Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-07T14:29:27.352Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2024

Heather O'Donoghue
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
Eleanor Parker
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

Adam of Bremen, Hamburgische Kirchengeschichte, ed. Schmeidler, Bernhard (Hanover: Hahnsche Buchhandlung, 1917).Google Scholar
Ævintýri frá miðöldum, ed. Halldórsson, Bragi (Reykjavík: Skrudda, 2016).Google Scholar
Ágrip af Nóregskonungasögum: A Twelfth-Century Synoptic History of the Kings of Norway, ed. and trans. Driscoll, M. J., 2nd ed. (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 2008).Google Scholar
Ágrip af Nóregskonunga sögum, Fagrskinna – Nóregs konunga tal, ed. Einarsson, Bjarni, ÍF 29 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1985).Google Scholar
Alfræði íslenzk: Islandsk encyklopædisk litteratur, ed. Kålund, Kristian and Beckman, Natanael, 3 vols., STUAGNL 37, 41 and 45 (Copenhagen: S. L. Møller, 1908–18).Google Scholar
Áns rímur bogsveigis, ed. Halldórsson, Óláfur, Íslenzkar miðaldarímur 2 (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1973).Google Scholar
Árna saga biskups, ed. Hauksson, Þorleifur (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1972).Google Scholar
Magnússon, Árni, Brevveksling med Torfæus, ed. Kålund, Kristian (Copenhagen: Gyldendal, 1916).Google Scholar
Austfirðinga sögur, ed. Jóhannesson, Jón, ÍF 11 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1950).Google Scholar
[Bede], Bedae Venerabilis Opera, Pars 3: Opera Homiletica, ed. Hurst, David, CCSL 122 (Turnhout: Brepols, 1955).Google Scholar
Bevers saga, ed. Sanders, Christopher (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 2001).Google Scholar
Biblia sacra iuxta vulgatam versionem, ed. Roger, Gryson et al. (Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 1994).Google Scholar
Biörner, Erik Julius (ed.), Nordiska Kämpa Dater (Stockholm: J. L. Horrn, 1737).Google Scholar
Biskupa sögur, ed. Sigurðsson, Jón and Vigfússon, Guðbrandur, 2 vols. (Copenhagen: S. L. Møller, 1858–78).Google Scholar
Biskupa sögur I, ed. Steingrímsson, Sigurgeir, Halldórsson, Ólafur and Foote, Peter, 2 vols., ÍF 15 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 2003).Google Scholar
Biskupa sögur II, ed. Egilsdóttir, Ásdís, ÍF 16 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 2002).Google Scholar
Biskupa sögur III, ed. Grímsdóttir, Guðrún Ása, ÍF 17 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1998).Google Scholar
The Book of Settlements: Landnámabók, trans. Hermann Pálsson and Paul Edwards (Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press, 1972).Google Scholar
Borgfirðinga sögur, ed. Nordal, Sigurður and Jónsson, Guðni, ÍF 3 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1938).Google Scholar
Bósa rímur, ed. Halldórsson, Óláfur, Íslenzkar miðaldarímur 3 (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1974).Google Scholar
Die Bósa-Rímur, ed. Jiriczek, Otto, Germanistische Abhandlungen 10 (Breslau: Wilhelm Koebner, 1894).Google Scholar
Bragða-Mágus saga með tilheyrandi þáttum, ed. Þórðarson, Gunnlaugur (Copenhagen: Páll Sveinsson, 1858).Google Scholar
Byskupa sögur, ed. Helgason, Jón, 2 vols., EA A 13 (Copenhagen: Munksgaard, 1938–78).Google Scholar
