Iceland review - 2016, Síða 60

Iceland review - 2016, Síða 60
58 ICELAND REVIEW HISTORY kingdom. However, back in Iceland, Snorri didn’t act on his promise to the king, and other chieftains followed his example. The king finally won Iceland over with the Old Covenant (Gamli sátt- máli) in 1262-64, which put an end to the Age of the Sturlungs and to the Icelandic Commonwealth. The age has long been considered a black period in Icelandic history; a savage period of civil wars led by chieftains in constant struggle for power, eventually resulting in the young nation losing its independence. However, historians* have reasoned that even though the period was marked by violent struggles, ‘civil wars’ is an overstatement, and the centuries preceding it were hardly peace- ful. The struggles were evidence of the concentration of power, also occurring elsewhere in Europe in the middle ages. Icelandic identity didn’t exist at the time and as the covenant with Norway secured peace, people likely approved of the king’s rule. The Age of the Sturlungs was also when the Icelandic sagas—on which the nation, in its fight for independence centuries later, built its identity—were written. These include the contemporary Sturlunga Saga, partly written by Snorri’s nephew, Sturla Þórðarson (1214-1284)— the most important historical evidence about the Age of the Sturlungs. BLOOD WILL RAIN DOWN Örlygsstaðabardagi proved a huge blow to the Sturlungar clan. The conflict- ing parties were, from the side of the Sturlungs: Sighvatur Sturluson and his son Sturla Sighvatsson (1199-1238) with a combined army of 1,000 men; against Gissur Þorvaldsson (1208-1268), chief of the Haukdælir clan, who ruled large territories in South Iceland, and Kolbeinn the Young (1208-1245), chief of the Ásbirningar clan in Skagafjörður, North Iceland, with a combined army of 1,600 men. Hungry for power, Sturla had already claimed his uncle Snorri’s chieftainships in the West Fjords when he tricked Gissur into promising his loyalty at Apavatn lake in the spring of 1238. Wrathful, Gissur sought his vengeance. Outnumbering the Sturlungar, Gissur and Kolbeinn launched their attack in the early morning of August 21, 1238, where the Sturlungar were waiting in Skagafjörður. Sturla Þórðarson, who survived the battle, recites in Sturlunga Saga: Sturla [Sighvatsson] woke up shortly after sunrise. He sat up and his face was sweating; he stroked his chin with his hand and said, “There’s not much meaning in dreams.” After that he got up and went to the out- house; Illugi the priest was with him. When he came back he lay down for a little while, until a man came into the hall and called out: “The group of southerners is riding now, and it’s a whole army!” The Sturlungar retreated into an enclosed field named Örlygsstaðir, after which the battle is named. It was low-lying and poorly suit- ed for defense. The men took positions but didn’t have time to unfasten their shields from the horses. Their enemies attacked and it soon became clear that they were the stronger party. After Kolbeinn struck Sighvatur with a spear, the wounded chieftain pleaded: “Let us talk with one another—for you have the upper hand now in our affair.” But Sighvatur, 68 years old, was shown no mercy. His enemies struck again and again, inflicting 17 wounds on his body. Sturla fought bravely on. Sturla defend- ed himself with a spear, which was named Grásíða, an ancient, inlaid, but not very strong spear. He continuously laid about him so hard with this spear that men fell before him, but the spear bent and several times he had to straighten it out under his foot. Eventually, Sturla could defend himself no longer. After