Gunnhildr Sveinsdóttir Explained

Gunnhildr
Consort:yes
Succession:Queen consort of Sweden
Reign:c. 1022–c. 1050
Succession1:Queen consort of Denmark
Reign1:1050–1052
Spouse:Anund Jacob of Sweden
Sweyn II of Denmark
Issue:Gyda, Queen of Denmark (?)
House:House of Hlaðir
Father:Sveinn Hákonarson
Mother:Holmfrid of Sweden
Birth Place:Norway
Death Date:c. 1060
Death Place:Gudhem, Västergötland, Sweden
Burial Place:Gudhem, Västergötland, Sweden

Gunnhildr Sveinsdóttir or Gunnhildr Haraldsdóttir, Guda or Gyda (traditionally died in Gudhem, Västergötland, Sweden, c. 1060) was, according to the traditional view, a queen consort of King Anund Jacob of Sweden and of king Sveinn II of Denmark. However, the sources are so vague that several modern historians maintain that there were actually two queens of that name, of Sweden and Denmark respectively.[1] She is sometimes called Gude or Gyridje, but this is probably because of confusion with her daughter, Gyda, who is also known under her mother's name Gunnhildr.[2]

Background

According to Snorri Sturluson's Heimskringla (c. 1230) and the Knýtlinga saga (1250s) she was the child of the Norwegian jarl Svein Håkonsson and Holmfrid, daughter (or sister) of king Olof Skötkonung and sister (or niece) of king Emund the Old of Sweden. Gunnhildr's sister Sigrid was married to the grandee Aslak Erlingsson in Jaederen.[3]

Queen of Sweden

Svein Håkonsson held part of Norway as fief under Olof Skötkonung. In 1015 he was defeated by the claimant Olaf Haraldsson (Olaf the Saint) and was forced to flee to Sweden with his family. From the near-contemporary chronicle of Adam of Bremen it is known that a Gunnhildr became married to Olof Skötkonung's son and successor King Anund Jacob (1022-c. 1050) at an unknown date. The information is found in a scholion which says: "Gunnhildr, the widow of Anund, is not the same person as Gyda, whom Thora killed".[4] The scholion refers to a passage in Adam's main text which describes Gunnhildr as residing in Sweden in c. 1056, after her marriage with Sveinn II of Denmark ended.[5] On the basis of this scholion it was common in older history writing to identify the Swedish and Danish Queen Gunnhildr with each other. This has been denied by historian Sture Bolin, who, basing himself on a close reading of Adam's text, regards them as two different individuals, of whom the Danish queen was Svein Håkonsson's daughter.[6] Two later scholars, Tore Nyberg and Carl Hallencreutz, have suggested that Gunnhildr may actually have been married to both Anund Jacob and Sveinn II.[7]

Contemporary sources do not mention any children of Gunnhildr and Anund Jacob. However, the later Danish chronicler Saxo Grammaticus and the Icelandic annals say that "the Swedish king", by implication Anund Jacob, had a daughter by the name of Gyda, sometimes also called Guda or Gunnhildr.[8] It is possible that Gyda was the daughter of Anund by another woman, and that Gunnhildr was her stepmother. However, Saxo and the Icelandic annals are both late sources, and information about Gyda's parentage may ultimately go back to a misinterpretation of Adam of Bremen's text. Gyda was, according to Adam, married to king Sveinn II of Denmark, who had spent some time at the Swedish court during his political exile from Denmark, in about 1047. However, she soon died in 1048/49, allegedly poisoned by Sveinn's concubine Thora.[9]

