Everything about Harald Iii Of Norway totally explained
Harald III Sigurdsson (
1015 –
September 25,
1066), later surnamed
Harald Hardråde (
Old Norse:
Haraldr harðráði, roughly translated as "stern counsel" or "hard ruler") was the
king of
Norway from
1047 until
1066. He was also claimed to be the King of Denmark until 1062, often defeating
King Sweyn's army and forcing him to leave the country. Many details of his life were chronicled in the
Heimskringla. Among English-speakers, he's generally known as "Harold Hardrada" and remembered for his invasion of England in 1066. The death of Hardrada is often recorded as the end of the Viking era.
Early life
Born in
1015, Harald was the youngest of King
Olaf II's three half-brothers born to
Åsta Gudbrandsdatter. When Harald was 15, King Olaf was killed defending his throne from
Canute the Great in
1030 at the
Battle of Stiklestad. Harald took part in the battle and although wounded managed to escape before leaving Norway in exile. He was able to form a band of warriors out of men who had also been exiled as a result of Olaf's death. In
1031 Harald and his men reached the land of the
Kievan Rus where they served the armies of
Yaroslav I the Wise, the King of the Rus. Harald is thought to have taken part in King Yaroslav's campaign against the
Poles and was appointed joint commander of defense forces.
Time in the Byzantine Empire
Some years after Harald and his men had entered the land of the Rus, they packed up and left for the heart of the
Byzantine Empire, the city of
Constantinople. At the time, the
Byzantine Empire was the wealthiest empire in
Medieval Europe and the
Near East.
Harald and his men pledged themselves to the service of the armies of the empire. Harald's forces joined the elite
mercenary unit known as the
Varangian Guard. It wasn't long until Harald had proven himself in battle and gained the respect of his fellow guardsmen. Harald became the leader of the entire force and used this power to undertake his own missions.
Harald's forces won a great many victories in
North Africa,
Syria and
Sicily. Through ingenuity, he and his men were able to besiege and defeat a number of castles. A contemporary source reports such tactics as attaching burning
resin to birds, setting the castle ablaze, digging a tunnel and feigning reluctance to fight, only to launch an attack at the most advantageous moment. Harald was able to build a large fortune in plunder from his victories.
Harald took part in the suppression of the uprising of
Peter Delyan, who attempted to restore the
Bulgarian Empire in 1040-1041. In the Norse sagas, he's hailed as "Devastator of Bulgaria" and "Scourge of the Bulgarians" due to his participation, and is even thought to have cut down Peter Delyan in the field of battle. Some authors go as far as to theorize that Harald named
Oslo after a Bulgarian he fell in love with, possibly named Slava or Oslava, though these theories are not known to have any actual base.
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According to
Snorri Sturluson, who quoted the
skald Stuf, Harald also made a raid into the country of
Palestine and was able to conquer the city of Jerusalem: “Here it's told that this land came without fire and sword under Harald’s command. He then went out to Jordan and bathed therein, according to the custom of other pilgrims. Harald gave great gifts to our Lord’s graves, to the Holy Cross, and other holy relics in the land of Jerusalem. He also cleared the whole road all the way out to Jordan, by killing the robbers and other disturbers of the peace.”³
This story would have made Harald the forerunner of the
Crusaders, whose kingdom was a century old at the time of Snorri Sturluson - a claim of obvious prestige valued to later Norwegian monarchs. In 1225, when the saga was written, Snorri was championing the cause of the Norwegian monarchy and urging a unification of
Iceland with Norway. The sagas, however, are historical fiction, which Snorri himself admits in his Prologue, "although we don't know the truth of these, we know, however, of occasions when wise old men have reckoned such things as true."
Byzantine and Islamic sources of Harald's own time don't mention such a conquest of Jerusalem. It is, however, quite plausible that as a Christian Harald did go on pilgrimage to Jerusalem with his men, and that they did fight and defeat robbers infesting the pilgrims' route to the Holy City - without intending or effecting the city's conquest from the Muslims.
Return to Norway
Using the wealth he'd built during his service to the
Byzantine Empire, Harald returned to Norway in
1045. He brought with him a number of men who served with him, and, as a result, became an immediate threat to the sitting king,
Magnus I, who was the son of Olaf II and nephew of Harald and had returned from exile in
1035 to reclaim his father's throne after the death of
Canute the Great.
