Eirik I Of Norway

Eirik Bloodaxe (Old Norse:Eirkr blðx, Icelandic:Eirkur blðx, Norwegian:Eirik Blodks) (cirka 885954), was the second king of Norway (930-934) and the eldest son of his father Harald Fairhair. Once the power was in his hands, he began to quarrel with his other brothers and had four of them killed. A Latin text describes him as fratris interfector (brother-slayer), and it is entirely conceivable the "blood" component of his soubriquet refers to his propensity for fratricide. In 920, he undertook a viking expedition to Bjarmaland, in northern Russia. His youngest brother, Haakon returned England and won support from the Norwegian nobles to oust Eirik in 934; Eirik's rule was hard and despotic, and this would account for the alacrity with which the nobles joined forces to oust him. After waging unsuccessful campaigns to regain the throne, Eirik moved to the Orkney Islands and later to the Kingdom of Jorvik. Although met initially warmly by Athelstan, who made Eirik ruler in Northumbria, with a brief to provide a defence against the ravages of the Scots, and the Irish. His rule in Northumbria soon degenerated, however, and he was killed in battle at Stainmore, Westmorland, in 954. Eric 1

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
harald iv of norway
olav v of norway
harald v of norway
farscape
art gallery
great sandy desert
auction bridge
charles viii
shopping
philippe ptain
dr dos
umberto i of italy
art colony
location
tate gallery
national gallery of scotland
national gallery of victoria
whitney museum of american art
museum of modern art
eclipse cycle
saros cycle
list of guerrillas
blake's 7
humbert i of savoy
table of chinese monarchs
richard hadlee
haakon i of norway
northern lights
sea urchin
festival of britain
pummelo
alfalfa
marie jos perec
eilat
ronaldo
lamp
university constituency
nasals
kent pitman
stephen f. austin
common swift
barn swallow
realpolitik
dreyfus affair