Orm Eriksson

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Orm Eriksson (also Orm Eiriksson, c. 1476 – 1521) was a Norwegian nobleman living in Stavanger and the alleged leader of the tax revolt in Rogaland, which ended with his execution in 1521.

It is uncertain whether Orm Erikson of Voss in 1482 was the same as the citizen and later væpner (squire) Orm Erikson of Stavanger. Asgaut Steinnes wrote in 1961 that the Orm Erikson of 1484 and the Orm Erikson of 1497 were the same man.[1]

In Stavanger

Orm Erikson is known to have been in the city records of Stavanger before 1518. The earliest mention of him was dated 17 June 1490, when he was one of the witnesses of a legal document.[2] He did not have at that time a title of nobility. But sometime between 1490 and 1509, he gained the title of væpner (squire). He was first mentioned as a væpner in 1509.[3] A year later, in 1510, Orm Eriksson av våpen (with his coat-of-arms) and wife Astrid Ormsdotter bought the Hana farm in Sandnes.[4] The document was created at Skagen in Stavanger. This is the only document linking Orm Erikson to any particular place in the Stavanger area. It is possible that Orm Erikson was then living at Skagen. In two documents, which were definitely from Stavanger, Orm Erikson was described as a væpner.[5]

The Tax Revolt

References

Literature

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