, showing the inscription concerning Harald During his reign, Harald oversaw the reconstruction of the Jelling runic stones, and numerous other public works. The most famous is fortifying the fortress of Aros (nowadays
Aarhus) which was situated in a central position in his kingdom in the year 979. Some believe these projects were a way for him to consolidate economic and military control of his country and the main city.
Ring forts were built in five strategic locations with Aarhus perfectly in the middle:
Trelleborg on
Zealand,
Borrering in eastern Zealand (the inner construction of this fort is still yet to be established),
Nonnebakken on
Funen,
Fyrkat in
Himmerland (northern
Jutland) and
Aggersborg near
Limfjord. All five fortresses had similar designs: "perfectly circular with gates opening to the four corners of the earth, and a courtyard divided into four areas which held large houses set in a square pattern." A sixth
Trelleborg of similar design, located at
Borgeby, in Scania, has been dated to about 1000 and may have been built by King Harald and a second fort named Trelleborg is located near the modern town of
Trelleborg in Scania in present-day Sweden, but is of older date and thus pre-dates the reign of Harald Bluetooth. He constructed the oldest known bridge in southern Scandinavia, the wide and long
Ravning Bridge at Ravning meadows. While quiet prevailed throughout the interior, he turned his energies to foreign enterprises. He came to the help of
Richard the Fearless of Normandy in 945 and 963, while his son conquered
Samland, and after the assassination of King
Harald Greycloak of Norway, managed to force the people of that country into temporary subjugation to himself. The
Norse sagas present Harald in a rather negative light. He was forced twice to submit to the renegade Swedish prince
Styrbjörn the Strong of the
Jomsvikings- first by giving Styrbjörn a fleet and his daughter
Thyra, the second time by giving up himself as hostage, along with yet another fleet. When Styrbjörn brought this fleet to
Uppsala to claim the throne of Sweden, Harald broke his oath and fled with his Danes to avoid facing the Swedish army at the
Battle of Fýrisvellir.
Harald's Rebellion In the wake of
Otto I's death, Harald attacked Saxony in 973.
Otto II counter-attacked Harald in 974, conquering Haithabu, Dannevirke and possibly large parts of Jutland. Harald regained some of the seized territory in 983 when Otto II was defeated by the Saracens. His body was brought back to the Trinity Church in Roskilde where he was buried. The Curmsun Disc, found in Groß-Weckow,
Pomerania, (after 1945
Wiejkowo) is inscribed with "ARALD CVRMSVN" (Harald Gormson), calling him, in abbreviated Latin, "king of Danes, Scania,
Jomsborg, town of
Aldinburg". Based on this, Swedish archaeologist Sven Rosborn has proposed that Harald is buried at the church there, close to Jomsborg, in what is now Poland. From 1835 to 1977, it was wrongly believed that Harald ordered the death of the
Haraldskær Woman, a
bog body previously thought to be
Gunnhild, Mother of Kings until
radiocarbon dating proved otherwise. The
Hiddensee treasure, a large trove of gold objects, was found in 1873 on the German island of
Hiddensee in the Baltic Sea. It is believed that these objects belonged to Harald's family. Harald introduced the first nationwide coinage in Denmark. ==Conversion to Christianity==