 Nov 2004 14:29
Children:
Alrek Agnasson King In Sweden b. About 445 in , , , Sweden
Eric Agnasson b. About 447 in , , , Sweden
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Notes Individual: REFN: HWS8897
Ancestral File Number: G6SZ-9WCHAN20 Mar 2001
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Sources Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral Fileâ„¢ v4.19" Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Publication: 3 Feb 2001
Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson"
Author: Larson, Kirk
Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Desce
ndants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library
Agne, Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne -------------------- http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne_Skjalfarbonde Agne Skjalfarbonde var en
svensk kung av Ynglingaätten, enligt Heimskringla. Han var son till Dag den vise. Under ett plundringståg i Finland dödade han
en hövding vid namn Froste samt förde dennes son Loge och dotter Skjalf som fångar till Sverige.
När de hade kommit in i Mälaren och slagit läger ville Agne tvinga Skjalf att bli hans maka. Skjalf låtsade samtycka härtill, men
lät på bröllopsnatten sina män till hämnd för sin faders död hänga Agne i hans eget guldhalsband från grenen på ett träd, varefter
hon seglade bort.
Enligt sägnen ska platsen där Skjalf lät hänga Agne ha varit ön som därefter fick namnet Agnefit. Agnefit är ön där Staden mellan
broarna (Gamla Stan i Stockholm) ligger. Agne sägs vara höglagd i Agnehögen i Lillhersby. Han efterträddes av sina söner Erik
och Alrik.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne Agne, Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of
Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
Þat tel ek undr, ef Agna her Skalfar ráð at sköpum þóttu, þar gœðing með gullmeni Loga dís at lopti hóf svalan hest Signýjar
vers.[3][4] How do ye like the high-souled maid, Who, with the grim Fate-goddess' aid, Avenged her sire? – made Swithiod's king
Through air in golden halter swing? How do ye like her, Agne's men? Think ye that any chief again Will court the fate your chief
befell, To ride on wooden horse to hell?.[5][6] Ynglingatal then gives Alrekr and Eiríkr as Agne's successors.
The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, older than Snorri's quotation:
Qui [Dagr] genuit Alrik; hunc frater suus Erikr freno percussit ad mortem. Alricr autem genuit Hogna; istum uxor sua juxta locum
Agnafit, qui nunc Stokholmr dicitur, propriis manibus interfecit suspendendo ad arborem cum catena aurea. Cujus filius Ingialdr
[...][7] This man [Dag] engendered Alrek, who was beaten to death with a bridle by his brother, Eirik. Alrek was father to Agne,
whose wife dispatched him with her own hands by hanging him on a tree with a golden chain near a place called Agnafit. His son,
Ingjald, [...][8]
Agne is incorrectly called Hogne[7]. Unlike Ynglingatal, Historia Norwegiæ does not give Dagr as Agne's predecessor, but Alrekr.
Instead Alrekr is Agne's predecessor and Agne is succeeded by Yngvi (incorrectly called Ingialdr[7]). The even earlier source
Íslendingabók cites the line of descent in Ynglingatal and it gives the same line of succession as Historia Norwegiæ: xii Alrekr. xiii
Agni. xiiii Yngvi[9].
The location indicated by Snorri Sturluson as the place of Agne's death has a barrow called Agnehögen (Agne's barrow) in
Lillhersby. The barrow was excavated by Oxenstierna and dated to c. 400. -------------------- Konge i Uppsala (Sverige)
Agne, English: Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne -------------------- Notes for Agne Dagson Ble først hengt og så brent.
Agne var en berømt Kriger og laae stedse paa Vikingtog; hærjede Finland, og overvandt Finnernes Høvding Froste, som faldt i
Slaget. Agne bortførte hans Datter Skjalf, og giftede sig med hende. Hun bad ham feire sin Faders Gravøl, og Natten derpaa
ophængte hun Agne med det Guldkjæde, som han bar om Halsen, i Træet ved hans Telt. Pladsen hvor dette skede er holdt derefter
Navn af Agnefit eller Agnesstrand, hvorpaa siden Stockholm blev anlagt. Alrik og Erik den 1ste, Agnes Sønner og store
Stridsmænd, bleve Samkonger efter ham. Paa et Tog ragede de i Strid, toge Bidslerne af sine Heste, da de ingen Vaaben havde
med sig, sloges dermed og faldt begge. -------------------- Agne var ein konge av Ynglingeætta, son eller far av Alrek (eller son av
Dag Dygveson). Forteljinga om han finst mellom anna i Ynglingesoga.
