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Halfdan Ragnarsson

Halfdan Ragnarsson (Old Norse: Hálfdan; Old English: Halfdene or Healfdene; Old Irish: Albann; died 877) was a Viking leader and a commander of the Great Heathen Army which invaded the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of England, starting in 865.

Halfdan Ragnarsson
King of Northumbria
Reign876–877
PredecessorRicsige
SuccessorGuthfrith
King of Dublin

(Disputed)
Reign875–877
PredecessorEystein Olafsson
SuccessorBárid
Co-ruler of Denmark

(possibly Jutland)
Reign871–877
PredecessorBagsecg
SuccessorSigurd Snake-in-the-Eye
Died877
Strangford Lough
Fatherpossibly Ragnar Lodbrok, or whoever was historical basis for the possibly legendary character
Motherpossibly Aslaug, or historical basis for a legendary character

One of six sons of Ragnar Lodbrok named in Norse sagas, Halfdan's brothers or half-brothers included Björn Ironside, Ivar the Boneless, Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, Ubba and Hvitserk. Because Halfdan is not mentioned in any source that mentions Hvitserk, some scholars have suggested that they are the same individual – a possibility reinforced by the fact that Halfdan was a relatively common name among Vikings and Hvitserk "white shirt" may have been an epithet or nickname that distinguished Halfdan from other men by the same name.[1]

Halfdan was the first Viking King of Northumbria and a pretender to the throne of Kingdom of Dublin. It is also possible he was for a time co-ruler of Denmark with his brother Sigurd Snake-in-the-eye, because Frankish sources mention certain Sigfred and Halfdan as rulers in 873. He died at the Battle of Strangford Lough in 877 trying to press his Irish claim.

Biography

Halfdan was one of the leaders of the Great Heathen Army which invaded the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of East Anglia in 865.[2][3] According to the Norse sagas this invasion was organised by the sons of Ragnar Lodbrok (Halfdan being one of them), to wreak revenge against Ælla of Northumbria. Ælla had supposedly had Ragnar executed in 865 by throwing him in a snake pit, but the historicity of this explanation is unknown.[4][5] The invaders are usually identified as Danes, although the tenth-century churchman Asser stated that the invaders came "de Danubia", which translates as "from the Danube"; the fact that the Danube is located in what was known in Latin as Dacia suggests that Asser actually intended Dania, a Latin term for Denmark.[6]

In the autumn of 865 the Great Heathen Army landed in East Anglia, where they remained over the winter and secured horses.[7] The following year the army moved northwards and invaded Northumbria, which was at that time in the middle of a civil war between Ælla and Osberht, opposing claimants for the Northumbrian throne.[8] Late in 866 the army conquered the rich Northumbrian settlement of York.[9] The following year Ælla and Osberht made an alliance to retake the town. The attack was defeated, and both of them fell in the battle.[8] With no obvious leader, Northumbrian resistance was crushed and the Danes installed a puppet-king, Ecgberht, to rule in their name and collect taxes for them.[10]

Later in the year the Army moved south and invaded the Kingdom of Mercia, capturing the town of Nottingham, where they spent the winter.[9] The Mercian king, Burghred, responded by allying with the West Saxon King Æthelred, and with a combined force they laid siege to the town. The Anglo-Saxons were unable to recapture the city, but a truce was agreed whereby the Danes would withdraw to York.[11] where they remained for over a year, gathering strength for further assaults.[8]

The Danes returned to East Anglia in 869, this time intent on conquest. They seized Thetford with the intention of remaining there over the winter, but they were met by an East Anglian army.[12] The East Anglian army was defeated and its commander, King Edmund, was slain.[13] Medieval tradition identifies Edmund as a martyr who refused the Danes' demand to renounce Christ, and was killed for his steadfast Christianity.[14] Ivar and Ubba are identified as the commanders of the Danes, and the killers of Edmund, and it is unknown what part, if any, Halfdan took.[15]

