The Ynglings were a dynasty of kings, first in Sweden and later in Norway, primarily attested through the poem Ynglingatal. The dynasty also appears as Scylfings (, ) in Beowulf. When Beowulf and Ynglingatal were composed sometime in the eighth to tenth centuries, their respective authors ( and ) expected their audience to have a great deal of background information about these kings, which is shown in the allusiveness of the references.
According to sources such as Ynglingatal and Íslendingabók, the Fairhair dynasty in Oppland, Norway was in fact a branch of the Ynglings (here Yngling is explicitly used as the name of the dynasty). Saxo Grammaticus held that the Ynglings also included Eric the Victorious, who is usually the first king in modern regnal lists, and his descendants. However, this does not tally with Icelandic sources.
The dynasty claimed descent from the gods Freyr and Njörðr, and other kings were likely mythical as well, whereas others may have been real: especially Egil, Ohthere, Onela and Eadgils that are mentioned in Beowulf as well as Nordic sources.
In his Skáldskaparmál the 13th-century Icelandic writer Snorri Sturluson hints at a less divine origin for this dynasty: One war-king was named Skelfir; and his house is called the House of Skilfings: his kindred is in the Eastern Land. In Ynglinga Saga, Snorri discusses marriages between Swedish and Finnish royal families. In the Skáldskaparmál section of Edda, he discusses King Halfdan the Old, Nór's great-grandson, and nine of his sons who are the forefathers of various royal lineages, including "Yngvi, from whom the Ynglings are descended".
According to the Orkneyinga Saga, Nór founded Norway. He was a direct descendant of Fornjótr, the King of "Gotland, Kvenland and Finnland". In traditional Scandinavian lineages we find Halfdan the Old as the Great-grandfather of Ragnvald Eysteinson Jarl of Møre, the father of Rollo, called Gengu-Hrolf in Norse sources, the Viking conqueror who founded Normandy, who Dudo of Saint-Quentin testifies took the name Robert after converting to Christianity. He is also known as Count Rou of Rouen, and is said to have been William the Conqueror's great-great-great-grandfather.
Hversu Noregr byggðist ('How Norway was founded') is a 14th-century account of the origin of various legendary Norwegian lineages. It too traces the descendants of the primeval Finnish ruler Fornjotr back through Nór and his siblings, Góí and Gór; Nór being here the eponym and first great king of Norway, and then gives details of the descendants of Nór and of his brother Gór in the following section known as the Ættartölur ('Genealogies', a.k.a. Fundinn Noregr, 'Founding of Norway'). The Hversu account is closely paralleled by the opening of the Orkneyinga saga.
The 'genealogies' also claim that many heroic families famed in Scandinavian tradition but not located in Norway were of a Finn-Kven stock, mostly sprung from Nór's great-grandson Halfdan the Old. Almost all the lineages sprung from Halfdan are then shown to reconvert in the person of Harald Fairhair, the first king of "all Norway". This information can be confirmed in other sources.
The 'Ættartölur' account ends to a genealogy of Harald's royal descendants down to Olaf IV of Norway with the statement that the account was written in 1387, and with a list of the kings of Norway from this Olaf back to Harald Fair-hair.
Another origin for the name skilfing is possible: Snorri described Erik and Alrik, the sons of Skjalf to be the de facto ancestors of this Norse clan.
Saxo on the Battle of Bråvalla (ca 750):
Moreover, both in Icelandic sources and in the Gesta Danorum, King Sigurd Hring would become the ancestor of the houses of Ragnar Lodbrok and would thus be the semi-legendary ancestor of the House of Munsö through Björn Ironside, and the Danish royal house through Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye. Ragnar's eldest son Ivar the Boneless was the leader of the Great Heathen Army and appears to have been the founder of the Uí Ímair dynasty of the Kingdom of York and Kingdom of Dublin, and by extension the Crovan Dynasty of the Kings of Mann.