Snorre Sturlason fortel at Agne fann seg kone i Finland, etter å ha drepe far hennar, Froste. Kona heitte Skjålv, og bror hennar
heitte Loge. På veg heim la han til ved Stokksund, ikkje langt frå innseglinga til Stockholm. Han hadde ein halsring av gull, som
før hadde vore ått av Visbur. Her gifta Agne seg med Skjålv, og budde til eit stort gilde. Då han var drukken, bad Skjålv at han
skulle akte på halsringen sin, og han feste ringen om halsen før han gjekk til sengs. Då han hadde sovna, tok Skjålv eit snøre og
feste i halsringen, og slengde snøret over ei grein. Så heiste mennene hennar Agne opp i treet etter ringen, og dette vart banen
hans. Etter dette vart staden kalla Agnafit, av di Agne vart bålførd på staden.
Tjodolv frå Kvine seier i Ynglingatal:
Underlegt er det um Agne-heren svik-fulle Skjålv skulle lika, då syster hans Loge upp i lufti drog kongen gode mer gullhalsbande,
han som ved Taur temja skulde hesten svale som Hagbard reid. Historia Norvegiæ fortel berre at kona til Agne "drap han med båe
hender" på Agnafit.
Kommentar [endre]
Forteljinga om Agne tykkjest vera mytologisk, og måten Agne døyr på minner i mangt om menneskeofring, slik dette vart utførd i
Uppsala etter skildringa hjå Adam av Bremen. Her kan ein og tenkje på at namnet Agne minner om grøde-offeret som er knytt til
vanekulten og Frøydyrkinga i desse områda. Namnet Skjålv (Skjolv), er og eit av namna til Frøya. Skilvingane, som er eit anna
namn på kongane av Ynglingeætta, tyder "ætlingar av Skjolv".
Froste og Loge er namn som finst i Fundinn Noregs. Her er Froste son av Fornjot, og Loge er bror til Kåre og Ler. Namna er
tydeleg mytiske, og knytt til vinteren, som "bur" i Finland. Dette "Finland" eller "Finnland" er tydeleg ikkje det geografiske
Finland, men eit mytisk land der vinteren rår. Det kan samanliknast med Finnmark, og "finnane" i forteljinga er mytiske
skapnader. Bak forteljinga om Agne kan ein soleis spore ein kamp mellom sommar og vinter, noko som fell naturleg inn i ein
grødekultus.
Halsringen som er skildra i forteljinga gjev minningar om ein keltisk torques, ein ring dei keltiske hovdingane ofte gjekk med.
Slike ringar er funne mange stader i søre Skandinavia i funn frå tidleg jernalder.
Henta frå «http://nn.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne»
Agne, Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling. Agne being hanged by his
wife Skjalf. Artwork by Hugo Hamilton, 1830 Agne's barrow in Sollentuna, Sweden.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d1/Konung_Agne_blir_om_na
tten_upph%C3%A4ngd_i_ett_tr%C3%A4d_by_Hugo_Hamilton.jpg/250px-Konung_Agne_blir_om_natten_upph%C3%A4ngd_i_
ett_tr%C3%A4d_by_Hugo_Hamilton.jpg&imgrefurl=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne&usg=__VKvUq6lFRleaFTBXk1sYDNsZ
xl8=&h=198&w=250&sz=26&hl=en&start=1&tbnid=O_krXTcuW2Z97M:&tbnh=88&tbnw=111&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dagni%
2Bking%2Bof%2Bsweden%26gbv%3D2%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG -------------------- Noteringar Sveakonung. Dag den vises son.