Following the conquest of East Anglia Ivar apparently left the Great Heathen Army – his name disappears from English records after 870. However, he is generally considered to be identical to Ímar, a Norse King of Dublin who died in 873.[16] With Ivar in Ireland, Halfdan became the main commander of the Army, and in 870 he led it in an invasion of Wessex.[11] Sometime after Ivar left the Army a great number of Viking warriors arrived from Scandinavia, as part of the Great Summer Army, led by Bagsecg, bolstering the ranks of Halfdan's army.[17] According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the Danes battled the West Saxons nine times, including at the Battle of Ashdown on 8 January 871.[18] However, the West Saxons could not be defeated, and Halfdan accepted a truce from Alfred, newly crowned king of Wessex.[19]

The Army retreated to the captured town of London and stayed there over the winter of 871/872.[20] Coins minted in London during this period bear the name Halfdan, identifying him as its leader.[18] In autumn of 872 the Army returned to Northumbria to quell a revolt against its puppet-regent Ecgberht.[19] However, this explanation for the army's move north has been challenged, and it has been suggested the relocation was a result of a war with Mercia.[21] The Army overwintered at Torksey, and was then reported as being in the Repton district a year later. It conquered Mercia in 874, the Mercian King Burghred being deposed and replaced by a Danish-puppet regent, Ceolwulf.[22]

Following this victory the Army split in two – one half under Guthrum heading south to continue fighting against Wessex, the other half under Halfdan heading north to fight against the Picts and Britons of Strathclyde.[18] According to the Annals of Ulster, Eystein Olafsson, King of Dublin was "deceitfully" killed in 875 by "Albann", a figure generally agreed to be Halfdan.[23][24] His brother Ivar had ruled the city prior to his death in 873 and it appears Halfdan's campaigning was an attempt to regain his brother's lost kingdom.[18] Halfdan did not remain in Ireland: in 876 he and his forces returned to Northumbria, and settled an area largely coextensive with the old Kingdom of Deira, with the northern part of Northumbria remaining under Anglian rule.[18] Sources sometimes title Halfdan King of Jórvík, beginning in 876.[25]

Halfdan's rule of Dublin was not secure, and he was deposed while away in York.[2] He returned to Ireland in 877 to try to recapture the city, but he was met with an army of "Fair Heathens" – a contentious term usually considered to mean the Viking population who had been in Ireland the longest, as opposed to the newly arrived "Dark Heathens", of whom Halfdan was one.[26] The forces met at the Battle of Strangford Lough, where Halfdan was slain.[27] Those of Halfdan's men who survived the battle returned to Northumbria via Scotland, fighting a battle along the way in which Constantine I, King of the Picts was killed.[28] The Vikings of Northumbria remained kingless until 883, when Guthred was made king there.[29]

Historicity

Halfdan and his supposed brothers are, individually, considered historical figures, although there is no contemporary mention of them being related, and opinion regarding his supposed father is divided. According to Hilda Ellis Davidson, writing in 1979, "certain scholars in recent years have come to accept at least part of Ragnar's story as based on historical fact".[30] Katherine Holman, on the other hand, concludes that "although his sons are historical figures, there is no evidence that Ragnar himself ever lived, and he seems to be an amalgam of several different historical figures and pure literary invention."[31]

References

Citations

  1. ^ "Ragnar Lodbrok och hans söner". Heimskringla.no. Retrieved 25 March 2016.
  2. ^ a b Venning p. 132
  3. ^ Holman 2012 p. 102
  4. ^ Munch pp. 245–251
  5. ^ Jones pp. 218–219
  6. ^ Downham 2013 p. 13
  7. ^ Kirby p. 173
  8. ^ a b c Forte pp. 69–70
  9. ^ a b Downham 2007 p. 65
  10. ^ Keynes p. 526
  11. ^ a b Forte p. 72
  12. ^ Downham 2007 p. 64
  13. ^ Gransden p. 64
  14. ^ Mostert pp. 165–166
  15. ^ Swanton pp. 70–71 n. 2
  16. ^ Woolf p. 95
  17. ^ Hooper p. 22
  18. ^ a b c d e Costambeys
  19. ^ a b Forte pp. 72–73
  20. ^ Downham 2007 p. 68
  21. ^ Downham 2007 p. 69
  22. ^ Forte pp. 73–74
  23. ^ Annals of Ulster, s.a. 875.
  24. ^ South p. 87
  25. ^ Malam p. 104
  26. ^ Downham 2007 p. 14
  27. ^ Annals of Ulster, s.a. 877.
  28. ^ Ashley p. 464
  29. ^ Lapdige et al. p. 526
  30. ^ Davidson p. 277
  31. ^ Holman 2003 p. 220

