"Świętosława" is a name that was used in the past by historians to refer to a Polish princess who was the daughter of Mieszko I of Poland, sister to Bolesław I of Poland, and purported wife of two Scandinavian kings. Modern research suggests it was likely not her name, and that she was only a wife to one of aforementioned kings, Sweyn Forkbeard.
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"Świętosława" is a name that was used in the past by historians to refer to a Polish princess who was the daughter of Mieszko I of Poland, sister to Bolesław I of Poland, and purported wife of two Scandinavian kings. Modern research suggests it was likely not her name, and that she was only a wife to one of aforementioned kings, Sweyn Forkbeard.
Some chroniclers recount that a princess, whose name is not given, was married first to Eric the Victorious of Sweden and then to Sweyn Forkbeard of Denmark, giving the former a son, Olof, and the latter two sons, Harald and Cnut. Because a documented sister of Cnut seems to have borne the Polish name Świętosława, it has been speculated that this may also have been the name of their mother, making her the Polish princess of the chroniclers.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).