Skilfingaätten = Yngre Ynglingaätten. Han hemförde med våld, från Finland, sin brud Skjalf, dotter till Frosti. Men vid själva
inseglingen till Mälaren lät hon sina män hänga Agne i ett träd med hans eget guldsmycke. Han brändes på plats och ligger nu i
Agnehögen i Lillhersby
Agni Dagsson 39 SmartMatches
Birth: About 424 in , , , Sweden 1 2
Death:
Sex: M
Father: Dag Dyggvasson b. About 403 in , , , Sweden
Mother: Dag Dyggvasson b. About 407 in , , , Sweden
Spouses & Children Skjalf Frostasson (Wife) b. About 428 in , , , Finland 1 2
Marriage: Abt 444 6 Nov 2004 14:29
Children:
Alrek Agnasson King In Sweden b. About 445 in , , , Sweden
Eric Agnasson b. About 447 in , , , Sweden
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Notes Individual: REFN: HWS8897
Ancestral File Number: G6SZ-9WCHAN20 Mar 2001
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Sources Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral Fileâ„¢ v4.19" Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Publication: 3 Feb 2001
Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson"
Author: Larson, Kirk
Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Desce
ndants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library
Agne, Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of Sweden, of the House of Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur (who, interestingly, was the son of
Skjalf's niece Drífa). Although, they were related, Agne married Skjalf who became pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne -------------------- Agne, English: Agni, Hogne or Agni Skjálfarbondi was a mythological king of
Sweden, of the House of Yngling.
Snorri Sturluson relates that he was the son of Dag the Wise, and he was mighty and famous. He was also skilled in many ways.
One summer, he went to Finland with his army where he pillaged. The Finns gathered a vast host under a chief named Frosti.[1]
A great battle ensued which Agne won and many Finns were killed together with Frosti. Agne then subdued all of Finland with his
army, and captured not only great booty but also Frosti's daughter Skjalf and her kinsman Logi.[2]
Agne returned to Sweden and they arrived at Stocksund (Stockholm) where they put up their tent on the side of the river where it is
flat. Agne had a torc which had belonged to Agne's great-great-great-grandfather Visbur. Agne married Skjalf who became
pregnant with two sons, Erik and Alrik.
Skjalf asked Agne to honour her dead father Frosti with a great feast, which he granted. He invited a great many guests, who
gladly arrived to the now even more famous Swedish king. They had a drinking competition in which Agne became very drunk.
Skjalf saw her opportunity and asked Agne to take care of Visbur's torc which was around his neck. Agne bound it fast around his
neck before he went to sleep.
The king's tent was next to the woods and was under the branches of a tall tree for shade. When Agne was fast asleep, Skjalf took a
rope which she attached to the torc. Then she had her men remove the tent, and she threw the rope over a bough. Then she told her
men to pull the rope and they hanged Agne avenging Skjalf's father. Skjalf and her men ran to the ships and escaped to Finland,
leaving her sons behind.
Agne was buried at the place and it is presently called Agnafit, which is east of the Tauren (the Old Norse name for Södertörn) and
west of Stocksund.
Þat tel ek undr, ef Agna her Skalfar ráð at sköpum þóttu, þar gœðing með gullmeni Loga dís at lopti hóf svalan hest Signýjar
vers.[3][4] How do ye like the high-souled maid, Who, with the grim Fate-goddess' aid, Avenged her sire? – made Swithiod's king
Through air in golden halter swing? How do ye like her, Agne's men? Think ye that any chief again Will court the fate your chief
befell, To ride on wooden horse to hell?.[5][6] Ynglingatal then gives Alrekr and Eiríkr as Agne's successors.
The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, older than Snorri's quotation:
Qui [Dagr] genuit Alrik; hunc frater suus Erikr freno percussit ad mortem. Alricr autem genuit Hogna; istum uxor sua juxta locum
Agnafit, qui nunc Stokholmr dicitur, propriis manibus interfecit suspendendo ad arborem cum catena aurea. Cujus filius Ingialdr
[...][7]
This man [Dag] engendered Alrek, who was beaten to death with a bridle by his brother, Eirik. Alrek was father to Agne, whose
wife dispatched him with her own hands by hanging him on a tree with a golden chain near a place called Agnafit. His son,
Ingjald, [...][8]
Agne is incorrectly called Hogne[7]. Unlike Ynglingatal, Historia Norwegiæ does not give Dagr as Agne's predecessor, but Alrekr.
