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Examples

  • Just as that tree spread out until all of Norway was in its shade, and even more lands, so Harald is king of all this country and of the western islands.

    Viking Tales 1902

  • The story of Harald is intended to serve in two ways towards the working out of this plot.

    Viking Tales 1902

  • I call Harald and explain why I want to find out more before I make a decision.

    NYT > Home Page By CHRISTOPH BANGERT 2011

  • At the flip of a coin Harald could have won the Battle of Stamford Bridge, and the history of England-of the whole world-would have been different.

    Crusader Gold Gibbons, David 2007

  • At the flip of a coin Harald could have won the Battle of Stamford Bridge, and the history of England-of the whole world-would have been different.

    Crusader Gold Gibbons, David 2007

  • In the yeere of our Lord 1066, Edward King of England, of famous memory deceased, whom Harald sonne of Godwin succeeded in his kingdome, against which Harald the king of Norwaie called Harald

    The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation 2003

  • Ingjald and his son Agnar, whom Bjarki slew; it is told a second time in the seventh book, where Hroar and Helgi are called Harald and Halfdan, and where the story about them is another version of the same story that we have in the _Hrólfssaga_.

    The Relation of the Hrolfs Saga Kraka and the Bjarkarimur to Beowulf A Contribution To The History Of Saga Development In England And The Scandinavian Countries Oscar Ludvig Olson

  • In the yeere of our Lord 1066, Edward King of England, of famous memory deceased, whom Harald sonne of Godwin succeeded in his kingdome, against which Harald the king of Norwaie called Harald Harfager fought a battel at

    The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation — Volume 01 Richard Hakluyt 1584

  • "Harald," cried Erling, for the berserk had shrunk back dismayed, "I do now accept the challenge, and come here to champion the old man."

    Erling the Bold 1859

  • When Harald Euler and Barbara Weitzel asked adults to think back about their childhood and report how they were treated by their grandparents, they found that most people remembered kinder, more protective treatment from their maternal grandmothers than from their other grandparents.

    Red Flags or Red Herrings? Susan Engel 2011

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