-
Sigurd the
Crusader (Old Norse: Sigurðr Jórsalafari; Norwegian:
Sigurd Jorsalfare; 1089 – 26
March 1130), also
known as
Sigurd Magnusson and
Sigurd I, was...
-
taken by the crusaders. Krag,
Claus (30 June 2022). "Sigurd 1.
Magnusson Jorsalfare".
Archived from the
original on 27
January 2022.
Retrieved 12 July 2022...
-
Korsfareren -
Sigurd Jorsalfare og hans verden.
Historie & Kultur. ISBN 9788283230222. Morten, Øystein (2014).
Jakten på
Sigurd Jorsalfare. Spartacus. ISBN 9788243008441...
- Norwegian).
Retrieved 6
November 2012. Krag, Claus. "Sigurd 1
Magnusson Jorsalfare".
Norsk biografisk leksikon (in Norwegian).
Retrieved 6
November 2012...
-
celebrate its "1000-year anniversary" in 1959.
Sigurd I
Magnusson (Sigurd
Jorsalfare, i.e.,
Sigurd the Crusader) was the King of
Norway (1103–1130) and is...
-
Columbia University Press, 1976, p. 16. Øystein
Morten (2014),
Sigurd Jorsalfare (p. 41), Oslo: Spartacus, ISBN 978-82-430-0844-1
Timothy Dawson (May 1992)...
- (originally
named Söte), Starkaðr,
Ketil Höing,
Odysseus and Polyphemus,
Sigurd Jorsalfare and the Rus'
ruler Oleg of
Novgorod (the
attack on Bjalkaland). The motif...
- Norwegian).
Retrieved 1
March 2013. Krag, Claus. "Sigurd 1
Magnusson Jorsalfare".
Norsk biografisk leksikon (in Norwegian).
Retrieved 1
March 2013. Saga...
- ISBN 978-2-503-54314-7. Hjardar, Kim:
Sigurd Jorsalfares korstog i
Store norske leksikon på snl.no. https://snl.no/Sigurd_
Jorsalfares_korstog Sturluson,
Snorri (2015)...
- Magnusson) : 1103–1123
Sigurd I of
Norway Sigurd the
Crusader (Sigurd
Jorsalfare) : 1103–1130
Magnus IV of
Norway Magnus the
Blind (Magnus Blinde): 1130–1135...