Berle-Kari (Berle-Kåre; Old Norse : Berðlu-Kári ) was a viking chieftain who lived in ninth-century Norway . His home was at Berle (Old Norse : Berðla ), in present-day Bremanger in Sogn og Fjordane county. Landnámabók names him as the son of Vemund, and brother of Skjoldolf, one of the early settlers of Iceland .
According to Egil's Saga , Kari was a berserker , and a comrade-at-arms of Ulf the Fearless (Úlfr inn óargi).[ a] . The saga also Kari's three offspring as: Olvir Hnufa , who became a skald in the court of Harald I of Norway , Eyvind Lambi , who became one of Harald's hersirs , and a daughter, Salbjorg , who married Kveldulf Bjalfason . Kveldulf being grandson of the elder Ulf.[ 2] [ b]
Explanatory notes
^ This according to William Sayers, who points out Kvelulfr is mistakenly identified as Berle-Kari (Berðlu-Kári)'s partner.[ 1]
^ Sayers is in agreement on this point.[ 3]
References
Citations
^ Sayers, William (2016), "Verbal Expedients and Transformative Utterances in Episodes of Egils saga Skallagrímssonar" , Scandinavian Studies , 88 (2): 182 (endnote 1), [Phillip] Theisohn errs on several points of detail: ... Úlfr inn óargi, not Kveldúlfr ([2009 paper, ] 148), is Berðlu-Kári's partner in the opening chapter of the saga. ]
^ Egil's Saga (Chapter 1, Pálsson & Edwards 1976 , p. 21). See Pálsson and Edwards' introduction, where the stemma indicates Kveldulf and Salbjorg are spouses (p. 14) and Berle-Kari is Egil's great-grandfather(p. 11)
^ Sayers, William (2015), "Generational Models for the Friendship of Egill and Arinbjǫrn" (PDF) , Scripta Islandica , 66 : 145, the marriage of Úlfr's grandson, Úlfr Bjálfason (called Kveld-Úlfr), to Kári's daughter Salbjǫrg.
Bibliography