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Aun
Aun
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Illustration by Erik Werenskiold, from the first edition of Gustav Storm's Norwegian translation of Heimskringla (published 1899).
East royal tumulus at Old Upsala, suggested grave of King Edwin the Old

Aun the Old (Old Norse Aunn inn gamli, Latinized Auchun, Proto-Norse *Audawiniʀ: English: "Edwin the Old") is a mythical Swedish king of the House of Yngling in the Heimskringla. Aun was the son of Jorund, and had ten sons, nine of which he was said to have sacrificed in order to prolong his own life. Based on the internal chronology of the House of Yngling, Aun would have died late in the fifth century.[1] He was succeeded by his son Egil Vendelcrow (Íslendingabók: Egill Vendilkráka)[2] identified with Ongentheow of the Beowulf narrative and placed in the early sixth century.

Ynglingatal

[edit]

Ruling from his seat in Uppsala, Aun was reputedly a wise king who made sacrifices to the gods. However, he was not of a warlike disposition and preferred to live in peace. He was attacked and defeated by the Danish prince Halfdan. Aun fled to the Geats in Västergötland, where he stayed for 25 years until Halfdan died in his bed in Uppsala.

Upon Halfdan's death Aun returned to Uppsala. Aun was now 60 years old, and in an attempt to live longer he sacrificed his son to Odin, who had promised that this would mean he would live for another 60 years. After 25 years, Aun was attacked by Halfdan's cousin Ale the Strong. Aun lost several battles and had to flee a second time to Västergötland. Ale the Strong ruled in Uppsala for 25 years until he was killed by Starkad the old.

After Ale the Strong's death, Aun once again returned to Uppsala and once again sacrificed a son to Odin; this time Odin told the king that he would remain living as long as he sacrificed a son every ten years and that he had to name one of the Swedish provinces after the number of sons he sacrificed.

When Aun had sacrificed a son for the seventh time, he was so old that he could not walk but had to be carried on a chair. When he had sacrificed a son for the eighth time, he could no longer get out of his bed. When he had sacrificed his ninth son, he was so old that he had to feed, like a little child, by suckling on a horn.

After ten years he wanted to sacrifice his tenth and last son and name the province of Uppsala The Ten Lands. However, the Swedes refused to allow him to make this sacrifice and so he died. He was buried in a mound at Uppsala and succeeded by his last son Egil. From that day, dying in bed of old age was called Aun's sickness.

Knátti endr
at Uppsǫlum
ánasótt
Aun of standa.
Ok þrálífr
þiggja skyldi
jóðs alað
ǫðru sinni.
Ok sveiðurs
at sér hverfði
mækis hlut
inn mjávara,
es okhreins
ôttunga rjóðr
lǫgðis odd
liggjandi drakk.
Máttit hárr
hjarðar mæki
austrkonungr
upp of halda.[3]

Translation:

Decrepitude long ago overtook Aunn at Uppsala. And the one tenacious of life had to receive the food of an infant a second time. And he turned the narrower part of the sword of the bull [HORN] toward himself when the reddener of kinsmen [Aunn] drank lying down [from] the tip of the sword of the yoke-reindeer [BULL > HORN]. The grey-haired eastern king could not hold up the sword of the bull [HORN].[3]

Historia Norwegiæ

[edit]

The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, older than Snorri's quotation (continuing after Jorund):

Iste genuit Auchun, qui longo vetustatis senio IX annis ante obitum suum densæ usum alimoniæ postponens lac tantum de cornu ut infans suxisse fertur. Auchun vero genuit Eigil cognomento Vendilcraco [...][4]

He became the father of Aukun, who, in the feebleness of a protracted old age, during the nine years before his death is said to have abandoned the consumption of solid food and only sucked milk from a horn, like a babe-in-arms. Aukun's son was Egil Vendelkråke, [...][5]

Notes

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Primary sources

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Secondary sources

[edit]

Nerman, B. Det svenska rikets uppkomst. Stockholm, 1925.

