List of legendary kings of Sweden
The legendary kings of Sweden are the legendary rulers of Sweden and the Swedes who preceded Eric the Victorious and Olof Skötkonung, the earliest reliably attested Swedish kings. Though the stories of some of the supposed kings may be embellished tales of local rulers of chiefs that actually existed, modern scholarship overwhelmingly does not consider the legendary kings of Sweden to have been real historical figures. The modern Swedish monarchy considers Eric the Victorious to have been the first King of Sweden.
In medieval Swedish lists of kings, the figure generally represented as the first king of Sweden is Olof Skötkonung, the first Christian king of Sweden and the first Swedish king to mint coins. Supposed earlier kings are for the most part only attested in Icelandic sagas, sometimes contradictory mixtures of myths and poetry, written in the 11th–13th centuries, several centuries after the events described in them. What is genuine history and what is myth and legend in the sagas is impossible to determine today, and everything contained in them must as such be regarded as legendary, if not fictional. The earliest legendary dynasty, the Ynglings, may be an entirely invented sequence of kings, serving to justify and legitimize the later dynasties and rulers in Scandinavia who claimed descent from them. Many of the legendary kings would have ruled during the Migration Period and subsequent Vendel Period, but larger political structures in Scandinavia are not believed to have formed and centralized until the Viking Age.
The legendary kings of Sweden, as presented in the sagas, covers three legendary dynasties of rulers; the Yngling dynasty, claimed to have been descended from the Norse god Odin, the dynasty founded by Ivar Vidfamne, who supposedly conquered Sweden and deposed the Ynglings, and the House of Munsö, which succeeded Vidfamne's dynasty. The final few kings considered part of the Munsö dynasty by the Icelandic sagas; Eric the Victorious, Olof Skötkonung, Anund Jacob and Emund the Old, were real historical kings, though that does not mean that their legendary ancestors were real historical figures. Contemporary primary sources from 9th–11th century Germany, such as the accounts of Adam of Bremen and Rimbert, contradict the line of Munsö kings purported to have existed by the sagas.
Yngling dynasty
The sequence of legendary kings below derives from medieval Icelandic poet and historian Snorri Sturluson's Ynglinga saga, the first section of the saga collection Heimskringla. The Ynglinga saga was composed by Sturluson 1230 and details the reigns and lives of the kings of the Yngling dynasty, a legendary line of kings said to descend from the Norse god Odin. The Ynglings are described in the Ynglinga saga as the first royal blood line of the Swedes.The Ynglinga saga contains no references to chronology with the exception of presenting the rulers in chronological order. In some places, names appear that might belong to people also attested in other sagas, such as Beowulf, wherein the Ynglings are called Scylfings. According to the Ynglinga saga, the earliest rulers used the title drotin. Even later Yngling rulers are typically not designated as "Kings of Sweden" or "Kings of the Swedes" in the Ynglinga saga, most of them being described as "Kings in Uppsala", an early political center in Sweden. The Yngling dynasty is sometimes referred to as the "Royal House of Uppsala" in later scholarship.
Sequence of kings
The Ynglinga saga presents the following line of Yngling kings of the Swedes:- Odin the Old – founder of the royal line; identified with the Norse mythological figure of the same name.
- Njord the Rich – son and successor of Odin; identified with the Norse mythological figure of the same name.
- Yngvi-Frey – son and successor of Njord; identified with the Norse mythological figure of the same name. Described as the founder of the subsequent Viking age political centre Gamla Uppsala. The Yngling dynasty takes its name from him.
- Fjölnir – son and successor of Yngvi-Frey.
- Sveigder – son and successor of Fjölnir.
- Vanlande – son and successor of Sveigder.
- Visbur – son and successor of Vanlande.
- Domalde – son and successor of Visbur.
- Domar – son and successor of Domalde.
- Dyggvi – son and successor of Domar.
- Dag the Wise – son and successor of Dyggvi.
- Agne Skjálfarbondi – son and successor of Dag.
- Alaric and Eric – sons and co-successors of Agne.
- Yngvi and Alf – sons of Alaric; co-successors of Alaric and Eric.
- Hugleik – son of Alf; successor of Yngvi and Alf.
- * Haki – Danish sea-king who supposedly conquered Sweden, usurpring the throne from Hugleik.