Instead Alrekr is Agne's predecessor and Agne is succeeded by Yngvi (incorrectly called Ingialdr[7]). The even earlier source
Íslendingabók cites the line of descent in Ynglingatal and it gives the same line of succession as Historia Norwegiæ: xii Alrekr. xiii
Agni. xiiii Yngvi[9].
The location indicated by Snorri Sturluson as the place of Agne's death has a barrow called Agnehögen (Agne's barrow) in
Lillhersby. The barrow was excavated by Oxenstierna and dated to c. 400.[10] -------------------- 10. AGNE - King from 220 to 260.
Agne took an army to Finland where he defeated the chieftain Froste and took his daughter Skjalv and her brother Loge. He
married Skjalv and prepared a great burial feast in honor of her father, Froste. Agne now was in possession of the gold ornament
which Visbur had refused to return to his first wife. It was securely tied about Agne's neck, when he fell into a drunken stupor after
a great drinking bout at the burial feast. Skjalv, his wife, fastened a noose under the ornament while Agne slept, and with the help
of her men threw the rope over a branch of the tree above and hanged Agne. His son was:
11. ALRIK - King from 260 until 280. -------------------- Agne became king after his father. Once he was pillaging Finland. He
subdued it and took the King Froste's daughter to wife. Her name was Skjalv. After they had left Finalnd, she begged Agne to
make a burial feast for her husband, during which he got drunk. Skjalv's men helped her hang Agne, after which they escaped and
returned to Finland.
Markhus says that Agne's son, Alrek was the son of Gunhild, the daughter of Hugleik Dansson. Wikipedia shows Skjalf as the
mother of both Alrek and Erik.
Agne ble også kalt Skelfir fra Voss. Han ble stamfar for Skelfingene i Uppsala, også kalt Ynglinger. -------------------- BIOGRAFI:
Nicknames: "Agne Skjalfarbonde", "Agni Skjálfarbondi", "Hogne", "Agni", "Agne", "Agni /Dagsson/"
Birthdate: cirka 400
Birthplace: Upsala, Sweden
Death: Died 450 in Stoksund, Now Norrstrom, Sweden
Occupation: Kung i Svealand, Roi d'Uppsal, Konge av Sverige, Kung. Hade erörat hövdingen Froste i fFnland och tog hans dotter
och son med hem., Kung
Agne Skjalfarbonde var en svensk kung av Ynglingaätten, enligt Heimskringla. Han var son till Dag den vise. Under ett
plundringståg i Finland dödade han en hövding vid namn Froste samt förde dennes son Loge och dotter Skjalf som fångar till
Sverige.
När de hade kommit in i Mälaren och slagit läger ville Agne tvinga Skjalf att bli hans maka. Skjalf låtsade samtycka härtill, men
lät på bröllopsnatten sina män till hämnd för sin faders död hänga Agne i hans eget guldhalsband från grenen på ett träd, varefter
hon seglade bort.
Enligt sägnen ska platsen där Skjalf lät hänga Agne ha varit ön som därefter fick namnet Agnefit. Agnefit är ön där Staden mellan
broarna (Gamla Stan i Stockholm) ligger. Agne sägs vara höglagd i Agnehögen i Lillhersby. Han efterträddes av sina söner Erik
och Alrik.
Birth: About 424 in , , , Sweden 1 2
Death:
Sex: M
Father: Dag Dyggvasson b. About 403 in , , , Sweden
Mother: Dag Dyggvasson b. About 407 in , , , Sweden
Spouses & Children
Skjalf Frostasson (Wife) b. About 428 in , , , Finland
1 2
Marriage: Abt 444 6 Nov 2004 14:29
Children:
Alrek Agnasson King In Sweden b. About 445 in , , , Sweden
Eric Agnasson b. About 447 in , , , Sweden -------------------- Levde på 375-400 talet. Han var grundläggare av den gotiska
Skilfingaätten.
http://www.celtic-casimir.com/webtree/3/2793.htm Born: 424, Sweden Married: Abt 444, Sweden
Ancestral File Number: G6SZ-9W.