Sturluson writes, “When Harald returned to Constantinople from Jerusalem he longed to return to the North to his native land; and when he heard that Magnus Olafson, his brother’s son, had become king both of Norway and Denmark, he gave up his command in the Greek service. And when the empress Zoe heard of this she became angry and raised an accusation against Harald that he'd misapplied the property of the Greek emperor which he'd received in the campaigns in which he was the commander of the army…On this account the Greek emperor had Harald made prisoner and carried to prison.”³
Magnus I agreed to share power with his uncle Harald and the two became co-rulers. However, it was only a year later that Magnus would die. The circumstances surrounding his death were never truly explained. Speculation and increased tension between the two rulers led to the widespread belief that Magnus was killed by Harald so that he alone would control Norway.
Invasion of England
In September
1066, Harald landed in Northern England with a force of around 15,000 men and 300
longships (50 men in each boat). At the
Battle of Fulford, two miles (3 km) south of York, on 20 September, he won a great victory against the first English forces he met.
Believing that King
Harold Godwinson was prepared to surrender, Harald confronted the English, with roughly half of his forces, to accept his claim to the English throne. His forces were carrying light weapons and wore light armor, as opposed to heavy armor.
However,
Harold Godwinson had ambitions of his own. At the
Battle of Stamford Bridge, outside the city of
York, England, on 25 September
1066, Godwinson's forces met with Harald's. Godwinson's forces were heavily armed, heavily armored, and heavily outnumbered Harald's. Although one of Harald's men was able to block one side of the bridge, when he fell, Godwinson's better armed and better equipped forces cut through Harald's forces easily.
Harald died fighting at this final battle against the forces of King
Harold Godwinson of
England by an arrow to the throat. He had come to England with the idea of claiming the English Throne as his own, basing this claim on a supposed agreement between Magnus and
Harthacanute whereby if either died without heir, the other would inherit both England and Norway. Instead, he met his end.
His army was so heavily beaten that fewer than 25 of the 300 recorded longboats Harald used to transport his forces to England were used to carry the survivors back to Norway.
Not long after his victory over King Harald, Harold Godwinson was defeated by
William the Conqueror at the
Battle of Hastings.
The fact that Harold had to make a forced march against Hardrada to fight at Stamford Bridge and then move at utmost speed back south to meet the Norman invasion, all in a matter of days, is widely seen as a primary factor in William's hard-fought victory at Hastings.
Legacy
Harald was the last great
Viking king of Norway and his invasion of England and death at the
Battle of Stamford Bridge in
1066 proved a true watershed moment. It marked the end of the Viking age. In Norway, although he was at least nominally Christian, Harald's death also marked the beginning of the
Christian era: the High
Middle Ages.
Sturluson writes, "One year after King Harald's fall his body was transported from England north to
Nidaros (the present
Trondheim), and was buried in the Mary Church, which he'd built.
It was common observation that King Harald distinguished himself above all other men by wisdom and resources of mind; whether he'd to take a resolution suddenly for himself and others, or after long deliberation. He was, also, above all men, bold, brave, and lucky, until his dying day, as above related; and bravery is half victory."³
Being remembered is one of the most important wishes for Vikings that went abroad or even those that stayed home. About a hundred years later his body was reinterred in
Helgeseter Monastery, which was demolished sometime in the 1600s.
On
September 25,
2006, the 940th anniversary of Harald's death, the newspaper
Aftenposten published an article on the poor state of Norway's ancient royal burial sites, including that of Harald Hardrada, which is reportedly located underneath a road built across the monastery site. In a follow-up article on September 26, the Municipality of Trondheim revealed they'd be examining the possibility of exhuming the king and reinterring him in the
Nidaros Cathedral.
The cathedral is currently the burial place of nine Norwegian kings, among them
Magnus I and
Magnus II, Harald's predecessor and successor respectively.
In 1980 the
Danish American science fiction and fantasy author
Poul Anderson published
The Last Viking, a three-volume historical novel about Harald. Harald also makes a notable appearance in
Thomas Holts novel
Meadowland where the tale of
Vinlands discovery is used as the plotline.
In 2006, the archeologist-author
David Gibbins in his book "Crusader Gold" uses Hardrada in his plot trying to follow the lost Jewish treasure "the
Menorah" (
candelabrum of the
Temple in Jerusalem), by having the king escaping wounded the battle in England to seek refuge in Vinland having with him the treasures of
Miklagard, the name of Constantinople in Norse language.
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