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Descendants of Darius I Great to Alfred Landon

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Generation 31 (con't)<br />

Fjolnir Yngvi Freysson had the following child:<br />

i. VANA 32 FJOLNARSSON (daughter <strong>of</strong> Fjolnir Yngvi Freysson) was born in 281 AD in<br />

Vanaheim,,,Sweden. She died in 360 AD in Svitjod,,,Sweden.<br />

Fjolnir Yngvi Freysson and Mrs Fjolner Yngvi Freysson had the following child:<br />

67. ii. SVEGDI FJOLNARSSON (son <strong>of</strong> Fjolnir Yngvi Freysson and Mrs Fjolner Yngvi<br />

Freysson) was born in Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden. He died in Svitjod, Sweden.<br />

He married Vana Fjolnarsson in 297 AD in Uppsala,Uppsala,,Sweden. She was<br />

born in Vanaheim, Sweden. She died in Svitjod, Sweden.<br />

Generation 32<br />

61. NJORD 29 SWEDES (Yngvi King Of 28 Turkey, Bengori Frey 27 , Lnor 26 Frey, Sk<strong>to</strong>bius Of 25 Turkey,<br />

Vengor <strong>of</strong> 24 Turkey, Al<strong>to</strong>y Of 23 Turkey, Sanvoritcus <strong>of</strong> 22 Syria, Demetrius I Of 21 Syria, Seleucus IV<br />

Philopa<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> 20 Syria, Demetrius 19 Nica<strong>to</strong>r, Demetrius I 18 Soter, Seleucus II 17 Callincus, Antiochus<br />

II 16 Theos, Antiochus I 15 Soter, Seleucus I 14 Nica<strong>to</strong>r, Antiochus 13 Theos, Anthiochus I 12 Soter Syria,<br />

Apame or Apama <strong>of</strong> 11 Bactria, Apame Amastris Of 10 Dascylium, Pharnabazos I 9 Daskyleion,<br />

Pharnakes 8 <strong>of</strong> Daskyleion, Pharnaces 7 Dascylium, Apama 6 De Persia, Artaxerxes Mnemon 5<br />

Achaemenid, <strong>Darius</strong> 4 Ochus, Artaxerxes I 3 Makrokheir, Xerxes I 2 Ahasuerus, <strong>Darius</strong> I 1 <strong>Great</strong>) was<br />

born in 214 AD in Noatun, Sweden. He died in 254 AD in Nortun, Sweden. He married Mrs Njord in<br />

234 AD in Noatun,Uppsala,Uppsala,Sweden. She was born in 217 AD in Noatun, Sweden. She<br />

died in 235 AD.<br />

Notes for Njord Swedes:<br />

Mythological king <strong>of</strong> Sweden<br />

Njörðr<br />

Wikipedia:<br />

Njörðr<br />

"Njord" redirects here. For the Leaves' Eyes album, see Njord (album).<br />

In Norse mythology, Njörðr is an Æsir god. Njörðr is father <strong>of</strong> the deities Freyr and Freyja by his<br />

unnamed Van sister, was in an ill-fated marriage with the goddess Skaði, lives in Nóatún (Old<br />

Norse "ship-enclosure"[1]) and is associated with sea, seafaring, wind, fishing, wealth, and crop<br />

fertility.<br />

Njörðr is attested in the Poetic Edda, compiled in the 13th century from earlier traditional sources,<br />

the Prose Edda, written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson, in euhemerized form as a beloved<br />

mythological early king <strong>of</strong> Sweden in Heimskringla, also written by Snorri Sturluson in the 13th<br />

century, as one <strong>of</strong> three gods invoked in the 14th century Hauksbók ring oath, and in numerous<br />

Scandinavian place names.<br />

Njörðr has been the subject <strong>of</strong> an amount <strong>of</strong> scholarly discourse and theory, <strong>of</strong>ten connecting him<br />

with the figure <strong>of</strong> the much earlier attested Germanic goddess Nerthus, the hero Hadingus, and<br />

theorizing on his formerly more prominent place in Norse paganism due <strong>to</strong> the appearance <strong>of</strong> his<br />

name in numerous place names. Njörðr is sometimes modernly anglicized as Njord, Njoerd, or<br />

Njorth.<br />

Etymology, <strong>to</strong>ponyms, and eponyms<br />

The name Njörðr corresponds <strong>to</strong> that <strong>of</strong> the older Germanic fertility goddess Nerthus, and both<br />

derive from the Pro<strong>to</strong>-Germanic term Nerþuz. The original meaning <strong>of</strong> the name is contested, but it<br />

may be related <strong>to</strong> the Irish word nert which means "force" and "power". It has been suggested that<br />

the change <strong>of</strong> sex from the female Nerthus <strong>to</strong> the male Njörðr is due <strong>to</strong> the fact that feminine nouns<br />

with u-stems disappeared early in Germanic language while the masculine nouns with u-stems<br />

prevailed. Other scholars hold the change <strong>to</strong> be based not on grammatical gender but on the<br />

evolution <strong>of</strong> religious beliefs.[2] The name Njörðr may be related <strong>to</strong> the name <strong>of</strong> the Norse goddess<br />

Njörun.[3]<br />

Njörðr's name appears in various place names in Scandinavia, such as Nærdhæwi (now Nalavi),

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