Kristine Andersdotter

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Kristine Andersdotter

Birthdate:
Death: between 1313 and 1314
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Andres Bjarnesson Bjarkøy and Kristin Toresdatter Bjarkøy
Half sister of Kristina Ivarsdatter Rova and Cecilia Ivarsdatter Rova

Managed by: Gerene Mae Jensen Mason
Last Updated:

About Kristine Andersdotter

Kristine Andersdotter

  • Daughter of Andres Bjarnesson, Bjarkøy and Kristin Toresdatter Sørum
  • Knut Robberstad completely ignores the fact that it is a marvelous daughter of Margreta. He has, in his translation of the will, done what I mean is an all Too big leap by replacing "Øigerdh, My Margrettis sister daughter" with "Sigrid, my niece mi". (Robberstad, K. 1947:Law and Letter from Old Norse Time: texts and translations for use in legal history exercises for legal students

Descendants of the Bjarkøy family: ca. 1250 - 1605, inheritance, property transfer and marriage

3.3.2 Bjarne Erlingsson and Margreta Nikolausdatter

  • Margreta Nikolausdatter's will is not preserved, but we still know some of her dispositions. A copy of a document dated 5 has been preserved. November 1307, where Bishop Arne in Bergen announces that he changed the harm to Bjarne Erlingsson the quarter of the farm Fatten, which Margreta in Giske gave
  • 27: In his will, against Bjarnegard. For this, a soul fair was to be held on Margaret's Day (Death Day).
  • 114:  In Bjarne's will we find confirmation of two gifts, given by Margaret in her will: the first of the 15-month supper, to priests and priests who ministered at the altar of the Church of Christ in Nidaros. The proceeds from the property (of which it is not mentioned anything about the location) should be used for trade show and cork clothes.
  • 115:  The second item was a six-month food gift, i Sildewoega
  • 116: to Giske church, where Bjarne affirms the eighth half was to be owned by the priest and the rest of the church. Bjarne also wrote that if anything from Margareta's will had been left out or extended, parts of the farm Ordnes in Sognlegges should be made for leveling.
  • 117: The fact that Margaret's donation of the quarter of Fatten passed through her husband without confirmation from her husband, while confirming other donations in her own will, may indicate that Fatten has been kept out of the company, as a separate property, possibly because it may have been part of her dowry. , or for other reasons, while the 15-month food balls of Christ Church were part of the couple's common fortune. No social agreement has been preserved from the marriage between Bjarne and Margreta, therefore the Letter of Divorce and Bjarnes will be the only thing that gives us a clue. Had Fatten been included in the company it makes little sense that Bjarne should make the switch to the quarter of the farm, rather than leaving Margreta to testify to another farm party. The transcriptions of Bjarne Erlingsson's will, which we find in DN (XV, 1), are based on a copy of the 17th century, which is in the Danish National Archives. The original document was lost in a fire in 1826. The identification of the farms mentioned is not always easy. A long time elapsed between the execution of the will and the later transcripts, and “… the depreciation lack of paleographic, philological and geographical knowledge of local conditions in Norway ”, has contributed to the fact that the names are often distorted.
  • 118: In sharp contrast to Bjarne's violations of the church's rights, his generous donations stand to his credit. Perhaps his hard behavior was also one of the reasons for his roundness. Bjarne donated gifts to the entire 39 ecclesiastical institutions. Except for the two whole farms Fatten (which Bjarne had made after his death after Margreta had testified ¼) and Svarthals, the land estate had a land debt value of a total of 259 monthly food stamps (or 229 monthly food stables
  • 28: if the gifts to the churches in Veøy and Borgund were to be shared), 6 earbolts, 1 bet painted and 5 pennies.
  • 119:  This earthenware consists mostly of fairly randomly composed bedding, which was difficult to manage. The large spread on the estate may indicate that it is not inheritance donated. This could be whether goods Bjarne either bought, obtained by virtue of his position as a baron (in that people had to dispose of goods to him in the absence of other means to pay fines, taxes, fees, etc.), or through his trading activity by The pier in Bergen. The Church of Nidaros (Nidaros Cathedral) was bestowed on the greatest values. Bjarne gave two gifts of his own, and he confirmed a gift Margreta gave in his will. For the first donation to Kristkirken, which was at the 61-month food court in farms in Sunnmøre, Bjarne wanted to be buried in the outermost altered ice southwest corner of the new building, and a rehab was to be instituted.
  • 120: The other the donation to the Church of Christ was given as a gift of soul for “migh margretter allerister grate puszumines and my son's spiritrszis ... "
  • 121: and consisted of soils in Trøndelag to a value of a total of 78 monthly food bolts, 6 earbolts 1 wet malt, 5 coins.
  • 122:  Of the total 39 church donations, five of them were gifts for his and his late wife and son's souls, one gift for Bjarne alone and to attend church maintenance. Eight of the gifts were specific reimbursements that the institutions had to fulfill. First, four prebenders were to be instituted (two at the Christian Church in Nidaros, one at the Christian Church in Bergen and one at the Royal Chapel at Bergenhus). On Bjarne's birthday (death day), every year, a full-time mass was to be held, for all Christian souls, with singing, bell ringing and wax candles in Christ Churches in Nidaros and Bergen, in the Royal Chapel of Bergenhus and Nicholas Church in Bergen. At Olavshusetved by the Kongsgården in Bergen, everyone in the house was to read 10 Father's Day a day, while at the Nonneseter monastery a priest was to be appointed who would hold a soul fair every day, throughout the month, every twelve months.
  • 123:  About the time perspective the charges apply is nothing more than it is every year, so they have probably been meant to continue for all future.Bjarne made great demands, but then he was also one of the country's most powerful men.To the poor both in Romsdal and on Sunnmøre was given 1 loaded grain (12 ship pounds). The present and future servants were to be favored with one year's land debt of his land, each according to what he / she was worth. Ingebjørg Erlingsdatter (Anders Bjarnessons)
  • 29: mother-in-law), Kristine Andersdatter (Bjarne's son-in-law), Øygerd (Margaret's sister-in-law) and Jon ("Joe, my brother-in-law",
  • 124: probably a illegitimate son of Vidkunn Erlingsson) was favored with, among other things, property. Øygerd was to receive 5 brands of gold as well as 5 monthly groceries in Rochedhall and Gangstad, on the condition that she married Bjarne's consent. Unmarried sisters of Margreta are known. It is therefore obvious to believe that Øygerd must be the guardian of an illegitimate daughter, most likely by Margaret's father Nicholas.
  • 125: As mentioned earlier, the male line of the Giske family had died out and Margreta was sole heir. Perhaps Øygerd's male relatives on the paternity side had also died out, so Bjarne Erlingsson ended up as the closest male relative, thus being able to make the demand for marriage with his consent from a position like her husband's husband. The gift of Bjarne's granddaughter Kristine has given the historians some headache, and there is doubt as to who the gift was really intended for. Both Knut Helle and Knut Robberstad have assumed that the farm Giske was originally for Bjarne's grandson Kristin, and not for Kristine.
  • 126: Since the original will has been lost, it may well have been mistaken for an under-write-off, in which both their names and family relationships with Bjarne may have been mistaken. KnutHelle states that Kristin Toresdatter probably died around 1340,
  • 127: whereas, according to Audun Dybdahler, it is possible that Kristin was dead before 1309.
  • 128  When it comes to donating Giske it says the transcript of the transcript that it is for "Kristine, my son-in-law".
  • 129:  Initially, this should not have been necessary, as Kristine had the right to cultivate the farm. Kristin and Bjarne Erlingsson. This is a question I will go into in the next section. The conditions that followed the gift to his nephew Jon were that he could in no way get rid of the soil, and that if he did not get heirs, it would be returned to Bjarne and his heirs. Of personal objects, so-called memorial gifts, Queen Euphemia was given a gold-plated stoop, and Tore Håkonsson (son-in-law) a gilded picture of St. Nikolas. GyridAndresdatter (brother-in-law) was to receive a belt in gold, which Bjarne had been honored by one of King Edward I on one of his diplomatic journeys, as well as a non-gilded stop. Queen Euphemia also died in 1312, the year before Bjarne and probably did not receive his gift. Traces of Bjarn's willful wishes were brought to life, for example, through a receipt to ErlingVidkunsson, where Archbishop Eilif of Nidaros confirms that he received all the earth property that Bjarne, his will, gave to St. Olav's church in Nidaros

