Sam Corlett as Leif Erikson in Vikings ValhallaVikings: Valhalla Season 3 is now available to stream on Netflix. Creator Jeb Stuart never hid away from the fact that, though this show requires a huge amount of research (with the help of Vikings history specialists working on the show), it was also his job, as a storyteller, to fill in the gaps, to mix up the dates and the characters’ relationships to deliver an understandable and entertaining story to the audience. Now that we can learn what happens to Freydís Eiríksdóttir (Frida Gustavsson), Leif Erikson (Sam Corlett), and Harald Sigurdsson (Leo Suter) after the terrible battle of Kattegat at the end of Season 1, we thought we would take a moment to find out if the London Bridge collapsed as shown in the first season, or if Leif and Harald’s brotherhood was as strong in real life, or yet, was King Edmund as arrogant and inexperienced as portrayed in Vikings: Valhalla? How accurate was the portrayal of the well-known Viking explorer Erik the Red (Goran Visnjic) introduced in Season 3? What were the Vangarians at the beginning of the show, and lastly, did Harald really become the King of Norway, succeeding the fallen King Canute (Bradley Freegard)? Most of the information in this article can be found in the Viking sagas (which means ”a thing that is said” in Old Norse), written by Icelanders during the 13th century, or in the research of archeologists and historians.

Were Freydís, Leif, and Harald Real People?

Sam Corlett as Lief and Leo Suter as Harald in Vikings Valhalla Season 2Image via Netflix

Our three main protagonists of Vikings: Valhalla are based on historical characters. But the thing is, their historical counterparts never actually met. Well, Leif and Freydís did, because they were indeed siblings, but they didn’t know Harald, as they didn’t even exist as the same time. In fact, Leif was already dead when Harald was just an infant.

Let’s start with our favorite badass Viking, Freydís Eiríksdóttir, whose narrative arc in the series greatly changes from the very little information we have about her. Yes, Freydís was a strong Viking warrior and the sister of Leif Erickson, child of Erik the Red (the founder of the first European installment in Greenland). That much remains similar to the storyline used in the show. However, Freydís’ personality and achievements remain quite a mystery. She is an important character who appears in two Vinland sagas, with two very distinctive stories recounting who she really was. The first saga (Erik the Red’s saga) depicts the young woman as the heroin: The warrior accompanies a group of Vikings to Vinland (now known as Newfoundland), where she saves her party when natives attack them by taking a sword which belonged to a Viking who had been killed. According to this saga, Freydís is the illegitimate daughter of Erik the Red.

Frida Gustavsson as Freydis Eriksdotter in 'Vikings: Valhalla'Image via Netflix

In The Saga of the Greenlanders, however, it is a very different story and a very different Freydís we are introduced to: This time, she accompanies her husband, his men, and two brothers, Vikings, to Vinland. She dislikes the two brothers, and she thinks they are too bold. Freydís then tells her husband that the two men abused her and asks him to avenge her, or she will divorce him. The brothers and their men are killed, but not the women, who Freydís ends up killing herself with an ax. It’s not too hard to guess which version of Freydís most resembles the character of the Vikings: ValhallaLeif Erikson was more of an explorer than a warrior. In fact, he is known to be the first European to set foot in North America, c.1000 CE. Archeologists found the remains of the Norse settlement founded by Leif in Newfoundland, confirming this story told in the Sagas. In the United States, Leif Erikson even has his own day on October 9.

Sam Corlett as Leif Erikson in Vikings: Valhalla Season 2Image via Netflix

In Vikings: Valhalla, Leif starts having doubts about his religion, paganism, when a little girl places a cross in his hands after a battle, which leads him to believe that this is what actually saved him. The young man does the same thing to Liv, his best friend, and lover when she is gravely injured on the battlefield. She survives, which reinforces Leif’s inclination towards Christianity. In real life, Leif arrived in Norway. He swore allegiance to Olaf Tryggvason, King of Norway, who converted Leif to Christianity before asking him to spread the religion across Greenland, which he did (according to Erik the Red’s saga).