[Caesarius of Heisterbach], , Caesarii Heisterbacensis Monachi Dialogus Miraculorum, ed. Strange, Joseph, 2 vols. (Cologne: J. M. Heberle, 1851).Google Scholar
Child, Francis James (ed.), The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, 5 vols. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1882–98).Google Scholar
Clári saga, ed. Gustaf Cederschiöld, ASB 12 (Halle: Max Niemeyer, 1907).Google Scholar
Clemens saga: The Life of St Clement of Rome, ed. Carron, Helen (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 2005).Google Scholar
Danakonunga sögur, ed. Guðnason, Bjarni, ÍF 35 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1982).Google Scholar
Dínus saga drambláta, ed. Kristjánsson, Jónas, Riddarasögur 1 (Reykjavík: Háskóli Íslands, 1960).Google Scholar
Donovan, Jack, ‘Starting the sacred world’, Tyr, 5 (2018), 3543.Google Scholar
Dunstanus saga, ed. Fell, Christine, EA B 5 (Copenhagen: Munksgaard, 1963).Google Scholar
Edda: Die Lieder des Codex Regius nebst verwandten Denkmälern, ed. Neckel, Gustav, revised ed. by Kuhn, Hans, 5th ed. (Heidelberg: Winter, 1983).Google Scholar
Edda Sæmundar hins fróða, ed. Möbius, Theodor (Leipzig: J. C. Hinrichs, 1860).Google Scholar
Eddukvæði, ed. Kristjánsson, Jónas and Ólason, Vésteinn, 2 vols. (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 2014).Google Scholar
Egils saga einhenda ok Ásmundar berserkjabana, in Lagerholm, Åke (ed.), Drei lygisögur: Egils saga einhenda ok Ásmundar berserkjabana, Ála flekks saga, Flóres saga konungs ok sona hans, ASB 17 (Halle: Max Niemeyer, 1927), pp. 183.Google Scholar
Egils saga Skalla-Grímssonar, ed. Nordal, Sigurður, ÍF 2 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1933).Google Scholar
Einarr Skúlason’s Geisli: A Critical Edition, ed. and trans. Chase, Martin (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Eiríks saga rauða: Texti Skálholtsbókar AM 557 4to., ed. Halldórsson, Ólafur (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1985), supplement to 2nd ed. of ÍF 4.Google Scholar
Den eldre Gulatingslova, ed. Eithun, Bjørn, Rindal, Magnus and Ulset, Tor, Norrøne tekster 6 (Oslo: Riksarkivet, 1994).Google Scholar
Elis saga ok Rosamundu, ed. Kölbing, Eugen (Heilbronn: Henninger, 1881).Google Scholar
Eyrbyggja saga, Brands þáttr örva, Eiríks saga rauða, Grœnlendinga saga, Grœnlendinga þáttr, ed. Einar Ól, Sveinsson and Þórðarson, Matthías, ÍF 4 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1935).Google Scholar
Færeyinga saga, ed. Halldórsson, Ólafur (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1987).Google Scholar
Færeyinga saga, Óláfs saga Tryggvasonar eptir Odd munk Snorrason, ed. Halldórsson, Ólafur, ÍF 25 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 2006).Google Scholar
Fagrskinna, A Catalogue of the Kings of Norway, trans. Alison Finlay (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2004).Google Scholar
Jónsson, Finnur (ed.), Fernir forníslenskir rímnaflokkar (Copenhagen: S. L. Möller, 1896).Google Scholar
Jónsson, Finnur (ed.), Den norsk-islandske skjaldedigtning, 4 vols. (Copenhagen and Christiania: Gyldendal, 1912–15; rpt. Copenhagen: Rosenkilde and Bagger, 1973).Google Scholar
Jónsson, Finnur (ed.), Den oldnorske og oldislandske Litteraturs Historie, 3 vols. (Copenhagen: G. E. C. Gad, 1920–4).Google Scholar
