Notes


Matches 9,001 to 9,050 of 10,692

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9001 Sibley Cemetery Land, George Benjamin (I35555)
 
9002 Sibley Cemetery O'Neal, Daniel Eldon Sr (I35556)
 
9003 Sibley Cemetery O'Neal, Joseph Franklin (I35557)
 
9004 Sibley Cemetery O'Neal, Joseph Milton (I35566)
 
9005 Sibley Cemetery Calhoun, Allie Tibits (I35567)
 
9006 Sibley Cemetery Emory, Clyde (I35572)
 
9007 Sibley Cemetery Emory, Judson Land (I35575)
 
9008 Sibley Cemetery, Alabama Presbyterian Church Harris, Anna Judson (I16810)
 
9009 Sibley Cemetery, Alabama Presbyterian Church Land, James Wesley (I16824)
 
9010 Sibley Cemetery, Alabama Presbyterian Church Kendall, Sally Kathleen (I21129)
 
9011 Sibley Cemetery, Alabama Presbyterian Church Land, Son (I21130)
 
9012 Sibley Cemetery, Alabama Presbyterian Church Land, Son (I21131)
 
9013 Sibley Cemetery, Sibley, Louisiana Land, George Franklin (I16817)
 
9014 Siege of Acre De Coucy, Lord of Coucy Raoul I (I3769)
 
9015 Siege of Vicksburg Tuttle, Sylvanus (I34423)
 
9016 Sigrid the Haughty, also known as Sigríð Storråda, is a queen of contested historicity appearing in Norse sagas as wife first of Eric the Victorious of Sweden, and then Sweyn Forkbeard of Denmark. While given a Nordic ancestry in the sagas, she has been hypothesized to be identical to historically attested queens of Polish or Pomeranian origin. Alternatively, she is held to be apocryphal by some modern scholars, e.g. Birgitta Fritz.[1]
Sigrid appears in many sagas composed generations after the events they describe, but there is no reliable evidence as to her existence as they describe her. It is unclear if she was a real person, a compound person (with several real women's lives and deeds attributed to one compound person), or a complete invention of the saga authors.

The Heimskringla describes Sigrid as the beautiful but vengeful daughter of Skogul-Tosti, a powerful Swedish nobleman. As widow of Eric the Victorious, she held many great estates, and was living with her son Olav the Swede, when her foster-brother Harald Grenske, a king in Vestfold sought her hand, but she had him and another royal wooer, Vissavald of Gardarik burned to death in a great hall following a feast to discourage other suitors.
Her hand was next sought by Olaf Trygvasson, the king of Norway, but he would have required that she convert to Christianity. She told him to his face, "I will not part from the faith which my forefathers have kept before me." In a rage, Olaf struck her with a glove, and Sigrid calmly told him, "This may some day be thy death." Sigrid then proceeded to create a coalition of his enemies to bring about his downfall. She allied Sweden with Denmark, marrying the widower Sweyn Forkbeard who had already been feuding with Olaf. Swein had sent his sister Tyri to marry the Wendish king Burislav, who had been father of Swein's first wife, Gunhild. Tyri fled and married Olaf, goading him into conflict with her brother, while Sigrid inflamed Swein against her former suitor. This shared animosity would lead to the Battle of Swold, in which Olaf fell.
The Danish historian Saxo Grammaticus would repeat this information, writing that Eric the Victorious' widow Syritha had married Sweyn Forkbeard after having spurned Olaf Trygvasson.
[edit]Contemporary chroniclers

There is scant material in medieval chronicles to provide details regarding the marriages of Swein of Denmark and Erik of Sweden:
Thietmar of Merseburg mentions that the daughter of Mieszko I of Poland and sister of Boleslaw I of Poland married Sweyn Forkbeard and gave him two sons, Canute the Great and Harold II of Denmark, but he does not mention her name. Thietmar is probably the best informed of all medieval chroniclers, since he was contemporary with described events and well-informed about the events in Poland and Denmark. The assertion that Harald and Canute's mother was Boleslaw's sister may explain some mysterious statements which appear in medieval chronicles, such as the involvement of Polish troops in invasions of England.
Adam of Bremen writes that a Polish princess was the wife of Eric the Victorious and by this marriage the mother Olof Skötkonung of Sweden, before she became mother of Canute the Great and Harold II of Denmark in her second marriage with Sweyn. Consequently, Adam calls Canute and Olof Skötkonung brothers. Adam's information here is considered unreliable by some historians, because he is the only source to state this relationship.
Gesta Cnutonis regis mentions in one short passage that Canute and his brother went to the land of the Slavs, and brought back their mother, who was living there. This does not necessarily mean that his mother was Slavic, but nevertheless this chronicle strongly suggests that she was.
There is an inscription in "Liber vitae of the New Minster and Hyde Abbey Winchester", that king Canute's sister's name was "Santslaue" ("Santslaue soror CNVTI regis nostri"), which without doubt is a Slavic name. J. Steenstrup suggests that Canute's sister may have been named after her mother, hence coining (the now generally agreed upon) hypothesis, that her Slavic name is Swietoslawa, but only as a reconstruction based on a single mention of her daughter's name and the hypothesis that she named her daughter after herself.
[edit]Modern reconstructions