Queen of Denmark

King Anund Jacob died in c. 1050. If the two Gunnhildrs were really one and the same person, the Queen Dowager went to Denmark and married her (step-)daughter's widower, her former son-in-law King Sveinn Estridsson of Denmark. According to the Annales Lundensis the marriage was concluded in 1052.[10] To quote Adam of Bremen, "When things went well for him, he soon forgot the heavenly king and brought as his wife a kinswoman from Sweden. The Archbishop [of Hamburg-Bremen] was highly displeased with this."[11] The couple had a son called Sveinn,[12] but the marriage did not last long; the church considered the marriage illegal because they were too closely related – either because they were cousins, or because Sveinn had been married to her daughter – and they were threatened with excommunication if they did not separate. At first Sveinn was furious and threatened to ravage the Archbishopric of Hamburg, but the Archbishop persisted in his demand. When finally Pope Leo IX dispatched a written request, Sveinn found reason to yield and gave his queen a letter of divorce.[13] Gunhild was thereby forced to return to Sweden, in c. 1051/52. Gunnhildr and her daughter's marriage with Sveinn have also been confused with each other in later historiography.[14]

Later life

After her involuntary divorce, Gunnhildr returned to her estates in Sweden, perhaps in Västergötland. Adam of Bremen calls her Sanctissima and describes her hospitality toward the missionary bishop Adalvard, who had been turned away from a Thing by King Emund the Old. Adam tells that Adalvard was escorted to the queen's residence over mountainous terrain by the king's kinsman Stenkil, possibly from the Mälaren Valley to Västergötland. She devoted her time to "hospitality and other pious work".[15]

Nothing more is known of Gunnhildr from contemporary sources. According to the unreliable 16th-century chronicle of Johannes Magnus she spent her remaining days in pious repentance for her sins and religious acts. The chronicle reports that she founded a studio of the making of textiles and habits for clerical use. Her most known work was a choir gown she made for the cathedral of Roskilde. According to Johannes Magnus she founded the convent of Gudhem Abbey in the mid-11th century.[16] In reality, however, this convent was founded exactly one hundred years later (in 1152).[17] The legend of the convent might have come about because she and her women lived an isolated religious life making church robes on her estates, one of which could have been Gudhem. Tradition says she died in Gudhem, where she had "shown so much virtue" during her set-back, and was buried under a gravestone shaped to her likeness.

The years of her birth and death are not known, but she survived her first husband (d. c. 1050) and lived during the reign of king Emund the Old of Sweden (reign c. 1050–c. 1060). She therefore died around 1060 or later.

Literature

Notes and References

  1. https://sok.riksarkivet.se/Sbl/Presentation.aspx?id=13305 Hans Gillingstam, "Gunhild", Svenskt biografiskt lexikon
  2. Sven Axelson (1955), Sverige i utländsk annalistik 900-1400. Stockholm: Appelbergs, p. 34, 55.
  3. Snorre Sturluson (1993), Nordiska kungasagor. III. Magnus den gode till Magnus Erlingsson. Stockholm: Fabel, p. 100 (Harald Sigurdssons saga, Chapter 41); Knýtlinga saga, Chapter 23 http://www.heimskringla.no/wiki/Knytlinga_saga.
  4. Adam av Bremen (1984), Historien om Hamburgstiftet och dess biskopar. Stockholm: Proprius, p. 189 (Book III, Scholion 66).
  5. Adam av Bremen (1984), p. 140 (Book III, Chapter 15).
  6. Sture Bolin (1932), "Kring Mäster Adams text", Scandia 4, p. 230-8.
  7. Adam av Bremen (1984), p. 189.
  8. Saxo Grammaticus, Gesta danorum http://heimskringla.no/wiki/Svend_Estridss%C3%B8n; Sven Axelson (1955), p. 34, 55-6.
  9. Adam av Bremen (1984), p. 192 (Book III, Scholion 72).
  10. Sven Axelson (1955), p. 55.
  11. Adam av Bremen (1984), p. 137 (Book III, Chapter 12).
  12. http://www.heimskringla.no/wiki/Knytlinga_saga Knýtlinga saga, Chapter 23
  13. Adam av Bremen (1984), p. 137 (Book III, Chapter 12).
  14. Sven Axelson (1955), p. 55-6.
  15. Adam av Bremen (1984), p. 140 (Book III, Chapter 15).
  16. Johannes Magnus (1620), Swea och Götha Crönika. Stockholm: Ignatium Meurer, p. 515.
  17. Markus Hagberg (ed.) (2009), Gudhems kloster. Skara stiftshistoriska sällskaps skriftserie, 44. Skara: Skara stiftshistoriska sällskap.