Events:
1. Alt. Birth; 424.
Marriage Information:
Agni married Skjalf FROSTADÓTTIR, daughter of Frosti King in Finland and Unnamed Princess of the Fins, about 444 in
Sweden. (Skjalf FROSTADÓTTIR was born in 428 in Finland.)
https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/stamboom-homs/I5621360343390114039.php
Sagokung!
https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agne_Skjalfarbonde
Dag "The Powerful" Van Sweden 1
Birth: About 431 in <, , , Sweden> 2 3
Death:
Sex: M
Father:
Mother:
Unknown: , Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden 1 3
Spouses & Children
Dag De Sweden (Wife) b. About 434 in (, , , Sweden)
2 3
Marriage: Abt 448 in (, , , Sweden) 6 Nov 2004 14:29
Children:
Dageith Dagsdotter b. About 449 in , , , Sweden
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Notes
Individual:
Name Prefix: King
REFN: HWS50546
Ancestral File Number: 18JX-72P
OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\c_crown.jpg
OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\Suede_Moderne.GIF
(Research):DEADEND:CHAN20 Mar 2001
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Sources
Title: "Héraldique européenne"
Author: Arnaud Bunel
Publication: Coats of Arms for European Royalty and Nobility (http://www
.heraldique-europeenne.org, Arnaud Bunel, 1998) , Internet"Armigerous" (ahr-MIJ-ehr-us) adjective
Bearing or entitled to bear heraldicarms.
The reason the notion of a family crest was brought into th
e languagewas that those who were armigerous (entitled to bear arms) used to put their crest or achieveme
Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral Fileâ„¢ v4.19"
Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Publication: 3 Feb 2001
Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson"
Author: Larson, Kirk
Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Desce
ndants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library
-
The Dagling or Dögling dynasty was a legendary clan of the petty kingdom Ringerike what today is Norway. It was descended
from a Dag the Great.
Stanza 18 of the Hyndluljóð reads:
Dagr átti Þóru
drengja móður,
ólusk í ætt þar
æðstir kappar:
Fraðmarr ok Gyrðr
ok Frekar báðir,
Ámr ok Jösurmarr,
Alfr inn gamli.
Varðar, at viti svá.
Viltu enn lengra?[1] The mate of Dag
was a mother of heroes,
Thora, who bore him
the bravest of fighters,
Frathmar and Gyrth
and the Frekis twain,
Am and Jofurmar,
Alf the Old;
It is much to know,--
wilt thou hear yet more?[2]
In the Ynglinga saga, Snorri Sturluson writes that the clan was descended from Dag the Great whose daughter Dageid married the
Swedish king Alrekr and was the mother of Yngvi and Alf.
In the later Hversu Noregr byggðist, it is reported that Dag the Great married a woman named Þóra drengjamóður and they had
nine sons. Among them were Óli, Ámr, Jöfurr and Arngrim the berserker who married Eyfura.
This fits well the chronology of Ynglinga saga, Hervarar saga and Orvar-Odd's saga, as Arngrim's sons Angantyr and his brother
Hjörvard would have been the cousins of the Swedish king Yngvi, whose daughter Hjörvard wanted to marry. This proposal would
lead to both Angantyr and his brothers being killed in battle against the Swedish hero Hjalmar and his Norwegian friend
Orvar-Odd.
Another one of Dag the Great's sons according to Hversu Noregr Byggðist was Óli, who was the father of Dag, the father of Óleif
the father of Hring (the old king Ring of Frithiof's Saga), the father of Olaf, the father of Helgi, the father of Sigurd Hjort, the
father of Ragnhild, who was the mother of Harald Fairhair.
This line partially agrees with the one found in Ragnarssona þáttr, where it is told instead that Dag the Great and his wife Þóra
drengjamóður were the parents of Hring, the father of Ingi, the father of Ingjald, the father of Olaf, the father of Gudröd and Helgi
the Sharp. Helgi married the daughter of Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye and had the son Sigurd Hjort, the father of Ragnhild, the mother
of Harald Fairhair.
