See also
Husband:
Sturla ÞÓRÐARSON (1214-1284)
Wife:
Helga ÞÓRÐARDÓTTIR (c. 1221- )
Children:
Marriage:
"??"
Iceland
residence family:
Staðarhóll (Staðarhóli) í Saurbæ, Dalasýsla, Iceland
Residence (family):
Staðarhóll (Staðarhóli) í Saurbæ, Dalasýsla, Iceland
Resided (family):
Staðarhóll (Staðarhóli) í Saurbæ, Dalasýsla, Iceland
Name:
Sex:
Male
Father:
Mother:
Birth:
Jul 29, 1214
Residence:
Staðarhóll (Staðarhóli) í Saurbæ, Dalasýsla, Iceland
Occupation:
1251 (age 36-37)
Sagnaritari (story teller), skáld (poet) and lögsögumaður (law speaker); Iceland4
* Sturla Þórðarson er ættfaðir Sturlunga, höfðingjaættar á síðari hluta 12. aldar og á 13. öld. Sturla var kenndur við bæ sinn, Hvamm í Dölum og nefndur Hvamm-Sturla. Hann var goðorðsmaður og fór með Snorrungagoðorð. Hann þótti harðfylginn maður, ágjarn og slægvitur. Sturla var nokkuð við deilur riðinn, einkum kvað mjög að sennu með þeim Einari Þorgilssyni að Staðarhóli, Oddssonar.
The Sturlungs (Icelandic: Sturlungar) were a powerful family clan in medieval mid-13th century Iceland, in the time of the Icelandic Commonwealth. Their story is partly told in Sturlunga saga.
The Sturlungs were extremely wealthy and influential. So influential, in fact, that a whole period of Icelandic history, Sturlungaöld ("The Age of the Sturlungs") bears their name. They controlled Western Iceland, the Westfjords and North Eastern Iceland.
The patriarch of the Sturlungs was Sturla Þórðarson, whom scholars believe was born around 1115 A.D. He inherited his Goðorð (domain, realm or area of influence) from his father Þórður Gilsson. Sturla quarrelled extensively with Einar Þorgilsson of Staðarhóll and many other chieftains. Jón Loftsson, a well-respected man, mediated in one of these disputes. Consequently, he was entrusted with the upbringing of Sturla's son Snorri Sturluson, who was to become the most influential of the Sturlungs, and certainly the most famous due to his literary endeavours. Snorri had two brothers, Þórður Sturluson and Sighvatur Sturluson.
The descendants of Sturla played an important role in the Sturlungaöld civil war that brought the Icelandic Commonwealth under the control of Haakon IV of Norway, most notably his sons Snorri and Sighvatur, and Sighvatur's son Þórður "The Jackal" Sighvatsson. Another notable Sturlung was Sturla Þórðarson, son of Þórður Sturluson, who fought with Þórður "The Jackal". He wrote Íslendinga saga, the longest part of Sturlunga saga, and Hákonar saga gamla, the story of Haakon IV of Norway. Some scholars also attribute to him the authorship of Kristni saga and a transcript of Landnáma.
The writing of the Icelandic sagas began with the Sturlungs, and many (if not most) of those written before 1280 were their work, or written at their behest.
Death:
Jul 30, 1284 (age 70)
Name:
Sex:
Female
Father:
Mother:
Birth:
c. 1221
Death:
"??"
Iceland
Name:
Guðný STURLUDÓTTIR1
Sex:
Female
Spouse:
Birth:
c. 1242
Iceland
Death:
"??"
Iceland
Islendingabok, Islendingabok.
Ibid. ÍÆ, Sturl., Árb.Þing.73.176, Bysk., Ann., Austurl.II.
http://en.wikipedia.org, Wikipedia.
Hálfdan Helgason, GenWeb.
Islendingabok, Islendingabok. Sturl.