Bibliography

  • Ashley, Mike (7 June 2012). The Mammoth Book of British Kings and Queens. Little, Brown Book Group. ISBN 978-1-4721-0113-6.
  • Costambeys, M (2004). "Hálfdan (d. 877)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/49260. Retrieved 23 November 2014. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) Subscription or UK public library membership required.
  • Davidson, Hilda Roderick Ellis, ed. (1979). Gesta Danorum [Saxo Grammaticus: The history of the Danes: books I–IX]. Vol. 1 & 2. Translated by Peter Fisher. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer. Chapter introduction commentaries. ISBN 978-0-85991-502-1.
  • Downham, Clare (2007). Viking Kings of Britain and Ireland: The Dynasty of Ívarr to A.D. 1014. Dunedin Academic Press. ISBN 978-1-9037-6589-0.
  • Downham, Clare (2013). "Annals, Armies, and Artistry: 'The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle', 865–96". No Horns on their Helmets? Essays on the Insular Viking-age. Celtic, Anglo-Saxon, and Scandinavian Studies (series vol. 1). The Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies and The Centre for Celtic Studies, University of Aberdeen. pp. 9–37. ISBN 978-0-9557720-1-6. ISSN 2051-6509.
  • Forte, A; Oram, RD; Pedersen, F (2005). Viking Empires. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-82992-2.
  • Gransden, A (2000) [1996]. Historical Writing in England. Vol. 1, c. 500 to c. 1307. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-15124-4.
  • Holman, Katherine (July 2003). Historical dictionary of the Vikings. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-4859-7.
  • Holman, Katherine (26 April 2012). The Northern Conquest: Vikings in Britain and Ireland. Andrews UK Limited. ISBN 978-1-908493-53-8.
  • Hooper, Nicholas Hooper; Bennett, Matthew (1996). The Cambridge Illustrated Atlas of Warfare: the Middle Ages. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-44049-1.
  • Jones, Gwyn (1984). A History of the Vikings. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-215882-1.
  • Keynes, S (2014). "Appendix I: Rulers of the English, c.450–1066". In Lapidge, M; Blair, J; Keynes, S; et al. (eds.). The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo-Saxon England (2nd ed.). Chichester: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 521–538. ISBN 978-0-470-65632-7.
  • Kirby, D. P. (2000). The Earliest English Kings. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-24211-0.
  • Lapidge, Michael; Blair, John; Keynes, Simon; Scragg, Donald (2 October 2013). The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo-Saxon England. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-118-31609-2.
  • "Laud MS Misc. 636". Bodleian Library. Retrieved 22 November 2014.
  • Malam, John (6 February 2012). Yorkshire, A Very Peculiar History. Andrews UK Limited. ISBN 978-1-908759-50-4.
  • Mostert, M (1987). The Political Theology of Abbo of Fleury: A Study of the Ideas about Society and Law of the Tenth-century Monastic Reform Movement. Middeleeuwse studies en bronnen (series vol. 2). Hilversum: Uitgeverij Verloren. ISBN 90-6550-209-2.
  • Munch, Peter Andreas (1926). Norse Mythology: Legends of Gods and Heroes. The American-Scandinavian Foundation.
  • South, Ted Johnson (2002). Historia de Sancto Cuthberto. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 978-0-85991-627-1.
  • Swanton, M, ed. (1998) [1996]. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-92129-5.
  • Venning, Timothy (30 January 2014). The Kings & Queens of Anglo-Saxon England. Amberley Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-1-4456-2459-4.
  • Woolf, Alex, The Age of the Sea-Kings: 900–1300 in Omand, Donald (ed.) (2006) The Argyll Book, Birlinn, ISBN 978-1-8415-8480-5

