OLD NORSE LITERATURE

the literature of the Northmen, or Norsemen, c.850–c.1350. It survives mainly in Icelandic writings, for little medieval vernacular literature remains from Norway, Sweden, or Denmark.

The Norwegians who settled Iceland late in the 9th cent. brought with them a body of oral mythological poetry that flourished there in a sturdy, seafaring world removed from the warring mainland. The first great period, which lasted until c.1100, was oral, as writing was not introduced until well after the establishment of Christianity (c.1000). From c.1100 to c.1350 both the oral poetry and new compositions were set down. The conscious, clear prose style that developed for both saga and history antedates that of all other modern European literatures except Gaelic. In the later 13th cent., with Iceland's loss of independence to Norway, literary activity declined and had virtually disappeared a century later.

The surviving body of literature can best be discussed as consisting of several types. Eddic writings (see Edda) were condensations of ancient lays, in alliterative verse (see alliteration), on old gods and heroes. Many of the heroic lays involve the legend of Siegfried and Brunhild; the mythological lays, focusing on Norse gods, include "The Lay of Thrym," a narrative about Thor, and "The Seeress' Prophecy," which begins with creation and anticipates the gods' demise.

Also composed in alliterative verse, but more complex and artificial in form, was scaldic poetry, which flourished in Norway about the 10th cent. and reached its height slightly later in Iceland. Comprising poems of praise, triumph, lamentation, and love, it is subjective in approach and highly mannered in technique. Intricate metrical schemes are meticulously observed, and diction is polished to the point of preciousness, especially in the incessant use of the kenning (a metaphoric substituted phrase, e.g., "ship-road" for "sea"), found also in Anglo-Saxon literature. As the scalds became a group apart, and only the initiated could understand their highly allusive verse, Snorri Sturluson was prompted to write the Prose Edda (c.1222) as a text of scaldic poetry, in a vain attempt to promote and preserve the old techniques.

As scaldic poetry declined, new forms rose to replace it, among them the ballad and the sacred hymn. A new rhymed verse developed, somewhat analogous to that in Middle English literature and used for much the same purpose—translation and paraphrase of foreign romances. The bulk of medieval Norse literature, and the most readable today, survives in the form of sagas, that is, prose narratives, sometimes interspersed with verse, which relate the lives of legendary or historical figures with objectivity and skillful characterization and which reflect the old Icelandic devotion to personal honor and family.

Historical writing of the 11th and 12th cent. is also noteworthy. In this field Snorri Sturluson contributed his Heimskringla. Ari Thorgilsson produced Islendingabók (c.1125), an account of the island's history, an abridged version of which has survived. He was probably partly responsible also for the Landnámabók, a topographical and genealogical account of Iceland; other works by Thorgilsson have been lost. Finally, all the Scandinavian countries produced medieval ballads, but these were not written down until much later. There remain numerous unsolved problems concerning oral composition, transmission of origins and influences, and dating.

See studies by H. R. Davidson (1943, repr. 1968) and L. M. Hollander (1945, repr. 1968); S. Einarsson, A History of Icelandic Literature (1957); Old Norse Literature and Mythology, ed. by E. C. Polomé (1969).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Old Norse Literature  - 3035 results

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...8122-3358-1 alk. paper 1. Old Norse literature -- History and criticism. 2...perceived gender difference in Old Norse literature and society. In contrast to...history of the reception of Old Norse literature is increasingly an important...
...American. 4. Old Norse literature-Appreciation-United...in American literature virtu- ally...say that the Norse were forgotten...retellings of old Norse tales...wonderful old tales of English...estimate of the Norse role in this...on English literature and in a...
...Genre Analysis and Old Norse Literature 9...every discussion in the area of Old Norse literature, and the issues seem to me...nineteenth-century student of Old Norse literature, Guobrandur Vigfusson, calls...
...GUNNLAUGS SAGA ORMSTUNGU The saga is translated from the Old Icelandic of a man who remains unknown. Some people have...written in a language which is neither Modern English nor Old Icelandic. Old Icelandic was a highly inflected language, Modern English...
...commonplace gods from Norse mythology. The...early Icelandic literature as a whole. While...the fictional literature suggested that...as-one of the Norse terms for a pagan...Stjorn, a medieval Norse version of parts of the Old Testament, including...
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journal articles on: Old Norse Literature  - 231 results

