Pure (noble family)
The Rein family was an old Norwegian noble family. It comes from Skule kongsfostre (king's foster son), who returned to Norway with the army from England after the fall of King Harald Hardråde at the Battle of Stamford Bridge . His family background, however, is controversial. According to one theory, he was the son of Toste Godwinsson , Jarl of Northumbria and brother of Harold Godwinsson , the last Anglo-Saxon King of England and victor at Stamford Bridge. But this theory is also disputed.
Skule received land ownership with many large farms from the Norwegian crown estate, including Rein in Rissa . He was the father of Åsolf auf Rein, who came from the Giske family with Tora Skoftesdatter . Their son Guttorm auf Rein was the father of Bård Guttormsson . In his first marriage he was married to Cecilia , the daughter of Sigurd Munn and father of King Inge Bårdsson . His second marriage resulted in his daughter Sigrid Bårdsdotter, who was married to Jon Austrått and, as a widow, was the first abbess in Rein's monastery . He also had the son Duke Skule Bårdsson and the daughter Ingebjørg, who was married to Alv Erlingsson on Tornberg. Skule's daughter Margarete Skuledatter, wife of King Håkon Håkonsson . A large part of the later Norwegian nobility descends from Ingebjørg and Alv.
Family connections
Kongsfostre School | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Åsolf v. Purely | Torah Skoftesdatter (Giske) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Guttorm v. Purely | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bård Guttormsson (Rein) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Alfrid Ulfhild Pålsdatter | Cecilia Sigurdsdatter | Ragnfrid Erlingsdatter (Hvide) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Inge Bårdsson | Ragnhild Nikolasdatter (Giske) | Skule Bårdsson | Torgrim v. Ljones | Sigrid | Jon Sigurdsson on Austrått | Ingebjørg | Alf on Tornberg | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Margarete Skulesdatter | Håkon gamli | Ingerid | Jarl Knut | Ragnhild | Olav Ingason? | Erling on Tornberg | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Olav on stone | Jarl Alv on Tornberg | Tore Håkonsson | Ingebjörg | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rane Jonsson | Kristin | Håkon? | Andres Bjarnesson | Kristin | Elin | Erling Vidkunnsson | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
After PA Munch: Det Norske Folks Historie Vol. 4,2. Christiania 1859
- ↑ It was after returning from the Battle of Stamford Bridge by Harald Hardrade invested among other things pure.
- ^ Daughter of Bishop Pål of Hamar.
- ↑ As a widow, the first abbess in Rein's monastery .
- ↑ Knut Håkonsson, son of Jarl Håkon Galen , was Jarl with the Ribbungene, an uprising movement around 1219 in Eastern Norway.
- ↑ She too became an abbess in Rein's monastery.
- ↑ Erling received Borgarsyssel as a fief in 1275. He took part in the Norwegian-Swedish border commission from 1265 to 1273.
- ↑ 1332–1342 Bishop in Bergen . His ancestry from Tore is doubtful. He is also called Tore Erlingsson .
literature
- Terje Bratberg: "Reinsætten" in: Store norske leksikon