Aun
Preceded by Mythological king of Sweden
First reign 
Succeeded by
Preceded by Mythological king of Sweden
Second reign 
Succeeded by
Preceded by Mythological king of Sweden
Third reign 
Succeeded by
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Aun the Old (Old Norse: Ánni gamli), also known as Aun, was a legendary king of the (Svíar) in the Yngling dynasty, as recounted in Snorri Sturluson's 13th-century . He is renowned in Norse sagas for his extraordinary longevity achieved through ritual sacrifices of his sons to the god . Ruling from , he succeeded his father Jorund and is depicted as a wise but non-martial leader whose reign spanned centuries, marked by exiles and desperate pacts with the divine to defy mortality. Aun's most infamous acts involved offering up to nine of his ten sons to , one every ten years, in exchange for an additional decade of life each time, beginning around age 60 after he had already ruled for two decades and faced challenges from rivals like . This practice, detailed in the Ynglinga Saga, left him progressively frail—eventually chair-bound, bedridden, and sustained on infant food—yet extended his rule to an estimated 200 years. His subjects ultimately intervened to prevent the sacrifice of his final son, Egill, highlighting the tension between royal ambition and communal ethics in the saga's portrayal. Aun's death occurred in from old age, termed Ánasótt (Aun's ailment) to denote a painless decline, and he was interred in a burial mound there. As a figure in Snorri Sturluson's , Aun embodies themes of sacrificial kingship and the perils of defying natural limits, influencing later Nordic traditions of ritual and rulership, with poetic allusions in works like Ynglingatal underscoring his legacy as a ruler who "ushered to Óðinn nine royal men" to expand his domains.

Name and Etymology

Name Variations

In medieval Norse texts, the name of the Yngling king Aun appears in several orthographic variants reflecting linguistic and scribal differences. In Snorri Sturluson's , particularly the Ynglinga saga composed around 1225 and preserved in medieval Icelandic manuscripts, such as the 14th-century Kringla (AM 35 fol., c. 1360), the name is rendered as "Án" in , often qualified as "Án inn gamli" to denote "Aun the Old." The anonymous , a Latin from dated to the late 12th or early , Latinizes the name as "Auchun," presenting a summary of the Yngling that aligns with Snorri's account. In skaldic poetry, such as Þjóðólfr ór Hvini's Ynglingatal (9th century, quoted in ), the name takes the form "Aun," used in the context of and the king's prolonged life. Poetic variants occasionally appear as "Áni," as seen in certain kennings and verse forms referencing rulers. Latin chronicles from medieval sometimes simplify it to "On," a further Latinized emphasizing phonetic rendering over diacritics. Modern scholarly transliterations standardize these as "Aun" or "Aun the Old," drawing directly from the "Án inn gamli" in editions of Ynglinga saga, such as those by Finnur Jónsson (1911) and the Viking Society for Northern Research (2011). Swedish variants include "Ane" and "Ön." These forms connect to broader dynasty naming patterns involving short, ancestral elements.

Linguistic Origins

The name Aun, recorded in Old Norse as Aun, derives from the Proto-Norse element anu, which stems from Proto-Germanic *anô, signifying "ancestor" or "forebear." This linguistic root, traceable to Proto-Indo-European *h₂énsus or *h₂en-, emphasizes themes of lineage and veneration of forebears, aligning with the mythological context of Aun as a foundational figure in Swedish royal sagas. The term *anô appears in early Germanic nomenclature to denote paternal or ancestral authority, reflecting cultural practices where names invoked hereditary prestige and continuity. In Old Norse, *anu functions as a productive name element, appearing in compounds like Anundr (from anu "ancestor" + undr "wonder" or "triumph," interpreted as "triumph of the ancestor") and potentially linking to related terms such as ái ("grandfather"), which may share a common origin in *anô or a variant *awô. These connections suggest Aun could represent a simplified or standalone form highlighting elder status or unity with progenitors, common in Germanic onomastics where personal names often encoded familial or societal roles. Comparisons exist with similar elements in broader Germanic traditions, such as the Proto-Germanic ansu- ("divine being" or "god"), which overlaps semantically with ancestral divinity and appears in names evoking sacred lineage. Philological scholarship, particularly in 20th-century works on Germanic , has explored these derivations, with debates centering on whether Aun carries purely ancestral connotations or theophoric implications tied to as the archetypal Allfather. For instance, the overlap between anu and ansu- has led some analyses to propose a divine-ancestral duality, though direct attestation remains sparse and interpretations vary based on runic and evidence. These discussions underscore the name's role in bridging human kingship and mythological forebears without resolving a singular origin.