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...Paranormal in the Bible and in Old Norse Literature-Superstition? by Lisa...PARANORMAL IN THE BIBLE AND IN OLD NORSE LITERATURE--SUPERSTITION? By Nils Bjorn...whole. The chapter "Psi in Old Norse Literature and in the Bible" is divided...
...Giantess as Foster-Mother in Old Norse Literature. by Lorenzo Lozzi Gallo...consider in her study is that the Old Norse literature also contains a small number...R. "Fostering by Giants in Old Norse Literature". Medium AEvum 10 (1941): 70-85...
Old Norse-Iceland Literature: A Critical Guide. by Sian Gronlie Old Norse-Iceland Literature: A Critical Guide, ed. Carol...include new general works on Old Norse literature (of which there are several in...
A Companion to Old Norse-Icelandic Literature. by Carolyne Larrington A Companion to Old Norse-Icelandic Literature. Ed. by RORY MCTURK...comprehensive guide to Old Norse-Icelandic literature which functions as a basic...
...our understanding of Old Norse literature in that it undertakes...with regard to the literature of the period in general...verse. Chapter 5, "Old Norse Poetic Aesthetics...arresting works in Old Norse literature: the Snorra Edda, a...
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magazine articles on: Old Norse Literature  - 52 results

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...vocabulary and language--Old Norse--in which several...creating a functional literature in it, across all...close to the way Old Norse might have survived...inflections related to the old language. When he...only a pride for our literature, it is also a pride...
...of auroral displays is found in Norse literature dating to a.d. 1200. In the Kings...unified narrative. The handwritten Old Norse text describes the dancing lights...Scandinavia, it was said that the "old maids are making a fire." In western...
...artists are consistently indebted to, of all things, Old Norse literature. You cant throw a lava rock in Iceland without hitting...viable for you, then you have to grow new forms out of old ones, make these strange little mutants," he said, referring...
...literature. In those days "English literature" took in everything from Old Norse (a North Germanic language...Dickens, et al., but not to Old Norse, which no one at Brooklyn...departmental favorites like Old Norse had, mercifully, been eliminated...
...King Cnut during her Anglo-Saxon literature classes, which livened up a rather dull hour about kennings and Old Norse. She wasnt too far off the mark...etymologists think the word comes from the Old Norse kunta. Others think it is more likely...
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...example, the word horse is hors in Old English, hossit in Old Norse. But all these tricky little word endings would have...Greats England having the most developed vernacular literature in Europe. Now the English bandwagon is rolling, it...
...decidedly Argentine writer who had produced an austere new literature out of multiple traditions." It is these traditions...in his 50s. The shared interest in Anglo-Saxon and old Norse brought into his life Maria Kodama, who later became...
...speaking old English, old Norse, Romany (which came out...French and Latin. Those old English words include...honorary Doctorate in Literature from Liverpool University...as some of the greatest old English and Norse families hailed from the...
...will be revelry - a Hastings feast, with music by a very old Norse band named Thrir Venstri Foetr (Three Left Feet) and dancing...craft demonstrations and maybe even a fashion show. The Norse band Thrir Venstri Foetr (Three Left Feet) will play for...
...mainland has a name taken from the Old Norse for "turning point", it being a key landmark...novel by Oscar Hijuelos? 36 Which 44-year-old boxer will fight Sultan Ibragimov for...India-born writer, awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1907 at the age of 42, remains its...
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encyclopedia articles on: Old Norse Literature  - 25 results

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OLD NORSE LITERATURE the literature of...The bulk of medieval Norse literature, and the most readable...and which reflect the old Icelandic devotion to...Icelandic Literature (1957); Old Norse Literature and Mythology, ed. by...
SAGA , in Old Norse Literature in Old Norse literature , especially Icelandic and Norwegian, narrative in prose...sagas. See also S. Einarsson, A History of Icelandic Literature (1957); P. Hallberg, The Icelandic Saga (tr. 1962...
NORSE LITERATURE see Old Norse literature . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...as the language of the Eddas and sagas (see Old Norse literature ; Icelandic literature ). See E. V. Garden, An Introduction to Old Norse (2d ed. 1957). ____________________ Copyright...
...literature of Iceland, see Old Norse literature . Early Writings...64) came a decline in literature, although the linguistic tradition continued and the old writings were still venerated...works were translated; Old Norse works were copied and...
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