These data have been used for alternative reconstructions. One would interpret the saga account of Sigrid as a confused rendering of a historical Polish princess, 'Sviatoslava', daughter of Mieszko, who married in succession Erik and Swein, being mother of Olaf (by Erik), Harald and Canute (both by Swein). Sigrid would either be a contemporary name adopted by the Princess to conform to her new linguistic context, or else simply a name invented by saga writers who did not know or could not comprehend her Slavic name. This solution may further make her identical to Swein's first queen in the saga, 'Gunhild' daughter of Burislav, suggested to be a confused rendering of the same historical marriage to the sister of Boleslav of Poland. Alternatively, the attributed Polish marriages of Swein and Eric may have been to different women, with 'Gunhild' being the daughter of Mieszko, while Eric's widow, the model for Sigrid, then marrying Swein after her death. Finally, some consider "Sigrid" to be a fantasy created by Scandinavian saga writers.
[edit]Archaeology

Further confusion has been introduced by dated interpretations of an archaeological discovery. In 1835, the Haraldskær Woman was discovered in a peat bog in Jutland. This body of a woman was dated to the 1000s, and it was identified with Sigrid (or Gunhild). Radiocarbon dating later proved this dating incorrect. However, the erroneous dating became intertwined with numerous episodes of Scandinavian intrigue, as the theory was elaborated to serve a variety of agendas of kings and nobles prior to its redating.
[edit]In literature

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow composed a poem with the title Queen Sigrid the Haughty of which this is the first verse.
Queen Sigrid the Haughty sat proud and aloft
In her chamber, that looked over meadow and croft.
Heart's dearest,
Why dost thou sorrow so?
Karen Blixen, in the short story "The Deluge at Norderney" in Seven Gothic Tales, refers to Sigrid, claiming that she invited all her suitors to her house and burned them in order to discourage other suitors. 
Sigrid (I15917)
 
9017 Silent Home Cemetery Riley, Hazel Marie (I35631)
 
9018 Silent Home Cemetery Malson, Lowell Dwight (I35645)
 
9019 Silent Home Cemetery Malson, Daniel Andrew (I35647)
 
9020 Silent Home Cemetery Skeens, Georgia Loree (I35648)
 
9021 Siloam Cemetery Meador, Radford Anderson (I53566)
 
9022 Siloam Cemetery Gregory, Ida Pearl (I53567)
 
9023 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Cox, Elba (I3310)
 
9024 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Gandy, Etta Letitia (I5151)
 
9025 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Hicks, Bruce Wilmer (I6612)
 
9026 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Hicks, Nora Helen (I6714)
 
9027 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Hicks, Sylvia May (I6737)
 
9028 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Hicks, Virgil Chester (I6742)
 
9029 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Hicks, William Victor (I6758)
 
9030 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Littrell, Ezra Washington (I8797)
 
9031 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Littrell, Monell Delores (I8804)
 
9032 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Littrell, Richard Wilmer (I8806)
 
9033 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Minich, Nora Belle (I10014)
 
9034 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Smith, Arnold Leroy (I12730)
 
9035 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Smith, Peggy Ann (I12860)
 
9036 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Smith, Robert Dean (I12873)
 
9037 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Smith, William G (I12916)
 
9038 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Stanley, Edward Wayne (I13513)
 
9039 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Thompson, Mary Elizabeth (I14041)
 
9040 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Littrell, Richard Caleb (I37473)
 
9041 Siloam Chapel Cemetery Neighbors, Octavia Alice (I37474)
 
9042 SIlver Brook Cemetery Pegg, Nancy Elizabeth (I51377)
 
9043 SIlver Brook Cemetery Harrison, William Thomas (I51378)
 
9044 SIlver Brook Cemetery Guyton, John Milton (I51480)
 
9045 SIlver Brook Cemetery Russell, Emma (I51481)
 
9046 SIlver Brook Cemetery Guyton, Julia Hamilton (I51482)
 
9047 SIlver Brook Cemetery Acker, Ruth Halbert (I51624)
 
9048 SIlver Brook Cemetery Archer, Thomas Alexander E (I51625)
 
9049 SIlver Brook Cemetery Archer, William Mosley (I51628)
 
9050 SIlver Brook Cemetery Patterson, Dora (I51629)
 

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