Genealogy and Dynasty

Parentage and Succession

Aun, also known as On or Ane, was the son of Jorund, a of the Swedish House of , whose lineage traced back to the god in legendary accounts. Jorund himself was the son of Alric, continuing the Yngling royal line at . Primary sources provide no details on Aun's maternal ancestry. Jorund met his end during a raiding expedition in Denmark's , where he was attacked and captured by local forces led by a named Gylog of Halogaland; Jorund was subsequently hanged, and a standing stone was raised over his body. This event, described similarly in multiple accounts as occurring at Oddasund in the , marked the violent conclusion to Jorund's reign after he had reclaimed the Swedish throne from earlier usurpers. Upon Jorund's death, Aun ascended peacefully to the Swedish throne at , succeeding his father without recorded conflict, a departure from the turbulent transitions that characterized prior kings. In the legendary chronology of the Ynglinga Saga, this succession is placed around the AD, situating Aun's rule circa 450–500 in the euhemerized timeline of Swedish .

Family and Descendants

Aun is not recorded as having a named wife in the primary sources. According to the Ynglinga Saga, he fathered ten sons, though none are individually named beyond their role in the narrative of ritual sacrifices to prolong his life. The Historia Norwegiæ similarly describes Aun as having ten sons, nine of whom were sacrificed to , leaving only one survivor to carry forward the lineage. The surviving son, Egil (also known as Egil Vendelcrow), succeeded Aun as king of the Swedes and continued the dynasty. This succession ensured the persistence of the line despite the drastic reduction in family members through the sacrifices, which Aun performed nine times to gain extended life from the god . Egil's reign marked a shift toward more peaceful rule, but the diminished family structure underscored the vulnerabilities in Yngling royal continuity during Aun's era. The genealogy from Aun's immediate predecessors and successors illustrates the dynasty's thread:
PredecessorKingSuccessor
JorundAunEgil
This chain, as outlined in the Ynglinga Saga, highlights how the Yngling stability relied on single heirs amid familial losses, with Egil's line extending further to figures like in later accounts.

Accounts in Primary Sources

Ynglinga Saga Narrative

In Snorri Sturluson's Ynglinga saga, Aun, also known as Aun the Old or On, is portrayed as the son of King Jorund and successor to the Swedish throne at . He ruled wisely but avoided warfare, preferring a peaceful life at home where he amassed wealth through good harvests and made lavish sacrifices to the gods, especially , to ensure prosperity and divine favor. Aun's reign involved two exiles due to Danish incursions. He first ruled for about 25 years until Danish King subdued the Swedes and seized , forcing Aun to flee to West Gotland (Götaland) for 25 years, where he lived under local protection while held the capital. After 's death, Aun returned to at age 60 and ruled for another 25 years. During this period, he made a great sacrifice, offering his eldest son to and receiving the promise of 60 additional years of life, though he would lie bedridden like a and not govern or defend the realm. Danish King Ale (Ole) the Bold then invaded, leading to battles where Ale prevailed; Aun fled a second time to for 25 years while Ale ruled . Ale was slain by the warrior , after which Aun returned and ruled for a further 25 years. To prolong his life further, Aun sacrificed his second son to , receiving the promise to live as long as he offered a son every tenth year. He sacrificed a total of nine sons: after the seventh, he was carried on a ; after the eighth, he lay for 10 years; after the ninth, he lived 10 more years, drinking from a horn like an . His total lifespan was approximately 110 years, though he was increasingly immobile and dependent. When Aun sought to sacrifice his tenth and final son, Egil, to extend his life further and rename a district Tiundaland ("Ten Lands") in commemoration, the refused, halting the . Aun died naturally of extreme —his senile condition thereafter termed "Aun's " (Ánasótt)—and was buried in a great mound at , after which Egil succeeded him.