External links

  • Halfdan 2 at Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England
  • CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts at University College Cork. The Corpus of Electronic Texts includes the Annals of Ulster and the Four Masters, the Chronicon Scotorum and the Book of Leinster as well as Genealogies, and various Saints' Lives. Most are translated into English, or translations are in progress.

halfdan, ragnarsson, norse, hálfdan, english, halfdene, healfdene, irish, albann, died, viking, leader, commander, great, heathen, army, which, invaded, anglo, saxon, kingdoms, england, starting, king, northumbriareign876, 877predecessorricsigesuccessorguthfri. Halfdan Ragnarsson Old Norse Halfdan Old English Halfdene or Healfdene Old Irish Albann died 877 was a Viking leader and a commander of the Great Heathen Army which invaded the Anglo Saxon kingdoms of England starting in 865 Halfdan RagnarssonKing of NorthumbriaReign876 877PredecessorRicsigeSuccessorGuthfrithKing of Dublin Disputed Reign875 877PredecessorEystein OlafssonSuccessorBaridCo ruler of Denmark possibly Jutland Reign871 877PredecessorBagsecgSuccessorSigurd Snake in the EyeDied877Strangford LoughFatherpossibly Ragnar Lodbrok or whoever was historical basis for the possibly legendary characterMotherpossibly Aslaug or historical basis for a legendary characterOne of six sons of Ragnar Lodbrok named in Norse sagas Halfdan s brothers or half brothers included Bjorn Ironside Ivar the Boneless Sigurd Snake in the Eye Ubba and Hvitserk Because Halfdan is not mentioned in any source that mentions Hvitserk some scholars have suggested that they are the same individual a possibility reinforced by the fact that Halfdan was a relatively common name among Vikings and Hvitserk white shirt may have been an epithet or nickname that distinguished Halfdan from other men by the same name 1 Halfdan was the first Viking King of Northumbria and a pretender to the throne of Kingdom of Dublin It is also possible he was for a time co ruler of Denmark with his brother Sigurd Snake in the eye because Frankish sources mention certain Sigfred and Halfdan as rulers in 873 He died at the Battle of Strangford Lough in 877 trying to press his Irish claim Contents 1 Biography 2 Historicity 3 References 4 External linksBiography EditHalfdan was one of the leaders of the Great Heathen Army which invaded the Anglo Saxon kingdom of East Anglia in 865 2 3 According to the Norse sagas this invasion was organised by the sons of Ragnar Lodbrok Halfdan being one of them to wreak revenge against AElla of Northumbria AElla had supposedly had Ragnar executed in 865 by throwing him in a snake pit but the historicity of this explanation is unknown 4 5 The invaders are usually identified as Danes although the tenth century churchman Asser stated that the invaders came de Danubia which translates as from the Danube the fact that the Danube is located in what was known in Latin as Dacia suggests that Asser actually intended Dania a Latin term for Denmark 6 In the autumn of 865 the Great Heathen Army landed in East Anglia where they remained over the winter and secured horses 7 The following year the army moved northwards and invaded Northumbria which was at that time in the middle of a civil war between AElla and Osberht opposing claimants for the Northumbrian throne 8 Late in 866 the army conquered the rich Northumbrian settlement of York 9 The following year AElla and Osberht made an alliance to retake the town The attack was defeated and both of them fell in the battle 8 With no obvious leader Northumbrian resistance was crushed and the Danes installed a puppet king Ecgberht to rule in their name and collect taxes for them 10 Later in the year the Army moved south and invaded the Kingdom of Mercia capturing the town of Nottingham where they spent the winter 9 The Mercian king Burghred responded by allying with the West Saxon King AEthelred and with a combined force they laid siege to the town The Anglo Saxons were unable to recapture the city but a truce was agreed whereby the Danes would withdraw to York 11 where they remained for over a year gathering strength for further assaults 8 The Danes returned to East Anglia in 869 this