[edit] References
1.^ Guðni Jónsson's edition
2.^ Bellow's translation
Dag the Wise or Dagr Spaka (2nd or 3rd century AD) was a mythological Swedish king of the House of Ynglings. He was the son
of Dyggvi, the former king. According to legend, he could understand the speech of birds and had a sparrow that gathered news for
him from many lands. When the bird was killed on one of these trips, Dag invaded Reidgotaland (considering the date and
location, apparently Gothiscandza), in order to avenge it. There he was ambushed by a thrall and killed.The earliest two versions
based on Ynglingatal, i.e. Historia Norwegiæ and Íslendingabók (see below) say that Dag was succeeded by his son Alrekr and
Eírikr who in their turn were succeeded by Dag's grandson Agne (in Historia Norwegiæ incorrectly called Hogne[1]):Historia
Norwegiæ:Cui [Dyggui] successit in regnum filius ejus Dagr, quem Dani in quodam vado, quod Sciotanvath vel Wapnavath
dicitur, dum passeris injurias vindicare conaretur, publico bello occiderunt. Qui genuit Alrik; hunc frater suus Erikr [...] Alricr
autem genuit Hogna[2]Íslendingabók only lists the line of succession: x Dyggvi. xi Dagr. xii Alrekr. xiii Agni. xiiii
Yngvi[3].However, in the Ynglinga saga, Snorri Sturluson gives Agne as Dag's son and successor, and the two brothers Alrekr and
Eiríkr as his grand-sons.
Dagling from Wikipedia The Dagling or Dögling dynasty was a legendary clan of the petty kingdom Ringerike what today is
Norway. It was descended from a Dag the Great. Stanza 18 of the Hyndluljóð reads: Dagr átti Þóru drengja móður, ólusk í ætt þar
æðstir kappar: Fraðmarr ok Gyrðr ok Frekar báðir, Ámr ok Jösurmarr, Alfr inn gamli. Varðar, at viti svá. Viltu enn lengra?
(Guðni Jónsson's edition) The mate of Dag was a mother of heroes, Thora, who bore him the bravest of fighters, Frathmar and
Gyrth and the Frekis twain, Am and Jofurmar, Alf the Old; It is much to know,-- wilt thou hear yet more? (Bellow's translation) In
the Ynglinga saga, Snorri Sturluson writes that the clan was descended from Dag the Great whose daughter Dageid married the
Swedish king Alrekr and was the mother of Yngvi and Alf. In the later Hversu Noregr byggðist, it is reported that Dag the Great
married a woman named Þóra drengjamóður and they had nine sons. Among them were Óli, Ámr, Jöfurr and Arngrim the
berserker who married Eyfura. This fits well the chronology of Ynglinga saga, Hervarar saga and Orvar-Odd's saga, as Arngrim's
sons Angantyr and his brother Hjörvard would have been the cousins of the Swedish king Yngvi, whose daughter Hjörvard wanted
to marry. This proposal would lead to both Angantyr and his brothers being killed in battle against the Swedish hero Hjalmar and
his Norwegian friend Orvar-Odd. Another one of Dag the Great's sons according to Hversu Noregr Byggðist was Óli, who was the
father of Dag, the father of Óleif the father of Hring (the old king Ring of Frithiof's Saga), the father of Olaf, the father of Helgi,
the father of Sigurd Hjort, the father of Ragnhild, who was the mother of Harald Fairhair. This line partially agrees with the one
found in Ragnarssona þáttr, where it is told instead that Dag the Great and his wife Þóra drengjamóður were the parents of Hring,
the father of Ingi, the father of Ingjald, the father of Olaf, the father of Gudröd and Helgi the Sharp. Helgi married the daughter of
Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye and had the son Sigurd Hjort, the father of Ragnhild, the mother of Harald Fairhair. Retrieved from
"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dagling"
Gift med
Skjålv Frostedatter, född cirka 410
i Finland, död cirka 522 i Svitjod, Sverige.
Barn:
Alrik Agnasson, född cirka 430, död cirka 470
|