Thorfinn Sigurdsson | |
---|---|
Earl of Orkney | |
Title held | c. 1016[1] to c. 1065.[2] Jointly with Brusi Sigurdsson and Einar Sigurdsson to 1020, with Brusi to 1031, alone to 1036, with Rögnvald Brusason 1036 to 1046, alone to c. 1065[2][3] |
Predecessor | Sigurd Hlodvirsson |
Successor | Paul and Erlend Thorfinnsson |
Native name | Þorfinnr inn riki - "Thorfinn the Mighty" |
Born | 1009?[Note 1] |
Died | c. 1065[3] |
Noble family | Norse Earls of Orkney |
Spouse | Ingibiorg Finnsdottir |
Issue | Paul and Erlend Thorfinnsson |
Father | Sigurd Hlodvirsson |
Mother | Olith, daughter of Máel Coluim II of Scotland |
Thorfinn Sigurdsson (1009? – c. 1065), also known as Thorfinn the Mighty[6] (Old Norse: Þorfinnr inn riki), was an 11th-century Jarl of Orkney. He was the youngest of five sons of Jarl Sigurd Hlodvirsson and the only one resulting from Sigurd's marriage to a daughter of Malcolm II of Scotland. He ruled alone as jarl for about a third of the time that he held the title and jointly with one or more of his brothers or with his nephew Rögnvald Brusason for the remainder. Thorfinn married Ingibiorg Finnsdottir, daughter of Finn Arnesson, Jarl of Halland.
The Heimskringla of Icelandic historian Snorri Sturluson, and the anonymous compiler of the Orkneyinga Saga wrote that Thorfinn was the most powerful of all the jarls of Orkney and that he ruled substantial territories beyond the Northern Isles. A sizeable part of the latter saga's account concerns his wars with a "King of Scots" named Karl Hundason whose identity is uncertain. In his later years he went on a pilgrimage to Rome and he was instrumental in making Orkney and Shetland part of mainstream Christendom. On his death in the latter half of the 11th century he was followed as earl by his sons Paul and Erlend.
There are numerous problems associated with the chronology of Thorfinn's life and in identifying his relationships to the southern polities of the Kingdom of Alba (the precursor to modern Scotland) and the Kingdom of Moray. His diplomacy with the Norwegian court has also been interpreted in various ways. His life has been the subject of various works of historical fiction.
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