Sigurd the Stout

Sigurd Hlodvirsson
Earl of Orkney
Title held991[1] to 1014
PredecessorHlodvir Thorfinsson
SuccessorBrusi, Sumarlidi and Einar Sigurdsson
Native nameSigurðr digri - Sigurd the Stout
Died23 April 1014
Clontarf
Noble familyNorse Earls of Orkney
Spouseunnamed daughter of Malcolm II of Scotland
IssueHunde, Brusi, Sumarlidi, Einar and Thorfinn
FatherHlodvir Thorfinnsson
MotherEithne

Sigurd Hlodvirsson (c. 960 – 23 April 1014), popularly known as Sigurd the Stout from the Old Norse Sigurðr digri,[2] was an Earl of Orkney. The main sources for his life are the Norse Sagas, which were first written down some two centuries or more after his death. These engaging stories must therefore be treated with caution rather than as reliable historical documents.[3][Note 1]

Sigurd was the son of Hlodvir Thorfinnsson and (according to the Norse sagas) a direct descendant of Torf-Einarr Rognvaldson. Sigurd's tenure as earl was apparently free of the kin-strife that beset some other incumbents of this title and he was able to pursue his military ambitions over a wide area. He also held lands in the north of mainland Scotland and in the Sudrøyar, and he may have been instrumental in the defeat of Gofraid mac Arailt, King of the Isles. The Annals of Ulster record his death at the Battle of Clontarf in 1014, the earliest known reference to the earldom of Orkney.

The saga tales draw attention to Sigurd's conversion to Christianity and his use of a totemic raven banner, a symbol of the Norse God Odin. This ambiguous theme and the lack of detailed contemporary records of his life have led to a variety of interpretations of the saga material by modern scholars.

  1. ^ Muir (2005) p. 27
  2. ^ Thomson (2008) p. 59
  3. ^ Woolf (2007) pp. 277–85
  4. ^ Woolf (2007) p. 285
  5. ^ Woolf (2007) p. 277


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