- Jorund – son of Yngvi and cousin of Hugleik; retook the throne from Hugleik.
- Aun the Old – son and successor of Jorund.
- * Halfdan – legendary Danish king of the Scylding dynasty; supposedly conquered Uppsala from Aun and ruled there as king for twenty years before dying of natural causes, whereupon Aun was reinstated as king.
- * Ale the Strong – legendary Danish king of the Scylding dynasty; supposedly conquered Uppsala from Aun and ruled there as king for twenty-five years before being killed by legendary champion Starkad, whereupon Aun was reinstated as king.
- Egil Tunnadolg – son and successor of Aun.
- Ottar Vendelcrow – son and successor of Egil.
- Eadgils the Mighty – son and successor of Ottar.
- Eysteinn – son and successor of Eadgils.
- * Sölve – Danish or Geatish sea-king who supposedly conquered Sweden, usurping the throne from Eysteinn.
- Ingvar Harra – son of Eysteinn, proclaimed king after the Swedes turned on Sölve and murdered him.
- Anund – son and successor of Ingvar.
- Ingjald Illready – son and successor of Anund. According to the Ynglinga saga the last of the Swedish Yngling kings as Sweden was conquered by Scanian king Ivar Vidfamne. Ingjald's son, Olof Trätälja, became ancestral to the later kings of Norway of the Fairhair dynasty.
Historicity
It is possible that the Yngling line of kings is entirely fictional, invented by later Norwegian rulers to assert their right to rule Norway. In the Viking Age and later, Danish rulers repeatedly attempted to conquer Norway and through inventing a lineage that stretched back centuries, the Norwegian rulers may have attempted to demonstrate their inherent right to their lands and to put themselves on the same level as the Danes, who had historical accounts of their ancestors. The Swedish Ynglings might have been invented to glorify the Norwegian kings further, giving them a glorious and mythical past associated with Uppsala. Most of the sagas known today, the Ynglinga saga included, were composed during a relatively brief period, from the 12th to 13th century, a time when royal power was being consolidated in Norway, Denmark and Sweden. Their creation might thus stem from political and social needs, rather than a desire to tell genuine history.
In addition to having been written centuries after the events they describe, the sagas have numerous other problems which make them unsuitable to use as sources. Many of the elements of the Ynglinga saga appear to be based on later, documented, events and people in Scandinavia. For instance, the figure of Aun, described as being driven from Uppsala and taking up court in Västergötland instead, is similar to the historical Swedish king Inge the Elder, who was driven from Uppsala into Västergötland in the 11th century. The Ynglinga saga might also be an example of anti-royal social commentary rather than an attempt to tell history. Many of the kings in the saga are overshadowed by their contemporary vassals and wives, and they are rarely shown in a positive light. The inglorious deaths of many of the Swedish Ynglings; with examples such as murder, burning to death, drowning in mead and being "hag-ridden" to death, might be an attempt by Sturluson to say that the kings who ruled Norway in his time and claimed Yngling descent were not to be taken seriously. Though descent from figures such as Odin and Njord, gods in Norse mythology, might seem a prestigious origin, it would be problematic in early medieval Norway since the kings were Christian and their supposed ancestors were worshipped as Pagan gods. Their addition to the saga might thus have been another attempt by Sturluson to undermine royal ideology.
If some of the Ynglings were real historical figures, they would have ruled during the Migration Period and the subsequent Vendel Period, predating the Viking Age. Historical evidence of early geopolitics in Scandinavia suggests that larger political structures, kingdoms such as medieval Sweden, Norway and Denmark, did not form until the late Viking Age. The centralization of power under one monarch is believed to have resulted from, or at the very least have been connected to, Viking expansion, with petty kings increasing their power through aggressive military ventures directed both to foreign lands and against their neighbors.
Vidfamne dynasty
According to the Ynglinga saga, the Yngling dynasty's rule in Sweden was succeeded by Ivar Vidfamne, previously a petty king in Scania, who founded a new royal line.Sequence of kings
The sequence of kings presented below is given by the Hervarar saga, a saga written in the 12th or 13th century.- Ivar Vidfamne – founder of the dynasty, deposed the Yngling dynasty.