Burri | |||||
Borr | |||||
Óðinn Ásakonungr | |||||
Yngvi | Ingui | Freyr | |||
Njord | Neorth | Njörðr | Njörðr | ||
Freyr | Froyr | Freyr | |||
Fjǫlnir | Fjölnir | Fiolnir | Fjölnir | Fjölnir | |
Sveigder | Svegðir | Swegthir | Svegðir | Sveigðir | |
Vanlandi | Vanlandi | Wanlanda | Vanlandi | Vanlandi | |
Visbur | Visburr | Wisbur | Vísburr | Vísburr | |
Domalde | Dómaldr | Domald | Dómaldi | Dómaldi | |
Domar | Dómarr | Domar | Dómarr | Dómarr | |
Dyggve | Dyggvi | Dyggui | Dyggvi | Dyggvi/Tryggvi | |
Dagr spaki | Dagr | Dagr | Dagr spaki | Dagr | |
Agne | Alrekr | Alricr | Agni | Agni Skjálfarbóndi | |
Alrekr and Eiríkr | Agni | Hogni | Alrekr and Eiríkr | Alrekr | |
Yngvi and Alfr | Yngvi | Ingialdr | Yngvi and Álfr | Yngvi | |
Jorund | Jörundr | Jorundr | Jörundr and Eiríkr | Jörmunfróði/Jörundr | |
Aunn | Aun inn gamli | Auchun | Aun hinn gamli | Aunn inn gamli | |
Ongenþeow | Egill | Egill Vendilkráka | Eigil Vendilcraca | Egill Tunnudólgr | Egill Tunnadólgr |
Ohthere and Onela | Óttarr | Óttarr | Ottarus | Óttarr Vendilkráka | Óttarr Vendilskráka |
Eadgils and Eanmund | Aðils | Aðísl at Uppsölum | Adils/Athisl | Aðils | Aðils at Uppsölum |
Eysteinn | Eysteinn | Eustein | Eysteinn | Eysteinn | |
Ingvar Harra | Yngvarr | Ynguar | Yngvarr | Yngvarr inn hári | |
Anund | Braut-Önundr | Broutonundr | Brautönundr | Braut-Önundr | |
Ingjaldr inn illráði | Ingialdr | Ingjaldr hinn illráði | Ingjaldr inn illráði | ||
Ólafr | Óláfr trételgja | Olavus tretelgia | Óláfr trételgja | Ólafr trételgja | |
Halfdan | Hálfdan hvítbeinn Upplendingakonungr | Halfdan hwitbein | Hálfdan hvítbeinn | Hálfdan hvítbeinn | |
Eysteinn | Eustein | Eysteinn | Eysteinn | ||
Halfdan | Halfdan | Hálfdan hinn mildi | Hálfdan inn mildi | ||
Guðrøðr | Goðröðr | Guthrodr | Guðröðr veiðikonungr | Guðröðr veiðikonungr | |
Ólafr | Óláfr | Halfdan Niger | Ólafr | Hálfdan svarti | |
Rǫgnvaldr heiðumhôr | Helgi | Haraldus | Rögnvaldr heiðum hæra | Haraldr inn hárfagri |
Ohthere ( Ottar) also occurs as the father of Aedgils ( Adils) in Ynglingatal. There Skilfing ( Skilfingr) appears as a synonym of Yngling, in a line on Egil, the father of Ottar, so that Ongentheow is considered identical to Egil.
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Likewise in the Skáldskaparmál the Scylfings are described as an eastern family and East King was a conventional kenning for a Swedish king.
However, in the Ættartolur, (the genealogies attached to Hversu Noregr byggdist), the Skilfings are of Norway origin and include a family identified as Scylding. In the eddic poem Grímnismál (stanza 55), Skilfing appears as one of Odin's names, the information there also appearing in the Gylfaginning..
Hence come the Scylding, hence the Skilfings,
Hence the Ödlings Ǫðlingar, hence the Ylfings, ...[4]
One war-king was named Skelfir; and his house is called the House of Skilfings: his kindred is in the Eastern Region.A connection with the east might mean a connection to Sweden, but the vagueness of expression suggests Snorri knows no more about these Skilfings than he has written.
Snorri also gives Skilfing as a kenning for "king" and it appears as a kenning for "sword" in the thulur found in some versions of the Skáldkskaparmál.
There are many oddities in this account.
It claims Skelfir was king of Vörs ( Vǫrs), modern Voss in northern Hordaland in southwestern Norway, but Halfdan's inheritance was in southeastern Norway.
Skelfir was the father of Skjöld ( Skjǫldr). The account ends by saying that lineage of Skelfir was called the Skilfing lineage or the Skjöldung lineage, seemingly identifying the two. But Skjöldungs are normally the legendary royal family of the rulers of Denmark and no connection with Denmark is made here. Indeed, the Ættartǫlur later twice gives a quite different list of descendants of the Danish Skjöld who is there made a son of Odin as commonly in Norse texts. Skjöld as son of Skelfir might be related to English traditions of Scyld being a son or descendant of Sceafa (as discussed under Sceafa), though here too (at least in Beowulf) the connection is to Danish matters, not to Norway.
This Norwegian Skjöld, ancestor of the Norwegian Skjöldungs, is father of Eirík, father of Alrek ( Alrekr), father of Eirík the Eloquent, whom the Skáldskaparmál presented as an Ylfing. These two mentions are the only occurrences of Eirík the Eloquent in Norse texts. But what seems to be the same figure appears prominently in book 5 of Saxo Grammaticus' Gesta Danorum as Ericus disertus. This Ericus disertus is indeed a Norwegian, but his father is not named Alrek but rather Regnerus pugilex, that is Ragnar the Champion. The Gesta Danorum then somewhat forcibly identifies Ericus disertus with Eirík, a legendary king of Sweden, a king who in the Ynglinga saga and elsewhere has an elder brother (rather than a father) named Alrek. See Alrek and Eirík for details.
In the Ynglinga saga the mother of the Swedish kings Alrek and Eirík is named Skjalf, which might also be an eponym for Skilfing.
Returning to the Ættartǫlur, there Eirík the Eloquent is father of Alrek, father of Víkar ( Víkarr), father of Vatnar. This Víkar is the famous Víkar, king of Hördaland, who was sacrificed to Odin by Starkad. The chain of descent from Alrek to Víkar to Vatnar is also found in Hálfs saga ok Hálfsrekka ('The saga of Hálf and his heroes'). However Gautreks saga gives an entirely different ancestry and different descendants to Víkar. See Víkar for details.
This genealogy may have been based on attempts to ascribe a Norwegian origin to both Swedish Scylfings and Danish Skjöldungs and also be related to Saxo's account of the Norwegian Ericus desertus. If so, as it stands, it has been edited to remove material that would obviously conflict with the standard genealogies of the Skjöldungs and Ynglings which also appear in the Ættartǫlur.
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