time intent on conquest They seized Thetford with the intention of remaining there over the winter but they were met by an East Anglian army 12 The East Anglian army was defeated and its commander King Edmund was slain 13 Medieval tradition identifies Edmund as a martyr who refused the Danes demand to renounce Christ and was killed for his steadfast Christianity 14 Ivar and Ubba are identified as the commanders of the Danes and the killers of Edmund and it is unknown what part if any Halfdan took 15 Following the conquest of East Anglia Ivar apparently left the Great Heathen Army his name disappears from English records after 870 However he is generally considered to be identical to Imar a Norse King of Dublin who died in 873 16 With Ivar in Ireland Halfdan became the main commander of the Army and in 870 he led it in an invasion of Wessex 11 Sometime after Ivar left the Army a great number of Viking warriors arrived from Scandinavia as part of the Great Summer Army led by Bagsecg bolstering the ranks of Halfdan s army 17 According to the Anglo Saxon Chronicle the Danes battled the West Saxons nine times including at the Battle of Ashdown on 8 January 871 18 However the West Saxons could not be defeated and Halfdan accepted a truce from Alfred newly crowned king of Wessex 19 The Army retreated to the captured town of London and stayed there over the winter of 871 872 20 Coins minted in London during this period bear the name Halfdan identifying him as its leader 18 In autumn of 872 the Army returned to Northumbria to quell a revolt against its puppet regent Ecgberht 19 However this explanation for the army s move north has been challenged and it has been suggested the relocation was a result of a war with Mercia 21 The Army overwintered at Torksey and was then reported as being in the Repton district a year later It conquered Mercia in 874 the Mercian King Burghred being deposed and replaced by a Danish puppet regent Ceolwulf 22 Following this victory the Army split in two one half under Guthrum heading south to continue fighting against Wessex the other half under Halfdan heading north to fight against the Picts and Britons of Strathclyde 18 According to the Annals of Ulster Eystein Olafsson King of Dublin was deceitfully killed in 875 by Albann a figure generally agreed to be Halfdan 23 24 His brother Ivar had ruled the city prior to his death in 873 and it appears Halfdan s campaigning was an attempt to regain his brother s lost kingdom 18 Halfdan did not remain in Ireland in 876 he and his forces returned to Northumbria and settled an area largely coextensive with the old Kingdom of Deira with the northern part of Northumbria remaining under Anglian rule 18 Sources sometimes title Halfdan King of Jorvik beginning in 876 25 Halfdan s rule of Dublin was not secure and he was deposed while away in York 2 He returned to Ireland in 877 to try to recapture the city but he was met with an army of Fair Heathens a contentious term usually considered to mean the Viking population who had been in Ireland the longest as opposed to the newly arrived Dark Heathens of whom Halfdan was one 26 The forces met at the Battle of Strangford Lough where Halfdan was slain 27 Those of Halfdan s men who survived the battle returned to Northumbria via Scotland fighting a battle along the way in which Constantine I King of the Picts was killed 28 The Vikings of Northumbria remained kingless until 883 when Guthred was made king there 29 Historicity EditHalfdan and his supposed brothers are individually considered historical figures although there is no contemporary mention of them being related and opinion regarding his supposed father is divided According to Hilda Ellis Davidson writing in 1979 certain scholars in recent years have come to accept at least part of Ragnar s story as based on historical fact 30 Katherine Holman on the other hand concludes that although his sons are historical figures there is no evidence that Ragnar himself ever lived and he seems to be an amalgam of several different historical figures and pure literary invention 31 References EditCitations Ragnar Lodbrok och hans soner Heimskringla no Retrieved 25 March 2016 a b Venning p 132 Holman 2012 p 102 Munch pp 245 251 