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  1. Gunhilda of Denmark ( c. 1020 – 18 July 1038), was Queen consort of Germany by her marriage with King Henry III from 1036 until her death. Biography. Gunhilda was a daughter of King Cnut the Great (985/95 – 1035), ruler over the Anglo-Scandinavian North Sea Empire, and his second wife Emma of Normandy (c. 985 – 1052). [1] .

  2. Gunhilda de Dinamarca ( c. 1020 - 18 de julio de 1038) fue la primera esposa de Enrique III el Negro . Biografía. Gunhilda era una hija de Canuto el Grande y su segunda esposa, Emma de Normandía. 1 Sus abuelos maternos fueron Ricardo I de Normandía y su segunda esposa Gunnora, duquesa de Normandía .

  3. Danish princess. Name variations: Gunhild Haraldsdottir. Killed on November 13, 1002; daughter of Harald Bluetooth (c. 910–985), king of Denmark (r. 940–985) and Gyrid ; sister of Thyra of Denmark (d. 1000) and Sven or Sweyn I Forkbeard, king of Denmark (r. 985–1014), king of England (r. 1014); married Jarl Pallig or Palig, ealdorman in ...

  4. Gunhilda of Wenden was a Polish princess, daughter of Mieszko I of Poland according to Chronicles of Thietmar of Merserburg, Adam von Bremen and Acta Cnutonis regis princess and Danish Viking Age queen consort, the supposed spouse of 10th-century King Sweyn I of Denmark (c. 960–1014).

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GunhildeGunhilde - Wikipedia

    Gunhilde (or Gunnhild) (died 13 November 1002) is said to have been the sister of Sweyn Forkbeard, King of Denmark, and the daughter of Harald Bluetooth. She was married to Pallig, a Dane who served the King of England, Æthelred the Unready, as ealdorman of Devonshire. [1]

  6. 14 de jun. de 2023 · This article is a study of the life of Gunhild (d. 1087), sister of King Harold, who, together with her mother Gytha, sought exile in Flanders after the Norman Conquest; it is set in the wider context of the fate of high-status elite or royal women in post-Conquest England.

  7. Gunhilda of Denmark, born circa 1020, was Queen consort of Germany through her marriage to King Henry III from 1036 until her death in 1038. She was a daughter of King Cnut the Great and his second wife, Emma of Normandy, placing her in the House of Knýtlinga.