Ynglingatal References

Aun is referenced in Ynglingatal, the skaldic poem attributed to Þjóðólfr of Hvinir and composed in the late ninth century, which enumerates the dynasty from its Swedish origins to Norwegian rulers, emphasizing the manner of each king's in a series of cryptic stanzas without accompanying explanation. This eulogistic structure traces the lineage back to divine forebears, positioning Aun as a pivotal figure in the Uppsala-based Swedish branch, highlighting his prolonged life through means. Stanza 13 specifically alludes to Aun's (rendered as Aunn in the text) exceptional longevity and the extreme measures taken to sustain it, employing intricate kennings to evoke themes of decrepitude and familial sacrifice. The verse opens with "Knátti endr at Uppsǫlum á nasótt Aun of standa" ("Decrepitude long ago overtook Aunn at Uppsala"), portraying the king overwhelmed by old age at the sacred site. It continues by noting that the "þrálífr" ("one tenacious of life") was forced to "þiggja... jóðs alað ǫðru sinni" ("receive the food of an infant a second time"), symbolizing a regression to helplessness in extreme senescence. The kenning "rjóðr lǫgðis odd liggjandi" ("reddener of kinsmen [=Aunn] lying down") implies the shedding of relatives' blood, likely alluding to sacrifices of his sons to prolong his rule, while the image of the king turning the "mjávara... mækis hlut" ("narrower part of the sword of the bull [HORN]") toward himself and "drakk" ("drank") from its tip evokes a ritual suicide by goring or blade, as the "hár r... austrkonungr" ("grey-haired eastern king") could no longer "halda... upp" ("hold up") the weapon. These elements underscore Aun's devotion to Odin, obliquely styled through context as the god's favored ally in exchange for vitality. The poem's brevity contrasts with later elaborations, such as in Ynglinga saga, where interprets the stanza as detailing nine successive sacrifices of sons for decadal extensions of life. Textual variants across 13th-century manuscripts, including Codex Upsaliensis (DG 11) and the , introduce ambiguities in phrasing, such as the precise duration of Aun's "extended life," with some readings suggesting "nine winters" of prolongation through the "horn-drinking" motif, though the core kennings remain consistent. These differences arise from scribal interpretations in embedding the poem within narratives, affecting the perceived emphasis on sacrificial repetition.

Historia Norwegiæ Depiction

The Historia Norwegiæ, an anonymous Latin composed in the mid-12th century, provides a brief account of Aun, referred to as "Aun" or "Aukun," within its genealogical list of early Norwegian kings tracing the dynasty from to . In this text, Aun is portrayed as a ruler who sacrificed nine of his sons to to extend his lifespan, with each offering granting him an additional ten years of life, culminating in a total lifespan of 200 years. The narrative emphasizes his advanced age, during which he subsisted solely on milk from a horn, reminiscent of an infant's nourishment, and notes his rule over regions including and Reidgotaland. This depiction integrates Aun into a Norwegian-focused king-list, highlighting the migration and continuity of the line into areas like and the Uplands, rather than centering on Swedish traditions. As a product of Christian authorship, the account reflects a medieval lens on pagan practices, presenting the sacrifices as a legendary means of prolonging life through divine pact, without explicit condemnation but within a broader historiographical framework blending and . The story's placement in chapters IX-X underscores its role in establishing the antiquity and legitimacy of Norwegian royalty leading toward . The Historia Norwegiæ survives primarily in the 15th-century Dalhousie Manuscript held in the National Archives of , with fragments and excerpts in 14th- and 15th-century manuscripts (B 17-II and A 8), derived from a now-lost original possibly dating to 1140–1153. This work, edited and translated in modern scholarship, influenced subsequent Scandinavian chronicles by providing an early Latin synthesis of Nordic royal history, drawing on sources like Ari Þorgilsson's lost works and . The account of Aun shares core elements with Norse poetic traditions such as the Ynglingatal, including the motif of son-sacrifices for longevity, but is rendered in concise prose tailored to a Norwegian ecclesiastical audience.

The Sacrifice Legend

Sequence of Sacrifices

According to the Ynglinga Saga, Aun ruled for 25 years in before fleeing to West Götaland for 25 years during Halfdan's attacks. Upon returning to at the age of sixty, he consulted seers who prophesied his imminent death unless he made a great to for longevity. He offered his first son as a blood to the god, receiving in response a promise of an additional sixty years of life. After ruling another 25 years, Aun faced attacks from Áli the Bold and fled to West Götaland for another 25 years. Following his second return to , Aun sacrificed his second son to , who granted him continued life on the condition that he offer one son every tenth year thereafter. He adhered to this vow by sacrificing his third through ninth sons at ten-year intervals, each offering extending his life by another decade, though his body progressively weakened—after the seventh, he became unable to walk and required a chair or litter for transport, and after the eighth, he was . After the ninth sacrifice, Aun lived ten more years in severe decline, unable to support his head and forced to drink from a horn or vessel held to his mouth like an infant. When Aun, now over two centuries old, sought to sacrifice his tenth and final , Egil, and name the surrounding districts "Ten-land" (Tiundaland) to further prolong his existence, the refused to permit it, viewing the rite as excessive; deprived of the offering, Aun succumbed to and "Aun's sickness," a term later used for such frailty, and was interred in a burial mound at .

