Snø Frosteson av Kvenland (244-) 244-- (man)
Födelse: uppskattat mellan 245 och 275
Kvenland, Finland
Närstående:
Son till Frosti Karasson, Mythical King of Kvenland
Far till Driva Snaersdotter Snødatter; Fön Snærdotter; Mjöl Snærdotter; King Thorri Snærsson Snaero s¾nus, of Kvenland och In Snærdotter
concerns
This Snær is the same as Myth King of Kvenland Snaer Frostason,
NOTE: His father is named Frosti and Jøkull in two different accounts that are otherwise identical.
kilde/links
https://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sn%C3%B8_den_gamle
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sn%C3%A6r
content to clean up
Snow the Old / Snø den Gamle / Snaer
Snø den gamle norr. Snjór in gamli eller Snær in gamli, ifølge norrøn mytologi konge i Finland. Far til Torre, Fonn, Driva og Mjoll.
Legendary Scandinavian king, described in the Orkney Saga, the Flateyarbok and the Ynglingesaga.
The accounts differ on the name of his father; the Orkney saga gives his father as Frosti son of Kari; the Flateyarbok gives his father as Jølkull, son of Kari.
Note: Ynglingesoga gives a story of another princess who was called "daughter of Snow the old"; this father is listed on Geni as another person, since the most likely chronology gives several hundred years of difference.
Snær (Old Norse) Snærr, East Norse Sniò, Latin Nix, Nivis) 'snow', in Norse mythology seemingly a personification of snow, appearing in extant text as an euhemerized legendary Scandinavian king.
Snow's son in Orkneyinga saga and Hversu is Thorri 'frozen-snow'. The Hversu also gives Snow three daughters: Fön (Fǫnn 'Snowdrift'), Drífa 'snowfall', and Mjöl (Mjǫll, 'powdered snow'). Sturlaugs saga (section 22) brings in King Snow of Finmark and his daughter Mjöl who flies quickly through the air.
The Ynglinga saga relates how Vanlandi the ruler of Sweden visited Snow in Finland and married his daughter Drífa, but left in the spring and did not return. Drífa bore Vanlandi a son called Vísbur.
The Hversu also mentions in passing, when speaking of Snær's distant descendant Halfdan the Old, that Snær's life lasted three hundred years.
Snow's son Thorri reigned after Snow as king of Gotland, Kvenland, and Finland. Thorri had two sons named Nór and Gór and a daughter named Gói ('thin snow, track-snow').
NOTE: His father is named Frosti and Jøkull in 2 different accounts that are otherwise identical.
Snow the Old / Snø den Gamle / Snaer
Kilde:
http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sn%C3%B8_den_gamle
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sn%C3%A6r
Snø den gamle norr. Snjór in gamli eller Snær in gamli, ifølge norrøn mytologi konge i Finland. Far til Torre, Fonn, Driva og Mjoll.
Legendary Scandinavian king, described in the Orkney Saga, the Flateyarbok and the Ynglingesaga.
The accounts differ on the name of his father; the Orkney saga gives his father as Frosti son of Kari; the Flateyarbok gives his father as Jølkull, son of Kari.
Note: Ynglingesoga gives a story of another princess who was called "daughter of Snow the old"; this father is listed on Geni as another person, since the most likely chronology gives several hundred years of difference.
Snær (Old Norse) Snærr, East Norse Snio, Latin Nix, Nivis) 'snow', in Norse mythology seemingly a personification of snow, appearing in extant text as an euhemerized legendary Scandinavian king.
Snow's son in Orkneyinga saga and Hversu is Thorri 'frozen-snow'. The Hversu also gives Snow three daughters: Fön (Fonn 'Snowdrift'), Drífa 'snowfall', and Mjöl (Mjoll, 'powdered snow'). Sturlaugs saga (section 22) brings in King Snow of Finmark and his daughter Mjöl who flies quickly through the air.
The Ynglinga saga relates how Vanlandi the ruler of Sweden visited Snow in Finland and married his daughter Drífa, but left in the spring and did not return. Drífa bore Vanlandi a son called Vísbur.
The Hversu also mentions in passing, when speaking of Snær's distant descendant Halfdan the Old, that Snær's life lasted three hundred years.
Snow's son Thorri reigned after Snow as king of Gotland, Kvenland, and Finland. Thorri had two sons named Nór and Gór and a daughter named Gói ('thin snow, track-snow').
