For the Australian rules footballer, see James Hird.
The hird, in Norwegian history, was originally an informal retinue of
personal armed companionsFor this Germanic tradition the German generic
term Gefolgschaft 'body of followers' is also used in modern literature;
it was even adopted by powerful Romans in the late empire, by such Latin
names as bucellarii or the more common comitatus., hirdmen or housecarls,
but came to mean not only the nucleus ('Guards') of the royal army, but
also developed into a more formal royal court household.
The term came from Old Norse "hirð", again from either Old English
hir[LINK: e] [1]d/heard/hird/hurd or old German heirat 'marriage', both of
which can mean "body of men". While the term is often used in Norse sagas
and law codes, it is a medieval term - the sagas were primarily w
Hird,