Harald Sigurdsson is often called the last true Viking King and one of the most potent berserkers, as we can see in certain battle scenes of Vikings: Valhalla. A berserker, like Harald, means “A warrior in bear skin”` in old Norse, although it also has been translated as “warrior who fights without armor.” Harald is known to be a great, mighty warrior, taller than any other Viking. He was, like in the show, the half-brother of King Olaf II. However, they didn’t fight alongside and then against each other for too long, as in Valhalla. Harald was 15 when he and his brother fought against the Danes loyal to Canute in the battle of Stiklestad in 1030, which resulted in the death of Olaf. So Canute wasn’t exactly as close to Harald as he is in the show. Before he was King of Norway, Prince Harald was also a traveler who sailed to Kiev, Constantinople, and Sicily. When he was finally crowned king, he had to share the throne with Olaf’s son, Magnus. It didn’t last long, as Magnus died quickly after and King Harald finally became the sole King of Norway.

The True Story Behind Canute, Emma of Normandy and Edmund Ironside

Bradley Freegard, Kenneth M. Christensen, Jaako Ohtonen, Paaru Oja, Christopher Rygh and Robert McCormack in 'Vikings:Valhalla'Image via Netflix

As we established before, Canute was a great warrior. However, he didn’t fight alongside Harald when the retaliations to St. Brice’s Day Massacre were decided (we’ll get back to this event later in the article). As said in the show, Canute wasn’t the first Viking King of England, but his father, Sweyn Forkbeard, was (during one winter). When the latter died, Canute fought against England, and in particular against Prince Edmund, who then became king after the death of his father, Æthelred II. So far, the series has kept this storyline. However, Edmund wasn’t a ”boy king,” as Canute calls him in Vikings: ValhallaThe two men were actually the same age when they fought (roughly 26 years old). Edmund was a skilled warrior, but his efforts remained in vain during the battle of Assandun in 1016. Indeed, just like in the show, Eadric Sterna, who was supposed to come and fight with Edmund, abandoned the conflict, which allowed Canute and his men to break through English defenses and win the fight. Edmund later died under mysterious circumstances. Some say he was poisoned, and others claim that an arrow pierced his lungs while he was in the privy. Canute then married Queen Emma of Normandy, the widow of Æthelred II. She was a great strategist and politician, and she married King Canute, who succeeded in ruling over a North Sea Empire, as he always wanted to.

Did the London Bridge Really Fall Down?

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In Valhalla, the first episode introduces St. Brice’s Day Massacre, an event that occurred when King Æthelred (also called Æthelred the Unready or Ill-advised) ordered his troops to murder a large part of the population of the Danelaw regions, in which Gunhilde lived, the sister of Sweyn Forkbeard. In the show, it is said that the attack was ordered to ”cleanse” England from the Danes. As of now, many historians agree to say that this was most likely a response to repetitive Danish raids, murders and invasions in England. Another good use of “remains to be proved” history is the battle of The London Bridge in Episode 4. For dramatic purposes, the creators of Valhalla set the battle between Canute and Edmund on The London Bridge. Did it really happen there? There aren’t enough details on this battle to prove that this is completely fabricated. Now, everyone knows the nursery rhyme ”London Bridge is Falling Down.” Different versions of this song exist, and one of them, Heimskringla, supports the idea that the bridge might have, indeed, fallen down during a battle involving Olaf. The translation of the lyrics is the following:

London Bridge is broken down. —

Gold is won, and bright renown.

Shields resounding,

War-horns sounding,

Hild is shouting in the din!

Arrows singing,

Mail-coats ringing —

Odin makes our Olaf win!”“

Were There Really Women Viking Warriors?

vikings-valhalla-caroline-hendersonImage via Netflix

In Vikings: Valhalla and in Kattegat, we find a lot of women Vikings, warriors and women in a position of power, and history did prove it right. Justin Pollard, historian and screenwriter who worked on the show, stated:

“We have evidence now that there were women warriors. Viking society is quite egalitarian — not like Christian society at the time. Most things within the community and country, you get to vote on, and it’s not as though you get one king who tells you what to do. Women have rights, property, and can divorce their husbands. If you want to make something of yourself, you can. You can join a war band and go out as a Viking, but if you screw up, your team will take over or abandon you. It’s quite entrepreneurial.”

The character of Jarl Haakon (Caroline Henderson) didn’t exist; however, she is heavily based on a real Viking man called Haakon Sigurdsson. The first season introduces Black actress Caroline Henderson as Jark Haakon, and some people online were eager to criticize this choice of casting, they were proven completely wrong by historians who actually worked on Vikings: Valhalla. Tríona Sørensen, Ph.D., is a curator of the Viking Ship Museum in Roskilde, Denmark and she stated, “You see this clearly in the archaeological record here in Scandinavia — in silver coins from Arabic lands, precious metalwork from Ireland and Britain, silks from the East — all items that made their way to Scandinavia via maritime trade networks.” There is, indeed, much DNA and historical evidence that proves that there were black Vikings in history, which Vikings: Valhalla does show perfectly.

