Siefred — sometimes rendered Sigfrøðr — was one of several Viking kings operating out of York in the turbulent final decade of the ninth century, a period when the Danelaw's political boundaries were still being violently negotiated. His coins circulated alongside those of at least one contemporary co-ruler, Cnut, suggesting a fragmented authority rather than a settled monarchy. The precise relationship between these kings remains unresolved in the scholarship.
North 502 is a scarce type, and genuine examples frequently show the irregular flan shapes and variable die alignment characteristic of the Jorvik moneyers working in this period.
Siefred — sometimes rendered Sigfrøðr — was one of several Viking kings operating out of York in the turbulent final decade of the ninth century, a period when the Danelaw's political boundaries were still being violently negotiated. His coins circulated alongside those of at least one contemporary co-ruler, Cnut, suggesting a fragmented authority rather than a settled monarchy. The precise relationship between these kings remains unresolved in the scholarship.
North 502 is a scarce type, and genuine examples frequently show the irregular flan shapes and variable die alignment characteristic of the Jorvik moneyers working in this period.