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Template:Kings of Gesta Danorum family tree

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The family tree of legendary Kings of the Danes, according to the Gesta Danorum (Books I to VII)

Kings of the Danes are in bold and marked with an asterisk (*). Kings of the Swedes are marked with a dagger (†).

Humble
KEY
AngulDan*GrythaMarriage or coupling
Parent and child
The AnglesHumble*Lother*King of the SaxonsInheritance by other or unclear means
Sigtryg, King of the Swedes†Skiold*AlfhildSumble, King
of the Finns
GróaGram*†SigneHenry, King
of the Saxons
Hakon, King
of the Nitherians
Swipdag*†[unnamed]Guthorm*
Hadding*Ragnhild
Asmund†Gunhild
Guthorm
HenryUffe†Hunding†ThorhildUlfhildUbbe
Scot
Ragnar†SwanhwidHandwan
Thorwald
Frode*[unnamed]
HothbroddHalfdan*RoSkat
Thora
Helge*Ro*
AthilsUrse
King GewarRolf*† KrageRuteBjarkeSkuldeHiartuar†*
Hother†*NannaHerlekGerit
Rorik*Gerwendil
King of BritainGeruthaHorwendilFeng
[unnamed]AmlethHermutrude, Queen of ScotlandWiglek*
Wermund*Frowin, governor of Sleswik
Uffe*, aka Olaf the Gentle[unnamed]KetWig
Dan*
Hugleik*
Frode* the Vigorous
Dan*
KrakaRagnarBrakFridleif* the Swift
Gotar, King of NorwayHun, King of the HunsWestmarKollGotwar
RollerErikGunwar the FairAlfhildFrode*HanundGrep11 other brothers (two named Grep)
Hythin, King of TellemarkAlfEyfuraArngrimGrubbHiarn*Amund, King of Norway
[unnamed]Halfdan†12 sons, including AngantyAneJurithaFridleif*FrogerthaFrok
Hanef, King of SaxonySwerting, King of SaxonyOlafFrode*
Siward†Unnamed sons[unnamed]Ingeld*HelgaHelgeAsa
FrodeFridleifIngeldOlaf*Karl, governor of Gothland
UlfhildFrode*Hather, a chiefHarald*Signe
ErikThorhildHalfdan*† BiargrammHarald
Asmund
Kings of Norway

Name spellings are derived from Oliver Elton's 1905 translation, The First Nine Books of the Danish History of Saxo Grammaticus, via Wikisource.

Notes on the family tree

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  • This chart depicts the family tree described in Gesta Danorum by Saxo Grammaticus, and no other source. It begins with Humble, the father of Dan, from Book I, and continues to the family of Halfdan Biargramm in Book VII, although Gesta Danorum contains sixteen books in total. The family tree ends at Halfdan Biargramm because, although Saxo gives him a son named Asmund by Thorhild, he is also described as childless and after his death the monarchies of Denmark and Sweden pass to the unrelated Yngwin, King of the Goths. Thereafter, further kings are related to Yngwin and not to the original family of kings.
  • The following characters from Gesta Danorum are related to the family of the kings of Denmark, but are not currently fit into the chart:
    • Gram's unnamed sister (debauched by Swipdag)
    • Gram's unnamed first wife, the daughter of Roar.
    • Roar himself
    • Bess, who subsequently married Gram's unnamed first wife (the daughter of Roar)
    • Hakon, described in Book VI as a tyrant of Denmark and a king but not fitting in with the line of kings as described in the surrounding text. In this book, he may be an underling of king Frode (IV).
  • Some assumptions have been made about the mothers of some individuals. It has generally been assumed that a king's children (especially those that inherit) are also the children of his wife if one has been named and no other parentage is given, although in many cases this is not explicit in the text. For example, Hadding's children may not have been borne by Ragnhild; Rolf is the only child of Helge explitly born to Urse; Hother's son Rorik may not be born to Nanna; and Wiglek's son Wermund might not be the son of Hermutrude. Also, although Swipdag's unnamed wife is described as the brother of Guthorm (and elsewhere it is said that Swipdag debauched Gram's daughter), it isn't clear that the unnamed wife is the daughter of Gram and Groa.
  • Hythin of Tellemark may have had both an unnamed son and an unnamed daughter, or just one child. On introduction, his son has been kidnapped by a giant and is rescued by Fridleif; later, Fridleif arranges for Hythin's daughter "whom he had once rescued from a monster" to marry Halfdan. Three possibilities: (1) there is a textual error in either the written source or the translation, (2) the rescue of the daughter is separate from the rescue of the son but not related in the text, (3) the son and daughter are the same individual.
  • The 12 sons of Eyfura are all named, as follows: Brand, Biarbe, Brodd, Hiarrande; Tand, Tyrfing, two Haddings; Hiortuar, Hiartuar, Hrane, Anganty. These are different from the 9 sons of a certain prince, including Anganty, who was a suitor of Helga, sister of Ingeld.
  • At the slaying of Swerting's sons, Starkad says that 7 people have been slain. This may indicate that there were 7 sons of Swerting, but this isn't explicit.
  • Saxo says that Olaf, the King who succeeded Ingeld, is either the son of Ingeld and his wife (the sister of Swerting's sons) or the son of Ingeld's sister (which one is not stated), although Saxo says the latter is doubtful. For simplicity, he is assumed to be Ingeld's son in this tree.