Is Mariam Based on a Real Life Character?

Hayat Kamille as Mariam and Tolga Safer as Kurya in Vikings Valhalla Season 2Image via Netflix

Season 2 of Vikings: Valhalla brought many new characters and places. One of the most interesting characters introduced is Mariam (played by Hayat Kamille), based on a real historical character. In the show, Mariam is a scholar in the field of science and literature. She teaches Leif everything she knows, and he falls in love with her. Mariam is inspired by the real Mariam Al-Ijliya (or Mariam al-Astrulabi), born in Aleppo, Syria. Mariam Al-Ijliya developed the ancient astrolabe tool during the 10th century. Jeb Stuart said that Mariam Al-Ijliya used everything she knew about mathematics to apply it to already existing tools to chart the path of the stars. The astrolabe was meant to tell your exact position or the time using the celestial bodies. She also developed navigation and timekeeping techniques, which you can clearly see in Season 2 of Vikings: Valhalla.

At the time, Sayf Al Dawla, the founder of the Emirate of Aleppo, was very impressed by Mariam’s knowledge, and he employed her in the court of Aleppo. While Leif and Mariam didn’t meet in real life (let alone fall in love), her presence in the show is essential as she teaches Leif how to read and use mathematics and opens him up to a world of possibilities. Her skills saved the team more than once, and it is fair to say that without Mariam, her friends would never have been able to lift the boat and put it back on the water just in time before the attack of the Pechenegs.

Who Were the Pechenegs?

Hayat Kamille as Mariam and Tolga Safer as Kurya in Vikings Valhalla Season 2Image via Netflix

Speaking of Pechenegs, the people our team of travelers are so afraid to meet on their way to Constantinople were indeed semi-nomadic people from Central Asia who spoke the now-extinct Pecheneg language. According to the historical timeline of the Pechenegs, and at the time Vikings: Valhalla takes place, the Pechenegs had settled in what we now know as Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, and Bulgaria. The region was very uncertain and unsafe as we can see in the show, because the Pechenegs were famous for raiding their different neighbors or travelers.

In the series, Kurya, a blind Pecheneg, becomes a friend of Harald, Leif, and the rest of the group. He is the brother of the Khan, and he even sacrifices himself to save his friends. In real life, Kurya was THE Khan. He is believed to have been an ally to Svyatoslav I of Kiev but according to The Tale of Bygone Years, Kurya later betrayed and killed him. It even says that Kurya used Svyatoslav’s skull as a goblet. If you remember correctly, in Season 2, Episode 7, Harald is tortured by the Pechenegs inside a tent. There, we can see multiple skulls of Varangians, which was the name given to Scandinavian warriors operating around Constantinople for the Byzantine army. Harald tells them that there is not one single Viking skull in their collection because if the Pechenegs had fought a Viking, the said Viking ‘’would be drinking from (their) skull(s)’’. This quote is a direct reference to the real life Kurya, and the death of Svyatoslav I of Kiev.

Leo Suter in Vilings: ValhallaImage via Netflix

When Harald and Leif arrive in Novgorod hoping to find some help, Harald meets with his uncle Yaroslav (Marcin Dorociński). In real life, Yaroslav was indeed the Grand Prince of Kyiv from 1019 to 1054, and he was also the Prince of Novgorod. However, he wasn’t Harald’s uncle, but more of a mentor and distant relative. After Olaf’s death on the battlefield in 1030, Harald joined Yaroslav the Wise in Kyiv, when he was about 15 years old. It is often said that this is when Harald fell in love with Elisiv of Kyiv, daughter of Yaroslav.

In 1035, Harald traveled to Constantinople with his men, and he offered his services to the emperor by joining the Varangian Guard. After having acquired a lot of richness, Harald decided to return to Kyiv in 1043 or 1044, however, Empress Zoë accused Harald of the theft of imperial treasure. It is sometimes believed that she accused him to keep him in Constantinople after she fell in love with him (another version of this story is that Harald fell in love with her niece, Maria). Back in Kyiv, Harald finally married Elisiv of Kiev, and she later became Queen of Norway when Harald finally accessed the throne.

Is Jómsborg a Mythical Place?

