Rögnvald Kali Kolsson

St. Rögnvald

St. Rögnvald
Born c. 1103
Norway
Died 20 August 1158
Caithness, Scotland
Venerated in Roman Catholic Church
Canonized Late 12th-century by Pope Celestine III
Major shrine St. Magnus Cathedral, Kirkwall, Scotland
Feast 20 August

Rognvald Kale Kolsson (also known as St. Ronald or St. Ronald of Orkney) (c. 1103 - 1158) was an Earl of Orkney and a Norwegian saint.[1]

Life

Rognvald's parents were lendmann Kol Kalisson and Gunnhild Erlendsdotter, the sister of Magnus Erlendsson. It was through his mother, Gunnhild that Rognvald had a claim on the Orkney earldom.[2] Rognvald Kali Kolsson may have been born in Jæren, Norway.[3] That is not most likely, since his family resided in Agder and Jæren is in Rogaland. Some researchers think that he may have been born in Fjære, a part of Grimstad. The kings estate at Lista is also estimated as birth- and childhoodplace. Rognvald's family owned several farms in Agder where the boy could have spent his childhood.

Rognvald grew up in Norway where he was known as Kali Kolsson. He also had a sister, Ingirid. Kali was a fine poet and in one of his poem claims to possess nine exceptional skills; having mastered board games, runes, reading and writing, handicrafts such as metal work, carving and carpentry, skiing, archery, rowing, music and poetry. The sagas support this view of Kali as able and skilled: “Kali Kolsson was of average height, well proportioned and strong limbed, and had light chestnut hair. He was very popular and a man of more than average ability.”[2]

King Sigurd I of Norway appointed him Earl of Orkney and Shetland in 1129. When he became Earl, Kali was given the name Rognvald, after Earl Rognvald Brusason, who Rognvalds mother Gunnhild thought of as the most able of all the Earls of Orkney. It was thought this name would bring Rognvald luck.[2] Rognvald should have had one half of Orkney as his uncle Magnus Erlendsson had, but his second cousin Paul Haakonsson had just made himself sole ruler of the islands and would not cede any of them.

Rognvald remained in Norway as one of the leading men of King Harald Gille. His father counseled him to make a vow that if he were successful in establishing himself in Orkney, he would build a church in honour of his murdered uncle Magnus. By sabotating some beacons on Fair Isle and in the Orkneys, Rognvald made a successful landing unopposed. Through the intervention of the bishop an agreement was reached with Earl Paul. Later earl Paul Haakonsson was captured by Sweyn Asleifsson and delivered to the safe-keeping of Maddad, Earl of Athole, who was married to Paul's sister Margaret. What then happened to Earl Paul is unknown. Rognvald was hailed as jarl in 1136.

St. Magnus Cathedral

In 1137, Rognvald initiated the building of St. Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall, Scotland. Rognvald also served as guardian to Harald Maddadsson, the five-year-old nephew of Paul Haakonsson. In 1138 Rognvald appointed Harald Maddadsson as Earl along with him. Harald had inherited Caithness, Scotland and thus was Rognvald master over this area.

In 1151 Earl Rognvald set out on pilgrimage to the Holy Land. This celebrated enterprise takes up five complete chapters of Orkneyinga saga. The telling about their staying in the Holy Land is very short. It seems that the journey is the important part. But the description of the voyage is dominatet more by stories about fighting and feasting. The saga tells that the impulse for the pilgrimage came from a distant relative of Rognvald, Eindridi Ungi. There mentions prestige as a motivation for taking this big scale expedition. The earl, with Bishop William and other well-born companions, including Erling Skakki, left Orkney in the late summer of 1151 in fifteen ships. The fleet sailed through the Strait of Gibraltar, after which Eindridi Ungi went straight to Jerusalem with six ships while Rognvald tarried in Narbonne. During his stay there he composed several verses—included in the saga—in honour of the lovely lady Ermingard, verses which show strong influence from courtly love poetry, possibly the first such examples in skaldic verse.[4]

Having visited Jerusalem, the party made its way back north via Constantinople, where they were received by the emperor and his Varangian Guard, then sailed to Apulia where they took horses for the journey to Rome, arriving back in Orkney for Christmas 1153. This evidences the wide-ranging role of the earls of Orkney as players on the world scene of twelfth-century Europe. They were now participating in the cultural and religious activities of Christian Europe rather than threatening them from the periphery.[4]

While he was abroad, King David I of Scotland granted half of Caithness to the cousin of Harald Maddadsson, Erlend Haraldsson. Earl Harald subsequently displaced Erlend Haraldsson, who was killed in 1156. In August 1158, Rognvald was cut down with his company of eight men by Thorbjorn Klerk, the former friend and counselor of Harald, who had been made an outlaw by Earl Rognvald for a murder committed in Kirkwall, following a series of acts of violence. His body was taken to Kirkwall and buried in St. Magnus Cathedral. Alleged miracles shall have happened at his grave as well as on the stone where he died. Ragnvald was canonized 1192 by Pope Celestine III.[5] But some doubts exist as to the validity of his sainthood, because no existing records seem to confirm it.[6]

Poet

Rognvald was a skilled poet. The best known of his love poems is perhaps his exclamation of affection for Viscountess (or: Countess) Ermingerd of Narbonne. George Mackay Brown translates the poem as:

Golden one, Tall one
Moving in perfume and onyx
Witty one, You with the shoulders
Lapped in long silken hair/Listen: because of me
The eagle has a red claw.[1]

  1. ^ Ljosland, Ragnhild. "Helping unravel the Earl's poetry", University of the Highlands and Islands

Although the perfume and onyx are George Mackay Brown’s own invention, it is true to the spirit of the poem: Praising the lady in luxurious terms based on 12th century European aesthetics, while also bragging about himself using war-like Norse aesthetics.[7]

Another of his poems, translated by Ian Crockatt, reads:[8]

Vér hǫfum vaðnar leirur
vikur fimm megingrimmar;
saurs vasa vant, es vârum,
viðr, í Grímsbœ miðjum.
Nús, þats mâs of mýrar
meginkátliga lâtum
branda elg á bylgjur
Bjǫrgynjar til dynja.

Muck, slime, mud. We waded
for five mired weeks, reeking,
silt-fouled bilge-boards souring
in Grimsby bay. Nimbly
now, our proud-prowed Bergen-
bound Sea-Elk pounds over
wave-paved auk-moors – locks horns
with foam-crests, bows booming.

Other verses, record events which occurred during the rest of the journey, such as Rognvald's swim across the River Jordan.[4]

References

Other sources

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