- led by
Sigmund and Sinfjǫtli to save
princess Signý from the evil king
Siggeir, and, most famously,
Sigurd killing the serpent/dragon Fáfnir and obtaining...
-
Siggeir is the king of
Gautland (i.e. Götaland/Geatland, but in some
translations also
rendered as Gothland), in the Völsunga saga. In Skáldskaparmál...
- by the
Geatish king
Siggeir. He was
later avenged by one of his sons, Sigmund, and his
daughter Signy, who was
married to
Siggeir. Völsung's
story is...
-
daughter of King Völsung. She was
married to the
villainous Geatish king
Siggeir who has her
whole family treacherously murdered,
except for her brother...
- Völsung's daughter,
despises her
husband King
Siggeir, and begs "that she may not be made to
return to King
Siggeir." Völsung
denies her
request to leave, reminding...
- the
sword from the tree.
Siggeir is
smitten with envy and
desire for the sword. He
tries to buy it but
Sigmund refuses.
Siggeir invites Sigmund, his father...
- His son
Hagbard fell in love with Signy, a
relative of Sigmund's
enemy Siggeir (see
Hagbard and Signy). Hámundr
makes only a
cameo appearance in the Poetic...
- fine sword, and King
Siggeir is
covetous of it,
offering Sigmund three times its
weight in gold. When he refuses, King
Siggeir grows angry and secretly...
-
informing that
Sigar had the two sons
Siggeir and Sigmund, who had the son
Sigar (the one who
hanged Hagbard).
Siggeir is the
Geatish king who
murdered Völsung...
-
belong to the same clan, the Siklings, and that they are the
relatives of
Siggeir, the
villainous Geatish king in the Völsunga saga. [...] the ninth, Sigarr...