Frida Gustavsson as Freydis in Vikings Valhalla Season 2Image via Netflix

In Season 2 of Vikings: Valhalla, Freydis is separated from Leif and Harald, when she understands that they have different destinies to follow. She arrives in Jómsborg, which is meant to be the new Uppsala (destroyed in Season 1). So did Jómsborg really exist? The short answer is yes and no. Jómsborg is often referred to as a semi-legendary fortress, situated at the south of the Baltic Sea, even if its precise location still isn’t certain: some historians think Jómsborg is pure legend, while some others are convinced that the very few writings they found about Jómsborg, are based on a real location. They are convinced that it was situated on a hill near a now Polish town called Wolin. Jómsborg is described as a fortress with a harbor, an iron gate, and a high stone tower, just like in the show. Its inhabitants were the Jomsvikings, who were indeed, believers of the Old Gods and of the Old Norse faith. According to the Saga Heimskringla, Magnus, Olaf’s illegitimate child, destroyed Jómsborg, after they refused to acknowledge him as new king.

How Accurate is Erik the Red Who is Introduced in Season 3?

Goran Visjnic welcomes his daughter Freydis back to Greenland in Season 3 of 'Vikings: Valhalla'.Image via Netflix

Goran Visjnic plays Erik the Red, the father of Leif and Freydis, and is at the center of Freydis’ storyline as she returns to Greenland in Season 3. Erik the Red was born Eric Thorvaldssn in approximately 950. Leif and Freydis are half-siblings born of two separate women and sired by Erik. In the show, Erik is conspiring and duplicitous as his people struggle for food. He tries to keep Freydis and her group in Greenland to help produce for the clan. In reality, Erik did have issues with his children because he hung onto the pagan ways of the Old Gods. He was unwilling to make the venture away from Scandinavia to the West and what would later become America like Freydis wanted to, and Leif is credited for making it some 60 years later.

Were Leif and Harald Really Part of the Varangian Guard?

Leo Suter as Harald Sigurdsson in 'Vikings: Valhalla'Image via Netflix

In Season 3, Leif and Harald are members of Romanos III’s (Nikolai Kinski) “Varangian Guard” – an elite group of Viking mercenaries that fought in the southern portions of Western Europe from the 10th to 14th centuries. After joining Jarl Olaf in an attempt to take the throne from Canute and losing, Harald Hardrada (as he is tabbed at the end of Season 3) did travel south to the regions of Bulgaria, Italy, and Sicily as a respected member of the Varangian Guard that was tasked with protecting the Byzantine Emperors of the time. There is no evidence that he and Leif ever fought together as Varangians because Leif died when Harald was only about five years old, and had focused his life on scholarly pursuits and new discoveries toward the end of his life. In the mid-1030s, Harald and his Viking loyalists arrived in Constantinople with a vision of glory and great riches. They presented themselves in front of Empress Zoe (Sofya Lebvedeva). He offered his services to the Varangian Guard and fought under Byzantine General Georgios Maniakes (Florian Munteanu) in many great victories. However, he did not kill Maniakes himself, as shown in the show.

Did Harald Secure the Crown of Norway as Portrayed at the End of Season 3?

The final scenes of the final season of Vikings: Valhalla present Harald adopting the name Harald Hardrada, or “hard ruler,” to the boisterous support of a group of Vikings. He has anointed himself the new King of Norway after outsmarting Harald Haraldsson (Luke Harmon) and saving Freydis from being burned at the stake as a pagan witch. Harald was the King of Norway from 1046-1066. He died at the well known battle of Stamforb Bridge to secure England. This is much different than in Vikings: Valhalla as King Canute is given credit as the ruler of Norway. But Harald earned the moniker “The Last Viking” because of his heroics in battle all over Scandinavia and Europe. It is clear that he also played a larger role in the history of the Viking tribes than he is given credit for in the first season of Vikings: Valhalla.

Queen Emma of Normandy (Laura Berlin) is also shown deferring to the mischievous and self-serving wishes of Earl Godwin (David Oakes). The final sequence of the series shows her incredible grace and strength as she sits with the newest young king, who is to sit at her side. The real Queen Emma was indeed a valued strategist and faithful wife to Canute and mother to Edmund. Her ability to play the deviant political games of friends and foes alike made her a formidable force, the most powerful woman of her time in England, and smarter than the men she provided counsel to.

All 3 Seasons of Vikings: Valhalla are now streaming on Netflix.