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  2. Trygve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trygve

    Trygve is derived from the Old Norse tryggr, meaning "true, trustworthy", [1] [2] cognate with Old English treowe, Old High German triuwe. Gothic has triggws. The Icelandic, Faroese and Old Norse form of the name is Tryggvi, e.g. Tryggve Olafsson. There were 5,951 people with the forename Trygve in Norway in 2009, declining to 5,432 in November ...

  3. Tryggve Olafsson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tryggve_Olafsson

    Tryggve Olafsson was the son of Olaf Haraldsson, king of Vestfold and Vingulmark, and grandson of King Harald Fairhair. According to the Heimskringla, Tryggve performed Viking expeditions in Ireland and Scotland. In 946 King Haakon I of Norway went north, and set Tryggve to defend Viken against his enemies in the south. He also gave him all ...

  4. Tryggvi the Pretender - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tryggvi_the_Pretender

    Map of Northern Europe at the time of Tryggve. Tryggvi "the Pretender" (Old Norse Tryggvi Ólafsson, Norwegian Tryggve Olavsson) was a Viking chieftain who lived in the early eleventh century, and came from "west across the sea" (probably from the Norse settlements in England and Ireland).

  5. Trygve Lie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trygve_Lie

    Trygve Halvdan Lie (/ l iː / LEE, Norwegian: [ˈtrʏ̂gʋə ˈliː] ⓘ; 16 July 1896 – 30 December 1968) was a Norwegian politician, labour leader, government official and author.

  6. Tryggvaflokkr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tryggvaflokkr

    Tryggvaflokkr (the "Flokkr-poem of Tryggvi") was an Old Norse poem about Tryggve the Pretender, an 11th-century Viking chieftain who purported to be the son of Olaf Tryggvason and tried to conquer Norway in 1033. It is usually attributed to Sighvat Thordarson, a skald and court poet of Canute the Great.

  7. Tryggve Mettinger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tryggve_Mettinger

    Tryggve Mettinger (8 June 1940 in Helsingborg – 23 October 2023 [1]) [2] was a professor of Hebrew Bible, at Lund University, Sweden, where he taught from 1978 to 2003. [ 3 ] Life and work

  8. Trygve Hoff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trygve_Hoff

    Hoff was born in Oslo as a son of lawyer Alf Eid Rosenberg Hoff and Margrethe Jacobsen. Throughout his life Hoff remained attached to the Hoff family estate at Tjøme.. In 1916, Hoff graduated from the Royal Frederick University with a degree in economics.

  9. Ingeborg Tryggvasdotter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingeborg_Tryggvasdotter

    Ingeborg Tryggvasdotter was the daughter of Tryggve Olafsson (died 963), the great-granddaughter of Harald Fairhair, and the sister of Olaf I of Norway. [1] She married the Swedish earl Ragnvald Ulfsson, first the earl of Västergötland and later of Staraja Ladoga. They had two sons, Uleb Ragnvaldsson and Eilif, who became earls in Kievan Rus ...