- Sæmingr
Sæmingr was a king of
Norway according toSnorri Sturluson 's euhemerized accounts. He was said to be the son ofOdin or Yngvi-Freyr.According to the prologue of the "Prose Edda", Sæmingr was one of the
sons of Odin and the ancestor of the kings of Norway and of thejarls of Hlaðir . Snorri relates that Odin settled inSweden and::After that he went into the north, until he was stopped by the sea, which men thought lay around all the lands of the earth; and there he set his son over this kingdom, which is now called Norway. This king was Sæmingr; the kings of Norway trace their lineage from him, and so do also the
jarl s and the other mighty men, as is said in the "Háleygjatal ".:::—Prologue of the "Prose Edda" (11) [http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/pre/pre03.htm Brodeur's translation]In the "
Ynglinga saga ", Snorri adds that Sæmingr's mother wasSkaði ::Njord took a wife called Skade; but she would not live with him and married afterwards Odin, and had many sons by him, of whom one was called Saeming; and about him Eyvind Skaldaspiller sings thus ["Háleygjatal", stanza 3.] : --:::"To Asa's son Queen Skade bore::Saeming, who dyed his shield in gore, --::The giant-queen of rock and snow,::Who loves to dwell on earth below,::The iron pine-tree's daughter, she::Sprung from the rocks that rib the sea,::To Odin bore full many a son,::Heroes of many a battle won."::To Saeming Earl Hakon the Great reckoned back his pedigree.:::—"The Ynglinga Saga" (8), [http://omacl.org/Heimskringla/ynglinga.html Laing's translation]
Sæmingr is also listed among the sons of Odin in the "
þulur ".But in the prologue of the "
Heimskringla " Snorri mentions that according to a lost stanza of Eyvindr skáldaspillir's "Háleygjatal", Sæmingr was the son of Yngvi-Freyr.The late "
Hálfdanar saga Eysteinssonar " also reports that Sæmingr was Odin's son. The saga adds that he reigned overHålogaland . He married Nauma and had a son called Þrándr.Note
References
* Brodeur, Arthur Gilchrist (trans.). 1916. "Snorri Sturluson: The Prose Edda". New York: The American-Scandinavian Foundation.
* Laing, Samuel (trans.), Anderson, Rasmus B. (rev., notes). 1907. "Snorre Sturlason: The Heimskringla: a history of the Norse kings". London: Norrœna society. First published: 1844.
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