He composed the poem Útfarardrápa about the feats of Sigurðr Jórsalafari during his voyage to the Holy Land. After Sigurðr's death he probably served Magnus Barefoot. He is also known to have composed for nine powerful men, including the Swedish jarlsSone Ivarsson (c. 1107), Karl Sonesson (c. 1137) and for the Swedish kings Sverker I of Sweden (c. 1150) and Jon Jarl.
In the assessment of Jan de Vries, Halldórr was an able craftsman ('ein gewandter Verseschmied') but lacked poetic genius.[1]
Biography and works
Halldor was born early enough to compose an elegy for Magnus Barefoot of Norway, who died in 1103, but he also composed one for Inge I of Norway, who died in 1161.[2]
Útfaradrápa: an account of Sigurðr jórsalafari's expedition to the Mediterranean basin. These stanzas have been identified with the poem which, according to Sverris saga, a skald called Máni 'kvað síðan Útfarardrápuna er Halldórr skvaldri orti um Sigurð konung Jórsalafara, móðurfǫður Magnús konungs' ('later recited the Útfarardrápa which Halldórr skvaldri composed about King Sigurðr Jórsalafari, the maternal grandfather of King Magnus') to Magnus V of Norway in 1184.[5] The poem survives in varying degrees through quotation in Fagrskinna, Magnússona saga, Heimskringla, Morkinskinna, the Third Grammatical Treatise, and Hulda-Hrokkinskinna.
Halldórr's poems are reconstructed as accurately as possible from the surviving quotations in Poetry from the Kings’ Sagas 2: From c. 1035 to c. 1300, ed. by Kari Ellen Gade, Skaldic poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages, 2 (Turnhout: Brepols, 2009), pp. 482–96. A text and translation bades on Gade's edition is available at http://www.abdn.ac.uk/skaldic/m.php?p=skald&i=117.
References
^Jan de Vries, Altnordische Literaturgeschichte. Mit einem Vorw. von Stefanie Würth, 3rd edn in one volume, Grundriss der germanischen Philologie, 15-16 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 1999), I, 292-293. ISBN3-11-016330-6.