Category
page 1Germanic pagans

Igor of Kiev
prince of Kiev (877–945)
Redbad
King of the Frisians
Bragi Boddason
Skald poet
Þorbjörn Hornklofi
9th-century Norwegian skald
Thorir Hund
Norwegian historical chieftain
Björn at Haugi
semi-legendary Swedish king
Ariaricus
Ariaric also known as Ariacus was a 4th-century Thervingian Gothic pagan ruler (reiks, kindins) He was succeeded by Geberic.
In 328, Constantine the Great constructed a bridge across the
Danube and built fortifications in the territory of Oltenia and Wallachia. This caused a migration of the Thervingi and Taifali to the west into Tisza Sarmatian controlled areas. The Sarmatians joined forces with Constantine, who appointed his son Constantine II to campaign against the Goths in late winter 332, reportedly resulting in the deaths of approximately one hundred thousand people due to the weather
Mardonio
goth-Roman rhetorician, philosopher and educator

Harold
Hagrold (fl. 944–954), also known as Hagroldus, Harold, and Harald, was a powerful tenth-century Viking chieftain who ruled Bayeux. He was apparently a pagan from Scandinavia, and seems to have seized power in Normandy at about the time of the death of William, Count of Rouen. His career can be interpreted in the context of aiding the Normans against the intrusion of Frankish authority, or conversely in the context of taking advantage of the Normans.