Jones pp 218 219 Downham 2013 p 13 Kirby p 173 a b c Forte pp 69 70 a b Downham 2007 p 65 Keynes p 526 a b Forte p 72 Downham 2007 p 64 Gransden p 64 Mostert pp 165 166 Swanton pp 70 71 n 2 Woolf p 95 Hooper p 22 a b c d e Costambeys a b Forte pp 72 73 Downham 2007 p 68 Downham 2007 p 69 Forte pp 73 74 Annals of Ulster s a 875 South p 87 Malam p 104 Downham 2007 p 14 Annals of Ulster s a 877 Ashley p 464 Lapdige et al p 526 Davidson p 277 Holman 2003 p 220 Bibliography Ashley Mike 7 June 2012 The Mammoth Book of British Kings and Queens Little Brown Book Group ISBN 978 1 4721 0113 6 Costambeys M 2004 Halfdan d 877 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 49260 Retrieved 23 November 2014 Subscription or UK public library membership required Subscription or UK public library membership required Davidson Hilda Roderick Ellis ed 1979 Gesta Danorum Saxo Grammaticus The history of the Danes books I IX Vol 1 amp 2 Translated by Peter Fisher Cambridge D S Brewer Chapter introduction commentaries ISBN 978 0 85991 502 1 Downham Clare 2007 Viking Kings of Britain and Ireland The Dynasty of Ivarr to A D 1014 Dunedin Academic Press ISBN 978 1 9037 6589 0 Downham Clare 2013 Annals Armies and Artistry The Anglo Saxon Chronicle 865 96 No Horns on their Helmets Essays on the Insular Viking age Celtic Anglo Saxon and Scandinavian Studies series vol 1 The Centre for Anglo Saxon Studies and The Centre for Celtic Studies University of Aberdeen pp 9 37 ISBN 978 0 9557720 1 6 ISSN 2051 6509 Forte A Oram RD Pedersen F 2005 Viking Empires Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82992 2 Gransden A 2000 1996 Historical Writing in England Vol 1 c 500 to c 1307 London Routledge ISBN 0 415 15124 4 Holman Katherine July 2003 Historical dictionary of the Vikings Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 4859 7 Holman Katherine 26 April 2012 The Northern Conquest Vikings in Britain and Ireland Andrews UK Limited ISBN 978 1 908493 53 8 Hooper Nicholas Hooper Bennett Matthew 1996 The Cambridge Illustrated Atlas of Warfare the Middle Ages Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 44049 1 Jones Gwyn 1984 A History of the Vikings Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 215882 1 Keynes S 2014 Appendix I Rulers of the English c 450 1066 In Lapidge M Blair J Keynes S et al eds The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England 2nd ed Chichester John Wiley amp Sons pp 521 538 ISBN 978 0 470 65632 7 Kirby D P 2000 The Earliest English Kings London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 24211 0 Lapidge Michael Blair John Keynes Simon Scragg Donald 2 October 2013 The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 118 31609 2 Laud MS Misc 636 Bodleian Library Retrieved 22 November 2014 Malam John 6 February 2012 Yorkshire A Very Peculiar History Andrews UK Limited ISBN 978 1 908759 50 4 Mostert M 1987 The Political Theology of Abbo of Fleury A Study of the Ideas about Society and Law of the Tenth century Monastic Reform Movement Middeleeuwse studies en bronnen series vol 2 Hilversum Uitgeverij Verloren ISBN 90 6550 209 2 Munch Peter Andreas 1926 Norse Mythology Legends of Gods and Heroes The American Scandinavian Foundation South Ted Johnson 2002 Historia de Sancto Cuthberto Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 978 0 85991 627 1 Swanton M ed 1998 1996 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 92129 5 Venning Timothy 30 January 2014 The Kings amp Queens of Anglo Saxon England Amberley Publishing Limited ISBN 978 1 4456 2459 4 Woolf Alex The Age of the Sea Kings 900 1300 in Omand Donald ed 2006 The Argyll Book Birlinn ISBN 978 1 8415 8480 5External links EditHalfdan 2 at Prosopography of Anglo Saxon England CELT Corpus of Electronic Texts at University College Cork The Corpus of Electronic Texts includes the Annals of Ulster and the Four Masters the Chronicon Scotorum and the Book of Leinster as well as Genealogies and various Saints Lives Most are translated into English or translations are in progress Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Halfdan Ragnarsson amp oldid 1140304883, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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