Olaf
I
Olaf
I, full name OLAF TRYGGVASON (968-1000), king of Norway
(995-1000). A great-grandson of King
Harald I, he was brought up in Russia and later participated
in numerous Viking raids along the
Baltic and North Sea coasts and in the British Isles.
During
his last campaign, in England (994) with Sweyn
I Forkbeard of Denmark, he was converted to Christianity,
and the following year he returned to Norway, where a rebellion
had erupted against the pagan Earl Håkon.
The
victorious Olaf founded the city of Nidaros (now Trondheim)
as his capital and set out to Christianize the country.
Only partly successful in Norway, his efforts contributed
to the conversion of Iceland, Greenland, and the Faroe Islands
to Christianity. Olaf's forces were defeated by a coalition
consisting of Sweyn Forkbeard, King Olaf of Sweden, and
the two sons of Earl Håkon in the naval Battle of Svold
(1000), during which Olaf lost his life.
"Olaf
I ," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2001 http://encarta.msn.com
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