NOTE: His father is named Frosti and Jøkull in 2 different accounts that are otherwise identical.
Snow the Old / Snø den Gamle / Snaer
Kilde:
http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sn%C3%B8_den_gamle http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sn%C3%A6r Snø den gamle norr. Snjór in gamli eller Snær in gamli, ifølge norrøn mytologi konge i Finland. Far til Torre, Fonn, Driva og Mjoll.
Legendary Scandinavian king, described in the Orkney Saga, the Flateyarbok and the Ynglingesaga.
The accounts differ on the name of his father; the Orkney saga gives his father as Frosti son of Kari; the Flateyarbok gives his father as Jølkull, son of Kari.
Note: Ynglingesoga gives a story of another princess who was called "daughter of Snow the old"; this father is listed on Geni as another person, since the most likely chronology gives several hundred years of difference.
Snær (Old Norse) Snærr, East Norse Sniò, Latin Nix, Nivis) 'snow', in Norse mythology seemingly a personification of snow, appearing in extant text as an euhemerized legendary Scandinavian king.
Snow's son in Orkneyinga saga and Hversu is Thorri 'frozen-snow'. The Hversu also gives Snow three daughters: Fön (Fǫnn 'Snowdrift'), Drífa 'snowfall', and Mjöl (Mjǫll, 'powdered snow'). Sturlaugs saga (section 22) brings in King Snow of Finmark and his daughter Mjöl who flies quickly through the air.
The Ynglinga saga relates how Vanlandi the ruler of Sweden visited Snow in Finland and married his daughter Drífa, but left in the spring and did not return. Drífa bore Vanlandi a son called Vísbur.
The Hversu also mentions in passing, when speaking of Snær's distant descendant Halfdan the Old, that Snær's life lasted three hundred years.
Snow's son Thorri reigned after Snow as king of Gotland, Kvenland, and Finland. Thorri had two sons named Nór and Gór and a daughter named Gói ('thin snow, track-snow').
NOTE: His father is named Frosti and Jøkull in 2 different accounts that are otherwise identical.
Snow the Old / Snø den Gamle / Snaer
Kilde:
http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sn%C3%B8_den_gamle
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sn%C3%A6r
Snø den gamle norr. Snjór in gamli eller Snær in gamli, ifølge norrøn mytologi konge i Finland. Far til Torre, Fonn, Driva og Mjoll.
Legendary Scandinavian king, described in the Orkney Saga, the Flateyarbok and the Ynglingesaga.
The accounts differ on the name of his father; the Orkney saga gives his father as Frosti son of Kari; the Flateyarbok gives his father as Jølkull, son of Kari.
Note: Ynglingesoga gives a story of another princess who was called "daughter of Snow the old"; this father is listed on Geni as another person, since the most likely chronology gives several hundred years of difference.
Snær (Old Norse) Snærr, East Norse Snio, Latin Nix, Nivis) 'snow', in Norse mythology seemingly a personification of snow, appearing in extant text as an euhemerized legendary Scandinavian king.
Snow's son in Orkneyinga saga and Hversu is Thorri 'frozen-snow'. The Hversu also gives Snow three daughters: Fön (Fonn 'Snowdrift'), Drífa 'snowfall', and Mjöl (Mjoll, 'powdered snow'). Sturlaugs saga (section 22) brings in King Snow of Finmark and his daughter Mjöl who flies quickly through the air.
The Ynglinga saga relates how Vanlandi the ruler of Sweden visited Snow in Finland and married his daughter Drífa, but left in the spring and did not return. Drífa bore Vanlandi a son called Vísbur.
The Hversu also mentions in passing, when speaking of Snær's distant descendant Halfdan the Old, that Snær's life lasted three hundred years.
Snow's son Thorri reigned after Snow as king of Gotland, Kvenland, and Finland. Thorri had two sons named Nór and Gór and a daughter named Gói ('thin snow, track-snow').
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http://www.celtic-casimir.com/webtree/3/2822.htm orn: Abt 275, Finland Married: Abt 301, Raumsdal, , Norway
Ancestral File Number: G6SX-R6.
Marriage Information:
about 301 in Raumsdal, , Norway. Spouses/Children: Unknown
Driva SNAERSDÓTTIR+ Thorri SNAERSSON King in Kvenland+
https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/stamboom-homs/I56220762894100898... | |
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