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Siggeir and offered
Siggeir generously offered three times the sword's value, but Sigmund mockingly refused.

Siggeir and for
Siggeir is smitten with envy and desire for the sword.
Siggeir and his brother Hrærek learned about Hleid's abduction from Bjarmaland by Herraud and Bósi and their destruction of the temple, and they set out for Götaland.
She was married to the villainous Geatish king Siggeir who has her whole family treacherously murdered, except for her brother Sigmund.
Signy reluctantly married King Siggeir of Gautland after he asked King Volsung for her hand.

Siggeir and sword
This greatly angered Siggeir, and he swore that one day the sword would be his and he would be revenged on the Völsung family.

Siggeir and Sigmund
The story of Sigmund, beginning with the marriage of Signy to Siggeir and ending with Sigmund's vengeance on Siggeir, was retold in the novelette " Vengeance " by Arthur Gilchrist Brodeur, which appeared in the magazine Adventure, June 30, 1925.
According to Völsunga saga, Völsung was murdered by the Geatish king Siggeir and avenged by one of his sons, Sigmund, and his daughter Signy, who was married to Siggeir.
Sigar is provided with two sons Siggeir and Sigmund ( Sigmundr ).
According to the Völsunga saga, Siggeir married Signy, the sister of Sigmund and the daughter of king Völsung.
Siggeir and everyone else tried but only Sigmund succeeded.
Consequently, Siggeir invited Sigmund, his father Völsung and Sigmund's nine brothers to a visit in Gautland to see the newlyweds three months later.
Signy gave Siggeir two sons and when the oldest one was ten years old, she sent him to Sigmund to train him to avenge the Völsungs.
After some adventures Sigmund and Sinfjotli killed Siggeir.
In Hversu Noregr byggðist, it is given in more detail that Sigar the elder had two sons, Sigmund and Siggeir who killed Völsung.
Sigmund and Sinfjötli kill Siggeir to avenge the death of their father / grandfather together.
This is Sinfjötli, who together with Sigmund will avenge their clan by killing Siggeir.

Siggeir and no
Very unlike her previous sons born of the devious and unpleasant King Siggeir, Signý then bears a son who is no less strong, handsome, and fearless than Völsung himself.

Siggeir and .
As Siggeir thinks that the brothers deserve to be tortured before they are killed, he agrees.
Siggeir, the King of the Geats, soon arrived and proposed to Signy.
They were met by Signy, who warned them that Siggeir intended to ambush them.
The story of Völsung and his children from the marriage of Signy to Siggeir to Sigmund's vengeance on Siggeir is retold in the novelette " Vengeance " by Arthur Gilchrist Brodeur, which appeared in the magazine Adventure, June 30, 1925.
the ninth, Sigar, whence come the Siklings: that is the house of Siggeir, who was son-in-law of Völsung ,— and the house of Sigar, who hanged Hagbard.
Siggeir is prominent in Volsunga saga as the villanous husband of Signý the daughter of Völsung.
Siggeir is the king of Gautland ( i. e. Götaland / Geatland, but in some translations also rendered as Gothland ), in the Völsunga saga.
Siggeir was offended and went home the next day thinking of revenge.
As Siggeir thought that the brothers deserved to be tortured before they were killed, he agreed.

brother-in-law and offered
Innocent was then seeking to detach the Kingdom of Sicily from the Holy Roman Empire ( in the person of Conrad IV of Germany ), and offered it to Charles, after his brother-in-law Richard, Earl of Cornwall had declined it.
The failed revolt ( 1009 – 1011 ) of the Lombard nobles Melus of Bari and his brother-in-law Dattus, against the Byzantine governorate, though it was firmly repressed at the Battle of Cannae ( 1018 ), offered their Norman adventurer allies a first foothold in the region.
Busir was offered a bribe by Tiberios to kill his brother-in-law, and dispatched two Khazar officials, Papatzys and Balgitzin, to do the deed.
Whether it was on this occasion is not known, but about this time, and at the recommendation of his brother-in-law, Giovanni Florio, he was taken into favour at court, and wrote a Panegyricke Congratulatorie offered to the King at Burleigh Harrington in Rutland, in ottava rima.
Soon after his arrival in Bohemia, his brother-in-law King Conrad III of Germany offered him his hospitality.
She had little money ; when her brother-in-law offered to bring up the child, she accepted it, took up a family name of Pryor and went off to become a governess.
In 1910, when his brother-in-law in Fountain Inn offered to sell him a weekly advertising sheet called News and Notions, Quillen bought it and borrowed money to purchase his own press and type.

