Hålogaland

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Tromsø, by Peder Balke, 1804–1887. This painting illustrates some of the rugged Fjord and island terrain that was Hålogaland.
Tromsø, by Peder Balke, 1804–1887. This painting illustrates some of the rugged Fjord and island terrain that was Hålogaland.

Hålogaland was the northernmost of the Norwegian provinces in the mediaeval Norse sagas. In the early Viking Age, before Harald Fairhair, Hålogaland was a petty kingdom extending between Namdalen in Nord-Trøndelag and Lyngen in Troms. Perhaps the best known inhabitant was Ottar.

In modern times, the term Hålogaland is used in a variety of senses. For some purposes, all of Nord-Norge plus Svalbard and Jan Mayen are covered under the term Hålogaland. For other purposes the counties of Nordland and Troms constitute Hålogaland. Hålogaland or even Mid Hålogaland are frequent terms covering the smaller districts of Ofoten, Lofoten and Vesterålen, as well as the municipalities Bjarkøy, Gratangen, Harstad, Ibestad, Kvæfjord and Skånland of Troms county. The term has also been used in this last sense, minus the Lofoten archipelago.

Hålogaland, in every sense of the word, is drowned coastline containing extensive mountainous fjords and islands. It was an excellent refuge for Viking ships as well as a way station for voyagers to the White Sea, which offered access to Russia. Even in modern times, Narvik was an important WWII objective.

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[edit] History

[edit] Location and population in the sagas

Hålogaland around 1000 CE.
Hålogaland around 1000 CE.

Hålogaland figures extensively in the Norse sagas, and in the Heimskringla, especially the Ynglinga Saga. It was inhabited by the Háleygia aett[citation needed], "the race of Hölgi", who was the eponymous hero of Hålogaland[citation needed]. He was defended by a protective goddess, Thorgerth Hölgabrúth[citation needed].

The name is connected also (in folk etymology at least) with Helgeland, today just to the southwest of Hålogaland. It is possible that they were considered the same country then[citation needed]. In that case, Hölgi would be identical to Helgi[citation needed]. The name was and is fairly common, being owned also by Halga in Beowulf. There is an epithet of Logi, Haloge.

[edit] The name

How closely related linguistically are all these names is a topic of debate. In addition, the questions of whether there was an historical Hölgi and who he might be remain unanswered. Generally those interested end by hypothesizing a confusion in the sagas between various persons named Helgi, or else attribute the name to mythology. In this approach Hålogaland is seen as "Halogi's land", named after an individual.

One possible early source removes the question of name origin to a time before the Viking Age of the sagas: Hålogaland may be the location of the Adogit (Halogit?) that Jordanes named as the most northern tribe of Scandza. In that case the name would be indefinitely ancient, possibly dating to any time from Jordanes' era (Germanic migration period) to remote antiquity, limited only by glacial inaccessibility.

The many possibilities remain uncertain. Perhaps the name is Sami, assigned by the Lapplanders whose descendants now live in Finnmark to the north. If it is a personal name, perhaps it is related to our holy, either the land or its eponymous hero being sacred in some way (see Halga). Perhaps the word is related to our hell, being then an underworld figure and earth goddess. Or, if the Ha- is segmented out, perhaps it refers to a god of fire (logi), or is related to our lock in the sense of "enclosure", or means "tall Logi" (see under Fornjót).

Whatever the name may turn out to be, the dominant residents of the sagas are clearly Indo-european and Nordic, as the names and customs attest. If there is a Lappish element, it isn't clearly identified.

[edit] Sagic history

In the Heimskringla, a man called Gudlög led a number of Norwegian pirates that were fought by the Swedish king Jorund in the Heimskringla, and king Godgest was given a horse by the Swedish king Adils.

The first earl of Lade, Håkon Grjotgardsson, ruler of Trøndelag, came from Hålogaland, and sought to extend his kingdom southwards. Here, he met with Harald Fairhair, and joined him.