Eggert Hannesson

This is an Icelandic name. The last name is a patronymic, not a family name; this person is properly referred to by the given name Eggert Hannesson.

Eggert Hannesson (?1515-83) was a hirðstjóri and lawspeaker and lived in Saurbæ, otherwise known as Bær á Rauðasandi, a major farm in Barðastrandarsýsla.

Eggert was the son of leading Westfjorders: Hannes Eggertsson, the hirðstjóri in Núpur in Dýrafjörður, who was apparently of Norwegian descent, and his wife Guðrún, a daughter of Björn Guðnason, a sýslumaður in Ögur. Eggert had a sister, Katrín, who married Bishop Gissur Einarsson, the first Lutheran bishop in Iceland.

In his youth, Eggert served Ögmundur Pálsson, Bishop of Skálholt, and will have gone with him to Germany and Norway on his missions in the years 1538-39. Later, he was in the service of Gissur Einarsson and went with him when we went abroad for consecration in Copenhagen in 1542. He was sýslumaður in the Westfjords in 1544 and lived at first at Núpur. He was hirðstjóri 1551-53 and Lawspeaker for the south and east untul 1556, and for the north and west 1556-68, after which he was a sýslumaður and steward of the land of Helgafellsklaustur.

Eggert was the richest man in Iceland of his time, and indeed the most powerful. Among his manuscripts was the celebrated Eggertsbók (Rekjavík, Stofnun Árna Magnússonar, AM 556a-b 4to), which contains the earliest surviving text of Gísla saga. On one occasion while Eggert lived at Saurbær, he was seized by English pirates and held for a whole month on board their ship until a high ransome was paid. In 1580 Eggert moved to Hamburg, where he died.

Eggert's first wife was Sesselja Jónsdóttir; he later married Steinunn Jónsdóttir.

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    Preceded by
    Otte Stigsen Hvide
    Hirðstjóri
    1551-1553
    Succeeded by
    Poul Huitfeldt
    Preceded by
    Erlendur Þorvarðarson
    Lögmaður sunnan og austan
    1553-1555
    Succeeded by
    Páll Vigfússon
    Preceded by
    Oddur Gottskálksson
    Lögmaður norðan og vestan
    1556-1568
    Succeeded by
    Ormur Sturluson


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