receiving three mortal wounds, he asked to be spared. This was granted but Gissur decided otherwise, declaring: “Here am I to do the work.” He took a broadaxe from the hand of Þórð Valdason and struck Sturla mightily on the head from the left, behind the eye, a deep but narrow wound. The men who were near said that Gizur leapt into the air with both feet when he struck Sturla, so that they saw the sky between his feet and the earth. In addition to Sighvatur and Sturla, three of Sturla’s brothers were among the 49 casualties from the ranks of the Sturlungar. Gissur lost seven men and Kolbeinn none. The victors claimed much of their enemies’ territory but the war was far from over. POINT AND EDGE On accusation of treason, King Haakon ordered Gissur to assassinate Snorri Sturluson. Snorri was killed at his home in Reykholt on September 23, 1241. Snorri’s nephew, Sturla Sighvatsson’s brother, Þórður kakali, who was in Norway when his kinsmen were killed, returned to avenge them. In Iceland’s only naval battle, Flóabardagi on Húnaflói on June 25, 1244, Þórður crushed Kolbeinn the Young’s fleet of 20 ships and crew of 470, in spite of having only 12 ships and a crew of 200. Kolbeinn lost 60 men. He made his sec- ond cousin Brandur Kolbeinsson chief of the Ásbirningar clan and died the fol- lowing year. Then Þórður gathered an army of 600 men and attacked Brandur’s army of 700 at Haugsnes in Skagafjörður on April 19, 1244. The bloodiest battle in Icelandic history, Haugsnesbardagi claimed the lives of 60 of Brandur’s men, among them Brandur himself, and 40 of Þórður’s. The Ásbirningar clan had been defeated. Instead of continuing with the blood- shed, Þórður and Gissur decided to refer their case to King Haakon, whom they both served. The king ruled in Þórður’s favor and sent him back to Iceland, accompanied by the new bish- op of Hólar, Heinrekur Kársson, with the task of making all Icelanders pay taxes to the king. Þórður took the land of Garðar in Akranes in the king’s name and became a near dictator in Iceland in 1247-50. Heinrekur reported to Haakon that Þórður wasn’t efficient enough in winning him followers and Þórður was called back to Norway. He died there in 1256, shortly before the king had decided that he should return to Iceland.
Síða 1
Síða 2
Síða 3
Síða 4
Síða 5
Síða 6
Síða 7
Síða 8
Síða 9
Síða 10
Síða 11
Síða 12
Síða 13
Síða 14
Síða 15
Síða 16
Síða 17
Síða 18
Síða 19
Síða 20
Síða 21
Síða 22
Síða 23
Síða 24
Síða 25
Síða 26
Síða 27
Síða 28
Síða 29
Síða 30
Síða 31
Síða 32
Síða 33
Síða 34
Síða 35
Síða 36
Síða 37
Síða 38
Síða 39
Síða 40
Síða 41
Síða 42
Síða 43
Síða 44
Síða 45
Síða 46
Síða 47
Síða 48
Síða 49
Síða 50
Síða 51
Síða 52
Síða 53
Síða 54
Síða 55
Síða 56
Síða 57
Síða 58
Síða 59
Síða 60
Síða 61
Síða 62
Síða 63
Síða 64
Síða 65
Síða 66
Síða 67
Síða 68
Síða 69
Síða 70
Síða 71
Síða 72
Síða 73
Síða 74
Síða 75
Síða 76
Síða 77
Síða 78
Síða 79
Síða 80
Síða 81
Síða 82
Síða 83
Síða 84
Síða 85
Síða 86
Síða 87
Síða 88
Síða 89
Síða 90
Síða 91
Síða 92
Síða 93
Síða 94
Síða 95
Síða 96
Síða 97
Síða 98
Síða 99
Síða 100
Síða 101
Síða 102
Síða 103
Síða 104
Síða 105
Síða 106
Síða 107
Síða 108
Síða 109
Síða 110
Síða 111
Síða 112
Síða 113
Síða 114
Síða 115
Síða 116
Síða 117
Síða 118
Síða 119
Síða 120
Síða 121
Síða 122
Síða 123
Síða 124
Síða 125
Síða 126
Síða 127
Síða 128
Síða 129
Síða 130
Síða 131
Síða 132
Síða 133
Síða 134
Síða 135
Síða 136
Síða 137
Síða 138
Síða 139
Síða 140
Síða 141
Síða 142
Síða 143
Síða 144
Síða 145
Síða 146
Síða 147
Síða 148

x

Iceland review

Beinleiðis leinki

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: Iceland review
https://timarit.is/publication/1842

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.