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In these two royal sagas, Snorri Sturluson traces the dramatic careers of Olaf Tryggvason, missionary-king and sea-rover, and Harald Sigurdsson "Hardrada," Byzantine mercenary, Norwegian ruler, and last great Viking invader. Drawn from Heimskringla, the narratives move from conversion and dynastic consolidation to exile, conquest, and catastrophe at Stamford Bridge. Their style is characteristically Icelandic: lucid, restrained prose, sharpened by dialogue, genealogy, political analysis, and skaldic verse, placing heroic memory within the emerging discipline of medieval Scandinavian historiography. Snorri (1179-1241), an Icelandic chieftain, lawspeaker, poet, and politician, was uniquely equipped to compose such histories. His command of court poetry, oral tradition, and legal-political culture gave him both sources and interpretive tools. Living amid Iceland's factional violence and Norway's expanding influence, he understood kingship not as legend alone but as a perilous negotiation of charisma, loyalty, law, and force. This volume is recommended to readers of medieval literature, Viking Age history, and political biography who seek more than battle narrative. It offers a demanding but rewarding encounter with a world where sanctity and ambition, poetry and power, commemoration and critique are inseparable. Read attentively, these sagas reveal why Snorri remains central to the historical imagination of the North.