brother-in-law and its
In 1879, amid talks surrounding the closure of the university due to its dire financial situation, a wealthy New York publisher with Nova Scotia roots, George Munro, who was also the brother-in-law of Dalhousie's Board of Governors member John Forrest, began to donate to the university.
In the 1020s, Denmark was threatened by Norway and Sweden and in 1026, Cnut decided to strengthen its defences by bringing over his eight year old son to be the future king under a council headed by his brother-in-law, Earl Ulf.
* Rosco Purvis Coltrane ( James Best ) is the bumbling sheriff of Hazzard County and right-hand man and brother-in-law of its corrupt county administrator, Jefferson Davis " J. D.
Bari was awakened from its provincial somnolence by Napoleon's brother-in-law Joachim Murat.
It was the Irishman John Jennings and his brother-in-law, the Scotsman Robert Finlay, who founded the new ironworks which also got its name, Robertsfors, from Robert Finlay.
Hubbard's brother-in-law, Elijah Lindsey, anticipating growth around the new railroad, opened the fledgling community's first general store in 1871, and Lindale had its start ; Lindsey was elected the town's first mayor a year later.
The name " Tarascan " ( and its Spanish-language equivalent, " tarasco ") comes from the word " tarascue " in their own language, which means indistinctly " father-in-law " or " brother-in-law ".
An enthusiastic royalist, he published, with Fréron's brother-in-law, the abbé Thomas Royou ( 1741 – 1792 ), a journal, L ' Ami du roi ( 1790 – 1792 ), which possibly did more harm than good to the king's cause by its ill-advised partisanship.
Augustus Onslow Manby " Gussie " Gibbes ( 1827-1896 ) had purchased Yarralumla sheep station and its homestead from his brother-in-law, ( Sir ) Terence Aubrey Murray, on 1 July 1859 for approximately ₤ 20, 000.
Taylor brought his brother-in-law Peter Allen in as a partner in the Evening News and, after Taylor's death in 1907, the Guardian was sold to its editor C. P. Scott while the Evening News passed into the hands of the Allen family.
As his future brother-in-law later observed, " Australia has my sister to thank for giving this country one of its greatest scientists ".< ref > Hull, David ( 2008 ).
Truman O. Angell, Brigham Young's brother-in-law by his legal wife Mary Ann Angell and who designed the Salt Lake City Temple was also involved in the design of this home, which got its name from the statue of a lion over the front entrance, made by William Ward.
He later founded a publishing company in partnership in 1851 with his brother-in-law, first formally incorporated under the name George Routledge & Co. For the remainder of the century the firm continued to grow and expand its range of popular illustrated fiction, travel and reference titles, undergoing some further partnership and name changes in the process.
In addition, on 15 March 1806 Napoleon elevated his brother-in-law Marshal Joachim Murat to become ruler of the Grand Duchy of Berg and Cleves ( acquired from Bavaria in return for its receiving Ansbach ).
Among the most important victims of the Nomoto battle and its brutal sequel were Tasuku, his brothers, and his brother-in-law, Taira Kunika (?- 935 ), who was also Masakado ’ s uncle.
It was here, on 28 June, that the Battalion lost its first officer, Captain John Bussell, Bickerton's brother-in-law, being shot through the head during an inspection of the trenches.
The ore deposit was a very rich deposit and, according to an 1856 letter from Clemson to his brother-in-law, was still producing significant quantities of gold nearly 30 years after its initial discovery on the land.
Burrell was aware of the younger brother-in-law of Milsom reportedly having a toy lantern, but understood he could not question him or other members of the family about it without tipping them off about its significance.
The present house was built in 1834-39, to designs by its owner the Thomas de Grey, 2nd Earl de Grey, an amateur architect, the first president of the Royal Institute of British Architects, who was inspired by buildings he had seen on trips to Paris and based his house on designs published in French architectural books such as Jacques-François Blondel's Architecture Française ( 1752 ); the works were superintended as clerk of works on site by James Clephan, who had been clerk of the works at the Liddell seat, Ravensworth Castle, County Durham, and had recently performed as professional amanuensis and builder for Lord Barrington, whose house, Beckett Park, Berkshire, was designed by his brother-in-law, Tom Liddell, an amateur architect.
Against his brother-in-law Eugene's suggestion to sell the heroin on the side, Pace has the Cadillac and its contents burned at a remote location.
It was enlarged in the 1790s to its current three-story Federal style by John Codman, brother-in-law of Chambers Russell III and executor of his estate.
Nettlefold sought and obtained the involvement of his brother-in-law as equal partner for an investment of £ 10, 000 and the two established a factory in Smethwick, leaving its management to their sons, Edward John and Joseph Henry Nettlefold, and the junior Joseph Chamberlain.
He was co-pastor, with his brother-in-law B. M. Smith, of the Hampden-Sydney College Church 1858 to 1874, also serving Hampden-Sydney College in a professorial capacity on occasions of vacancies in its faculty.
Anthony, the last Lord Lucy, died in 1369, and the lands passed to his brother-in-law Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland, staying with the Percy family and its successors ever since.

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