The origin of the nickname is not certain. "Ívarr beinlausi" could be translated to "Ivar legless", but "beinlausi" could also be translated as "boneless", since "bone" and "leg" are translations of the same word, "bein", in
Old Norse.[4] Several of the sagas[example needed] describe him as lacking legs/bones or having a skeletal condition such as
osteogenesis imperfecta,[5] while a passage in Ragnarssona þáttr (also known as the tale of Ragnar's sons) suggest it refers to
male impotence.[6]
Sources
According to the Tale of Ragnar Lodbrok, Ivar's bonelessness was the result of a curse. His mother, Aslaug, Ragnar's third wife was described as a
völva, a seer or clairvoyant. Aslaug suggested that she and her husband wait for three nights before consummating their marriage after a long separation while he was in England raiding. However, Ragnar was passionate after such a long separation and did not heed her words. As a result, Ivar was born with weak bones.[7]
Another hypothesis is that he was actually known as "the Hated", which in Latin would be Exosus. A medieval scribe with only a basic knowledge of Latin could easily have interpreted it as ex (without) os (bone), thus "the Boneless",[8] although it is hard to align this theory with the direct translation of his name given in Norse sources.[7]
While the sagas describe Ivar's physical disability, they also emphasise his wisdom, cunning, and mastery of strategy and tactics in battle.[9]
He is often considered identical to
Ímar, the founder of the
Uí Ímair dynasty, which at various times, from the mid-ninth to the tenth century, ruled
Northumbria from the city of
York, and dominated the Irish Sea region as the
Kingdom of Dublin.[10] This would also make him the ancestor of the
Crovan Dynasty.
Chronology
865 the
Great Heathen Army, led by Ivar, invaded the
Anglo-SaxonHeptarchy.[11] The Heptarchy was the collective name for the seven kingdoms
East Anglia,
Essex,
Kent,
Mercia,
Northumbria,
Sussex and
Wessex. The invasion was organised by the sons of Ragnar Lothbrok, to wreak revenge against
Ælla of Northumbria who had supposedly executed Ragnar in 865 by throwing him in a snake pit, but the historicity of this explanation is unknown.[12][13] According to the saga, Ivar did not overcome Ælla and sought reconciliation. He asked for only as much land as he could cover with an ox's hide and swore never to wage war against Ælla. Then Ivar cut the ox's hide into such fine strands that he could envelop a large fortress (in an older saga it was
York and according to a younger saga it was London), which he could take as his own (compare the similar legendary ploy of
Dido).
Late the next year, the army turned north and invaded Northumbria, eventually capturing Ælla at
York in 867.[14] According to legend, Ælla was executed by Ivar and his brothers using the
blood eagle, a ritual method of execution of debated historicity whereby the ribcage is opened from behind and the lungs are pulled out, forming a wing-like shape.[10] Later in the year, the army moved south and invaded the kingdom of Mercia, capturing the town of
Nottingham, where they spent the winter. King
Burgred of Mercia responded by allying with the
West Saxon king
Æthelred of Wessex, and with a combined force they laid siege to the town. The Anglo-Saxons were unable to recapture the city, but a truce was agreed whereby the Danes would withdraw to York.[14] The Great Heathen Army remained in York for over a year, gathering its strength for further assaults.[14]
Ivar and Ubba are identified as the commanders of the Danes when they returned to East Anglia in 869, and as the executioners of the East Anglian king,
Edmund the Martyr, for refusing their demand that he renounce Christ.[15] The precise account of Edmund's death is unknown, however it has been suggested that his capture and execution at the hands of the sons of Ragnar is likely to have occurred.[16]
The identification of the king of
Laithlind as
Gothfraid (i.e., Ímar's father) was added by a copyist in the 17th century. In the original 11th-century manuscript, the subject of the entry was simply called righ Lochlann ("the king of Lochlainn"), which more than likely referred to Ímar, whose death is not otherwise noted in the Fragmentary Annals. The cause of death—a sudden and horrible disease—is not mentioned in any other source, but it raises the possibility that the true origin of Ivar's Old Norse nickname lay in the crippling effects of an unidentified disease that struck him down at the end of his life.