- Harald Wartooth – son of Randver, Ivar's vassal king in Denmark, and Alfhild, the daughter of Ivar. Took control over most of Ivar's former empire.
- Eysteinn Beli – son of Harald Wartooth, inherited Sweden. He ruled until Sweden was conquered by the Danish or Swedish viking Ragnar Lodbrok.
Historicity
Munsö dynasty
The Munsö dynasty of kings is the earliest supposed royal lineage that is mentioned not only in Icelandic sagas, but also in medieval Swedish sources. Though only a few examples survive, medieval Swedish lists of kings overwhelmingly begin with Olof Skötkonung, the first Christian king of Sweden, suggesting that he, and not any of the previous legendary figures, was seen as Sweden's first king. In Icelandic sources, such as the 12th/13th-century Langfeðgatal, Olof Skötkonung is regarded as a late ruler of a significantly older dynasty, stretching back to legendary Viking hero Ragnar Lodbrok. In addition to the short genealogical account of Langfeðgatal, Ragnar Lodbrok's royal dynasty is also presented in a more narrative form in the aforementioned Hervarar saga, also written in the 12th or 13th century.Sequence of kings
Langfeðgatal presents the following line of kings:- Ragnar Lodbrok – earliest king mentioned in Langfeðgatal. Conquered Sweden from Eysteinn Beli according to the Hervarar saga.
- Björn Ironside – son and successor of Ragnar Lodbrok.
- Eric Björnsson – son and successor of Björn Ironside.
- Eric Refilsson – son of Refil, a son of Björn Ironside, and successor of Eric Björnsson.
- Anund Uppsale and Björn at Haugi – sons of Eric Björnsson and co-successors of Eric Refilsson.
- Eric Anundsson – son and successor of Anund Uppsale.
- Björn Eriksson – son and successor of Eric Anundsson.
- Eric the Victorious and Olof Björnsson – both sons and co-successors of Björn Eriksson. Eric the Victorious is a real historical king, 970–995.
- Olof Skötkonung – real historical king, 995–1022, son of Eric the Victorious.
- Anund Jacob – real historical king, 1022–1050, son of Olof Skötkonung.
- Emund the Old – real historical king, 1050–1060, illegitimate son of Olof Skötkonung.
Historicity
In terms of sources on Viking Age kings, Adam of Bremen, who worked in the 11th century and wrote of Swedish kings, is significantly closer in time and place to the kings he describe, only being separated from the mentioned rulers by about 150–100 years. The Icelandic sources are substantially different from his work, not only in the kings preceding Olof Skötkonung. As the successors of King Stenkil, the Icelandic sources give Håkan the Red, followed by a co-regency of Inge the Elder, Halsten and Blot-Sweyn. Adam of Bremen instead gives a more linear succession of Eric and Eric, followed by Halsten, Anund Gårdske and then Håkan the Red. As the direct predecessors of Eric the Victorious, Icelandic sources give Björn Eriksson, preceded by Erik Anundsson. Adam of Bremen writes that Eric the Victorious was preceded by Anund/Emund Eriksson, who in turn was preceded by Eric Ringsson and Emund/Anund Ringsson, sons and successors of a king by the name of Ring. Adam of Bremen's line of kings is thus:
- Ring, reigning in the early 10th century.
- Eric Ringsson, son of Ring, reigning in the 10th century.
- Emund Ringsson, son of Ring, reigning in the 10th century, possibly together with Eric.
- Emund Eriksson, son of Eric and successor of Emund, reigning possibly 975.
- Björn, who reigned 829 when Ansgar first visited Sweden. Björn was reportedly friendly to the missionaries but chose not to convert to Christianity.
- *Anund, who is not mentioned as ruling at Birka, having been driven from Sweden and taken refuge among the Danes. Anund promised Birka to the Danes as a reward for helping him gain revenge and attacked Birka 840. As Birka continues to be ruled by Swedish kings, it is unlikely that the attack succeeded.
- Eric, who was recently deceased by the time Ansgar visited Sweden for the second time 852. According to Rimbert's writings, some of the Anti-Christian Swedes suggested that Eric be worshipped as a god alongside the rest of the Nordic pantheon instead of the new Christian god.
- Olof, who reigned 852, during Ansgar's second visit to Sweden, having then only recently come to the throne.
Cited bibliography
Cited web sources