Gissar Polvaderson: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
m (Bot: Cosmetic changes)
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Gissar Polvaderson''' was the [[king]] of [[Iceland]] in the [[12th century]]. He was enormously fat, had foul breath and his [[face]] was covered in boils and pustules. He dined exclusively on [[whale]] [[fat|blubber]] and drank hot [[mead]] all day. [[Wolvern]], the [[Duke]] of [[Trondheim]], arranged a [[marriage]] between his daughter, [[Princess]] [[Freydis (Dark Horizons)|Freydis]], and King Gissar; however, the king never received his bride as she decided to stay in [[Lowith]] with [[Henrik (Dark Horizons)|Henrik]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dark Horizons (novel)|Dark Horizons]]'')
'''Gissar Polvaderson''' was the [[king]] of [[Iceland]] in the [[12th century]]. He was enormously fat, had foul breath and his [[face]] was covered in boils and pustules. He dined exclusively on [[whale]] [[fat|blubber]] and drank hot [[mead]] all day. [[Wolvern]], the [[Duke]] of [[Trondheim]], arranged a [[marriage]] between his daughter, [[Princess]] [[Freydis (Dark Horizons)|Freydis]], and King Gissar; however, the king never received his bride as she decided to stay in [[Lowith]] with [[Henrik (Dark Horizons)|Henrik]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Dark Horizons (novel)}})


== Behind the scenes ==
== Behind the scenes ==

Latest revision as of 19:43, 25 July 2024

Gissar Polvaderson was the king of Iceland in the 12th century. He was enormously fat, had foul breath and his face was covered in boils and pustules. He dined exclusively on whale blubber and drank hot mead all day. Wolvern, the Duke of Trondheim, arranged a marriage between his daughter, Princess Freydis, and King Gissar; however, the king never received his bride as she decided to stay in Lowith with Henrik. (PROSE: Dark Horizons [+]Loading...["Dark Horizons (novel)"])

Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]

In reality, Iceland did not have a king at this time, being a commonwealth from when it was settled in the 9th century until it became a dependency of Norway in the 13th century.