[63] Encomium Emmæ, i., c. 2. It is barely possible that the brother was Gyrth, whose name appears on a runic monument (Wimmer, De danske Runemindesmærker, I., ii., 138 ff.). But in the absence of information to the contrary we shall have to assume that Gyrth was buried where his monument was placed and was therefore not the brother who fell in England.
[64] Florence of Worcester, Chronicon, i., 160-161.
[65] Ibid., 160-163. Snorre, Saga of Saint Olaf, c. 14. Storm in his translation of Snorre (Christiania, 1900) locates Ringmere in East Wretham, Norfolk, (p. 239).
[66] Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, 1011. Florence of Worcester, Chronicon, i., 163-165.
[67] Gesta Regum, i., 207.
[68] Encomium Emmæ, i., c. 3.
[69] Encomium Emmæ, i., c. 2.
[70] Encomium Emmæ, i., c. 3.
[71] Encomium Emmæ, i., c. 4.
[72] Ibid., i., c. 5.