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- Thyra (correctly spelled ?yrv?) was the consort of King Gorm the Old of Denmark. She is believed to have led an army against the Germans. Gorm and Thyra were the parents of King Harald Blaatand (Harald Bluetooth).
Thyra was referred to as a woman of great prudence. Saxo wrote that Thyra was mainly responsible for building the Dannevirke on the southern border, but archeology has proven it much older.
Thyra predeceased Gorm, who raised a memorial stone to Thyra at Jelling, which refers to her as "tanmarka but" - the 'Pride' or 'Ornament' of Denmark.
Gorm and Thyra were buried under one of the two great mounds at Jelling and later moved to the first Christian church there. This was confirmed when a tomb containing their remains was excavated in 1978 under the east end of the present church.
Accounts of Thyra's parentage are late, contradictory and chronologically dubious. Saxo holds she was the daughter of ?thelred, King of England (usually identified with ?thelred of Wessex), while the J?msv?kinga saga and Snorri's Heimskringla say her father was a king or jarl of Jutland or Holstein called Harald Klak. However, it seems more likely that she might be a descendant of ?thelred and/or Harald Klak, possibly a grand-daughter.
According to popular tradition, her daughter was captured by trolls and carried off to a kingdom in the far north beyond Halogaland and Biarmaland.
Tradition also has it that before Thyra consented to marry Gorm, she insisted he build a new house and sleep in it for the first three nights of winter and give her an account of his dreams those nights. The dreams were told at the wedding banquet and as recorded, imitate the dreams Pharaoh had that were interpreted by Joseph in Genesis. Oxen came out of the sea (bountiful harvest) and birds (glory of the king to be born).
This database researched and compiled by Norman Lee Madsen, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 21 July 2015.
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