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  1. Prince Gorm of Denmark (Danish: Prins Gorm Christian Frederik Hans Harald til Danmark; b. Jægersborghus , 24 February 1919 – Copenhagen , 26 December 1991) was the first son of Prince Harald of Denmark and his wife, Princess Helena of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg .

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Gorm_the_OldGorm the Old - Wikipedia

    Norse paganism. Gorm the Old ( Danish: Gorm den Gamle; Old Norse: Gormr gamli; Latin: Gormus Senex [1] [2] ), also called Gorm the Languid ( Danish: Gorm Løge, Gorm den Dvaske ), was ruler of Denmark, reigning from c.936 to his death c.958 [3] or a few years later. [4] [5] He ruled from Jelling, and made the oldest of the Jelling stones in ...

  3. 7 de feb. de 2023 · According to Adam of Bremen, a later medieval scholar and historian, it was the scion of Lothbrok, his great-grandson Gorm, who ruled the march of the Danes by the turn of the 10th century CE. The runestones at the Viking archaeological site at Jelling in Denmark. Photo: Kenneth Bagge Jorgensen / Shutterstock.

  4. Count Ingolf of Rosenborg RE (born 17 February 1940) is a Danish count and former prince.Born Prince Ingolf of Denmark (Danish: Prins Ingolf Christian Frederik Knud Harald Gorm Gustav Viggo Valdemar Aage til Danmark), he appeared likely to some day become king until the constitution was changed in 1953 to allow females to inherit the crown, placing his branch of the dynasty behind that of his ...

  5. In ancient times Denmark was not a kingdom, but a multitude of small provinces ruled over by warlike chiefs who called themselves kings. It was not until the ninth century that these little king-ships were combined into one kingdom, this being done by a famous chieftain, known by the Danes as Gorm den Gamle, or Gorm the Old. A great warrior he was,

  6. www.kongehuset.dk › en › the-monarchy-in-denmarkHistory - Kongehuset

    The history of the Danish Monarchy. The Danish Monarchy can be traced back to Gorm the Old (d. 958). The monarchy was originally elective, but in practice the choice was normally limited to the eldest son of the reigning monarch or closely related. In turn, from the end of the 1200s, the king had to sign a coronation charter that curbed the ...

  7. Individual Note. Gorm the Old (Gorm den Gamle) was King of Denmark in the mid-900s. He was the husband of Thyra (to whom he raised the older of the two Jelling stones) and the father of King Harald Bluetooth. Runestone for Thyra, frontsideThe son of Danish king Harthacnut, Gorm is one of the most misinterpreted figures in Danish history.