Knut Robberstad completely ignores the fact that this may be a sister daughter of Margreta. He has, in his translation of the will, done what I mean is an all ran too big by replacing "Øigerdh, My Margrettis sister's daughter" with "Sigrid, my niece". (Robberstad, K. 1947:   Laws and letters from the Old Norse era: texts and translations for use in legal history exercises for law students

  typewriter house, Oslo: p.16) 126 Helle 26.9.2009: «Erling Vidkunnsson» i   Norwegian biographical lexicon, available from: http: //nbl.snl.no/Erling_Vidkunnsson/ddypning [6.5.2014]; Robberstad 1947: p.15. 127 Helle 26.9.2009: http://nbl.snl.no/Erling_Vidkunnsson/ elaboration 128 Dybdahl 1998: p 404.

Source - Academia.edu, page 29 - http://www.academia.edu/20004741/Bjarkøy-ættas_etterkommere_ca._1250_-_1605_arv_eiendomsoverføring_og_ekteskap

Sources

  • DN XV, 1
  • skrivemaskinstua, Oslo: 16) 126 Helle 26.9.2009: "Erling Vidkunnsson" i Norwegian biographical lexicon, Available from: http://nbl.snl.no/Erling_Vidkunnsson/utdypning [6.5.2014]; Robberstad 1947: s.15.
  • Helle 26.9.2009: http://nbl.snl.no/Erling_Vidkunnsson/utdypning
  • Dybdahl 1998: s. 404.
  • Markhus-2000, Markhus, Bjørn, (Norway: 2000).
  • Rønneberg-2000, Rønneberg, Warren "Skip", (California: Oct 2000).
  • Lillebye13-2002, Lillebye, Einar, (www.lillebye.no/ane13.htm: 2002).
  • Lund-Est-2005, Lund, Ira J., (Latrobe Pennsylvania: 2005-2015).
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