请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 Ringerike (traditional district)
释义

  1. Etymology

  2. History

     Kings of Ringerike  Administrative history 

  3. Municipalities

  4. References

     Literature 
{{Other uses|Ringerike (disambiguation){{!}}Ringerike}}{{use dmy dates|date=August 2015}}{{Infobox settlement
| name = Ringerike
| settlement_type = District
| image_skyline = Tyrifjorden-tb.jpg
| image_caption = View of Tyrifjorden, a lake in southern Ringerike.
| seat_type = Adm. Center
| seat = Hønefoss
| area_total_km2 = 3801
| population_total = 55883
| population_as_of = 2015
| population_demonym = Ringeriking
| population_density_km2 = auto
| subdivision_type = Country
| subdivision_name = Norway
| subdivision_type1 = County
| subdivision_name1 = Buskerud
| subdivision_type2 = Region
| subdivision_name2 = Austlandet
}}

Ringerike is a traditional district in Norway, commonly consisting of the municipalities Hole, and Ringerike in Buskerud county. In older times, Ringerike had a larger range which went westward, to the municipalities Krødsherad, Modum, and Sigdal, also in Buskerud.

Ringerike has a rich history that is connected with one of the most notable kings in the history of Norway, the father of King Harald Fairhair Halfdan the Black, who subdued Gandalf, King of Alfheim and half of Vingulmork, and the Dagling clan. Gandalf was possibly the last king of Ringerike, whose name is given to the eponymous King Hring, son of Raum the Old (cf. Romerike), son of Nór (the eponymous anchestor of Norwegians), according to the Sagas of the ancient Northernlands, better known as Orkneyinga saga[1]. It is possible that this, as the name suggests, were the legendary heartland of the House of Sigurd Hring and Ivar the Wide-Fathoming. There are also many archaeological remains in the area, dating to the medieval period and earlier.

Etymology

{{Annotated image
| image = Map of Storelva, Buskerud.PNG
| width = 326
| height = 282
| image-width = 332
| float = left
| annotations ={{Annotation|74|248|Tyri-
fjorden
}}{{Annotation|132|148|Stor-
elva
}}{{Annotation|128|68|Ådals-
elva
}}{{Annotation|254|70|Rands-
elva
}}{{Annotation|264|18|Rands-
fjorden
}}{{Annotation|193|132|Høne-
foss}}
| caption = Terrain map highlighting the rivers Ådalselva and Randselva that form Storelva, which runs into Tyrifjorden.
}}

The district was known in Old Norse as Hringaríki which means the reich of the Rings.[2] The initial H was dropped sometime in the 13th century.[3] The etymology of the district has been, however, contested among philologists.

Halvdan Koht suggested in 1921 that the first settlers of Ringerike settled around Tyrifjorden in a ring, though this theory is outdated to many.[3]

It is suggested that Ringerike was named in a similar fashion of Romerike, which was named after the old name for Glomma, Rauma.[3] Eivind Vågslid suggested in 1959 that Ringa was the old name of the river Storelva, because it meanders in a ring-shaped form.{{sfn|Norsk Allkunnebok|1959|p=649}}

{{clear}}

History

Traditionally, Ringerike referred to the area around the northern and northwestern part of Tyrifjord[3] and the lowlands along the rivers Randselva, Ådalselva and Sokna,[7] i.e. the municipalities Hole, Krødsherad, Modum, Ringerike and Sigdal in Buskerud county.{{sfn|Munch|1849|p=7}}

Today, it may refer to the municipality Ringerike, or the municipalities Hole and Ringerike in Buskerud, which form the administrative district of Ringerike.[7] Including Jevnaker in Oppland, it forms the Council for the Ringerike Region (Rådet for Ringeriksregionen),[4] and the district court of Ringerike.[5]

Ringerike style, a historic Scandinavian animal style, was first discovered on rune stones in Ringerike. One of these, was the Alstad stone, a rune stone found in 1913 on the farm Nedre Alstad in Østre Toten. Both Ulvøya and Ringerike are mentioned in the text.[3][6][7]Old Norse:

Jórunnr reisti stein þenna eptir 〈au-aun-〉er hana [á]tti,

ok fœrði af Hringaríki útan ór Ulfeyj[u].

Ok myndasteinn [mæt]ir þessi.

English translation:

Jórunnr raised this stone in memory of

who owned her (i.e. was her husband),

and (she) brought (it) out of Hringaríki,

from Ulfey.

And the picture-stone venerates them.

The Dynna stone, a rune stone from Hadeland, is of the same type of red sandstone typical for Ringerike.[8][9]

Kings of Ringerike

Ringerike was founded by its eponymous ruler Hring, who was the son of Raum the Old.{{sfn|Hversu Noregr byggðist|1394|loc=ch. 1-2}} One of the more significant historic people who have lived in Ringerike, was the king Halfdan the Black, father of Harald Fairhair, who united Norway into a single kingdom. In the early Viking Era before Harald Fairhair became the first king of Norway, Ringerike was a petty kingdom. Dagling was a legendary clan of Ringerike.

In the Ynglinga saga, Snorri Sturluson writes that the clan was descended from Dag the Great whose daughter Dageid married the Swedish king Alaric and was the mother of Yngvi and Alf, both legendary Swedish kings of the House of Yngling. One of the sons of Dag the Great was Óli, who was the father of Dag, Óleif, Hring (the old king Ring of Frithiof's Saga), Olaf, Helgi, and Sigurd Hjört,{{sfn|Hversu Noregr byggðist|1394|loc=ch. 1-2}} who was a petty king of Ringerike.