In 1686, a farm labourer named Thomas Walker discovered a Scandinavian burial mound at
Repton in Derbyshire close to a battle site where the Great Heathen Army overthrew the
Mercian king
Burgred. The number of partial skeletons surrounding the body—over 250—signified that the man buried there was of very high status. It has been suggested that such a burial mound is possibly the last resting place of Ivar.[19]
According to the saga, Ivar ordered that he be buried in a place that was exposed to attack, and prophesied that, if that was done, foes coming to the land would be met with ill-success. This prophecy held true, says the saga, until "when Vilhjalm bastard (
William I of England) came ashore[,] he went [to the burial site] and broke Ivar's mound and saw that [Ivar's] body had not decayed. Then Vilhjalm had a large pyre made upon which Ivar's body was] burned... Thereupon, [Vilhjalm proceeded with the landing invasion and achieved] the victory."[20][21]
Fictional portrayals
Ivar the Boneless is a minor character in the 1969 film Alfred the Great,[22] portrayed as an acrobatic and agile warrior.
In the 2013 film Hammer of the Gods, Ivar the Boneless is portrayed as a reclusive, homosexual Viking. The character was played by
Ivan Kaye, who later portrayed King Ælla of Northumbria in the
History television series Vikings.[23]
In Vikings,
Ivar is portrayed as the son of
Ragnar and Aslaug and a younger half-brother to Björn Ironside. He first appeared in season 2 as a baby, and later was played by James Quinn Markey and
Alex Høgh Andersen.[24]
Ivar appears as a minor character in
Bernard Cornwell’s 2004 novel The Last Kingdom, in which his epithet “the Boneless” is explained by him being very thin. Ivar dies off-screen in the novel, and his later descendants continually appear throughout the remainder of
the series.
Ivar is a recurring character in Ubisoft's video game Assassin's Creed: Valhalla which takes place in for the most part in England between 873 CE and 878 CE. He plays a significant part in the main storyline of the game.
In the 2020 game Crusader Kings 3 by Paradox Interactive, Ivar is a playable character as leader of the Jarldom of the Suðreyjar in northwestern Scotland. His character in game is missing a leg, referring to his epithet “the Boneless”.
^Ferguson, Robert (2009). The hammer and the cross: a new history of the Vikings. London: Allan Lane.
ISBN978-0713997880.
OCLC609990781.
^Mahoney, Mike.
"Ivar the Boneless". www.englishmonarchs.co.uk. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
^
abHolman, Katherine (2007). The northern conquest: Vikings in Britain and Ireland. Oxford: Signal Books.
ISBN9781904955344.
OCLC166381361.
^Venning, Timothy (19 June 2013). The Kings & Queens of Anglo-Saxon England. Amberley.
ISBN9781445608976.
^Munch, Peter Andreas (10 September 2010). Olsen, Magnus (ed.). Norse Mythology: Legends Of Gods And Heroes. Kessinger Publishing, LLC.
ISBN9781164510307.
^
abcForte, Angelo; Oram, Richard; Pedersen, Frederik (30 May 2005). Viking Empires (First ed.). Cambridge University Press.
ISBN9780521829922.
^Swanton, Michael J., ed. (18 August 1998). The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (First ed.). Routledge.
ISBN9780415921299.
^Mostert, Marco (1 January 1987). The political theology of Abbo of Fleury: A study of the ideas about society and law of the tenth-century monastic reform movement. Verloren.
ISBN9789065502094.
^Giles, J. A., ed. (10 September 2010). Six Old English Chronicles: Ethelwerd's Chronicle, Asser's Life Of Alfred, Geoffrey Of Monmouth's British History, Gildas, Nennius And Richard Of Cirencester. Kessinger Publishing, LLC.
ISBN9781163125991.