Motivations and Outcomes

In the legend of Aun, the king's motivations for the sacrifices stemmed from a desire to prolong his life amid the threats of and political . At sixty years old, facing the threat of death, Aun sought counsel from seers at and offered his first to in exchange for extended life, receiving a promise of sixty additional years. The subsequent sacrifices followed 's bargain of one every ten years for continued life, allowing Aun to maintain his after periods of . The outcomes of these sacrifices yielded temporary extensions of Aun's but exacted a profound toll on his physical state and the Yngling dynasty. Progressively, after the seventh son, Aun could no longer walk and required a for transport; the eighth left him ; and the ninth reduced him to drinking from a horn like an infant, underscoring the diminishing returns of his pact with . By amassing over two hundred years of life, Aun weakened his lineage to a single surviving son, Egil. Societal resistance peaked when the , prioritizing communal welfare, forbade the tenth —intended to dedicate the area as Tiundaland—forcing Aun's from extreme and his in a mound at , which served as a narrative pivot restoring balance to the realm.

Interpretations and Legacy

Mythological Significance

In , Aun the Old exemplifies the theme of through his desperate bargaining with for prolonged life, as recounted in the Ynglinga Saga, where the aging king sacrifices nine of his sons at over successive decades, each offering granting him an additional ten years of vitality until his subjects intervene to spare the tenth.) This narrative underscores the perilous overreach of mortal ambition against divine will, portraying sacrifice not merely as but as a Faustian pact that erodes familial and social bonds. The legend draws parallels to other Odin-centric myths of self-inflicted suffering for gain, such as Odin's nine-night hanging on to acquire runic wisdom in the , yet Aun's story is distinct in its emphasis on proxy sacrifices—expending offspring rather than personal torment—and its focus on temporal extension over esoteric knowledge. These motifs collectively illustrate Odin's dual role as a granter of boons and enforcer of cosmic limits, where human entreaties through blood often invite retribution or futility. Scholarly interpretations position Aun as a euhemerized figure within the Ynglinga Saga's framework of deified kings, blending historical pretense with mythic caution against . Early 20th-century anthropologists like Edward Westermarck viewed the tale as emblematic of expiatory rites serving communal "life-insurance," transforming personal greed into a broader warning on the fragility of divine pacts. Aun's narrative influences later Eddic poetry and Scandinavian folklore, echoing themes of cursed longevity in tales of kings bound by sacrificial oaths to pagan deities, reinforcing the of the hubristic ruler whose extended reign breeds isolation and downfall.

Historical and Cultural Context

The dynasty, also known as the or House of Yngling, represents the earliest attested royal lineage in Scandinavian history, originating in the region of in central during the , approximately the 5th century CE. This dynasty is portrayed in medieval texts as descending from the god and establishing rule over much of before expanding into , reflecting a pseudo-historical that blends with emerging political structures. According to traditional accounts, the Ynglings migrated eastward and southward into following internal upheavals in , particularly after the reign of King Ill-ruler around the late in the saga timeline, marking a shift from Swedish dominance to Norwegian consolidation. Aun, known as Aun the Old, is positioned within this lineage as a mid-5th century figure, succeeding his father Jorund and embodying the dynasty's early phase of consolidation in before the broader migrations. The cultural landscape of 5th- and 6th-century during Aun's purported era was shaped by the turbulence of the , characterized by large-scale population movements, including the southward exodus of Gothic tribes from , which created power vacuums and opportunities for local elites to rise. This period saw the consolidation of chieftainships in fertile regions like , where emerged as a paramount center of political and possibly religious authority, evidenced by monumental burial mounds dating to the 5th and 6th centuries that contained high-status artifacts indicative of elite warrior burials and long-distance trade connections to the Mediterranean. Archaeological findings at , including cremation urns, weaponry, and game pieces from the Eastern and Western Mounds, suggest it served as a royal residence and assembly site for dynastic figures akin to the , underscoring a backdrop of emerging centralized power amid broader Germanic migrations and cultural exchanges. Debates surrounding the historicity of Aun and the Yngling dynasty highlight the absence of direct archaeological or contemporary written evidence for specific individuals, with correlations instead drawn to broader elite groups in through sites like , which align temporally with the dynasty's timeline but lack epigraphic ties to named rulers. Scholars critique the primary medieval sources, such as Snorri Sturluson's 13th-century Ynglinga Saga, for embedding Christian-era biases, including that recasts pagan gods as historical kings and potentially distorts pre-Christian rituals through analogies to biblical narratives, thus questioning the reliability of details like sacrificial practices attributed to figures like Aun. While no verifiable inscriptions or artifacts confirm Aun's existence, the dynasty's narrative may preserve echoes of real 5th-century power transitions in , filtered through later ideological lenses that served to legitimize medieval Norwegian .
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