Sigurd Hjört was the father of Ragnhild Sigurdsdotter, the mother of Harald Fairhair. Following Harald's consolidation of Norway in the late 9th century, the kingdom appears to have been ruled by a series of local jarls and client kings. A later sub-king of Ringerike, Sigurd Syr, was the father of Harald Hardråde and the step father of Olav King Haraldson, the saint, both kings of Norway. When King Olaf Tryggvason came to Ringerike to spread the novel Roman Catholic religion of the new feudal empire of Charlemagne, Sigurd Syr and his wife allowed themselves to be baptized.[10] Forced conversion to Christendom was a novelty, put into legal code by Charlemagne.

Administrative history

Ringerike was in its beginnings, the southwesternmost district of the historical Uplands.{{sfn|Munch|1849|p=7}} In {{circa}} 1320, it was together with Hadeland, Land and Toten, a part of the county (or syssel) Haðafylki.{{sfn|Munch|1849|p=7}}{{sfn|Norsk Historisk Atlas|1980|loc=map 59}} Ringerike was in {{circa}} 1640 grouped with Hallingdal in the district Buskerud og Hallingdal Fogderi.{{sfn|Norsk Historisk Atlas|1980|loc=map 71}} In 1866, the district was divided into the Buskerud district, which included Krødsherad, Modum, and Sigdal, along with Lower Buskerud, excluding Kongsberg.{{sfn|Norsk Historisk Atlas|1980|loc=map 109}} The rest of Ringerike, remained the same as it commonly is today.{{sfn|Norsk Historisk Atlas|1980|loc=map 109}}

{{clear}}

Municipalities

NrKartNameAdm.centerAreal
km²
Language
0605 RingerikeHønefoss{{nts|1555.10}}Bokmål
0612 HoleVik{{nts|194.80}}Bokmål
0621 SigdalPrestfoss{{nts|842.15}}Bokmål
0622 KrødsheradNoresund{{nts|374.63}}Neutral
0623 ModumVikersund{{nts|515.09}}Bokmål

References

1. ^{{Cite web|url=http://heimskringla.no/wiki/Hversu_Noregr_bygg%C3%B0ist|title=Hversu Noregr byggðist – heimskringla.no|website=heimskringla.no|language=nb|access-date=2018-11-04}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=https://snl.no/Ringerike/kommune#menuitem6|title=Ringerike – kommune: Navn og kommunevåpen|accessdate=13 July 2015|first=Geir|last=Thorsnæs}}
3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.heftet-ringerike.com/images/PDF_hefter/fulle_hefter/ringerike_2006.pdf|title=Heftet Ringerike|year=2006|pages=38–41|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150811150522/http://www.heftet-ringerike.com/images/PDF_hefter/fulle_hefter/ringerike_2006.pdf|archivedate=11 August 2015}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.ringerike.no/om/ringerike-utvikling/om-oss/ringeriksregionen|title=Ringeriksregionen|website=ringerike.no|accessdate=13 July 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140708053521/http://www.ringerike.no/om/ringerike-utvikling/om-oss/ringeriksregionen|archivedate=8 July 2014}}
5. ^{{cite web|url=https://snl.no/Ringerike%2Fomr%C3%A5de|title=Ringerike – område|accessdate=13 July 2015}}
6. ^{{cite web|url=https://snl.no/Alstadsteinen|title=Alstadsteinen|website=snl.no|accessdate=13 July 2015}}
7. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.abdn.ac.uk/skaldic/db.php?id=19793&if=runic&table=mss|title=N 61|website=abdn.ac.uk/skaldic/|accessdate=14 August 2015}}
8. ^{{cite web|url=https://snl.no/Dynnasteinen|title=Dynnasteinen|website=snl.no|first=Bergljot|last=Solberg|accessdate=13 July 2015}}
9. ^{{cite web|url=https://snl.no/Ringerikssandstein|title=Ringerikssandstein|website=snl.no|first=Inge|last=Bryhni|accessdate=13 July 2015}}
10. ^Heimskringla: King Olaf Trygvason's Saga, Part II, "Section 24, Olaf Haraldson Baptized"

Literature

{{refbegin}}
  • {{cite book

|last=Munch
|first=Peter Andreas
|title=Historisk-geographisk beskrivelse over kongeriget Norge (Noregsveldi) i middelalderen
|publisher=W. Gram
|ref=harv
|year=1849
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NI0BAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA140&lpg=PA140}}
  • {{cite encyclopedia

|title=Ringerike
|encyclopedia=Norsk Allkunnebok
|date=1959
|publisher=Fonna
|location=Oslo
|volume=9
|url=http://urn.nb.no/URN:NBN:no-nb_digibok_2008051404017
|accessdate=13 July 2015
|ref=CITEREFNorsk_Allkunnebok1959}}
  • {{cite book

|title=Frá Fornjóti ok hans ættmönnum: Hversu Noregr byggðist
|title-link=Hversu Noregr byggðist
|ref=CITEREFHversu Noregr byggðist1394
|year=1394
}}
  • {{Cite book

|year=1980
|title=Norsk Historisk Atlas
|isbn = 8202045347
|place = Oslo
|publisher=Cappelen
|url=http://urn.nb.no/URN:NBN:no-nb_digibok_2013042305053
|ref=CITEREFNorsk Historisk Atlas1980}}{{refend}}{{buskerud}}{{coord missing|Norway}}

3 : Districts of Buskerud|Ringerike|Petty kingdoms of Norway

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/27 23:23:46