The First Grammatical Treatise, ed. Benediktsson, Hreinn (Reykjavík: Institute of Nordic Linguistics, 1972).Google Scholar
First Grammatical Treatise: The Earliest Germanic Phonology, ed. Haugen, Einar, 2nd ed. (London: Longman, 1972).Google Scholar
Flateyjarbók, ed. Nordal, Sigurður, 4 vols. (Reykjavík: Flateyjarútgafan, 1944–5).Google Scholar
Flateyjarbok: En samling af norske konge-sagaer med indskudte mindre fortællinger om begivenheder i og udenfor Norge samt annaler, ed. Vigfússon, Guðbrandur and Unger, C. R., 3 vols. (Christiania: Malling, 1860–8).Google Scholar
Foote, Peter G. (ed.), Lives of Saints: Perg. fol. no. 2 in the Royal Library, Stockholm, Early Icelandic Manuscripts in Facsimile 4 (Copenhagen: Rosenkilde and Bagger, 1962).Google Scholar
Fornaldar sögur Nordrlanda, ed. Rafn, C. C., 3 vols. (Copenhagen: Popp, 1829–30).Google Scholar
Fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda, ed. Jónsson, Guðni, 4 vols. (Reykjavík: Íslendingasagnaútgáfan, 1954).Google Scholar
The Fourth Grammatical Treatise, ed. Clunies Ross, Margaret and Wellendorf, Jonas (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 2014).Google Scholar
Friðþjófs rímur, in Larsson, Ludvig (ed.), Sagan ock rimorna om Friðþjófur hinn frækni, STUAGNL 22 (Copenhagen: Malmström, 1893).Google Scholar
Gamal norsk homiliebok, ed. Indrebø, Gustav (Oslo: Jacob Dybwad, 1931).Google Scholar
[Gautreks saga] Die Gautrekssaga in zwei Fassungen, ed. Ranisch, Wilhelm, Palaestra 11 (Berlin: Mayer & Müller, 1900).Google Scholar
Gooding, Liam, How to Become a Modern Viking: A Man’s Guide to Unleashing the Warrior Within (North Charleston, SC: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2016).Google Scholar
Grágás: Islændernes lovbog i fristatens tid, ed. Finsen, Vilhjálmur, 3 vols. (Copenhagen: Berling, 1852–83).Google Scholar
Grágás: Lagasafn íslenska þjóðveldisins, ed. Karlsson, Gunnar, Sveinsson, Kristján and Árnason, Mörður (Reykjavík: Mál og Menning, 1992).Google Scholar
Grettis saga Ásmundarsonar, ed. Jónsson, Guðni, ÍF 7 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1936).Google Scholar
Vigfússon, Guðbrandur and York Powell, F. (eds.), Corpus Poeticum Boreale: The Poetry of the Old Northern Tongue, 2 vols. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1883).Google Scholar
Þorláksson, Guðbrandur (ed.), Ein ny Wiisna Bok, med mórgum andlegum Viisum og Kuædum, Psalmum, Lof sønguum og Rijmum teknum wr heilagre Ritningu (Hólar: n. p., 1612).Google Scholar
Guðmundar sögur biskups I, ed. Karlsson, Stefán, EA B 6 (Copenhagen: C. A. Reitzel, 1983).Google Scholar
Guðmundar sögur biskups II, ed. Karlsson, Stefán and Hauksson, Magnús, EA B 7 (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2018).Google Scholar
[Hallfreðar saga] ‘The Saga of Hallfred the Troublesome Poet’, trans. Diana Whaley, in Hreinsson, Viðar (ed.), The Complete Sagas of Icelanders, including 49 Tales, 5 vols. (Reykjavík: Leifur Eiríksson, 1997), vol. I, pp. 225–53.Google Scholar
Haralds rímur Hringsbana, ed. Halldórsson, Óláfur, Íslenzkar miðaldarímur 1 (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1973).Google Scholar
Harmer, F. E. (ed.), Select English Historical Documents of the Ninth and Tenth Centuries (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1914).Google Scholar
Heilagra manna søgur, ed. Unger, C. R., 2 vols. (Christiania: Bentzen, 1877).Google Scholar
Heiðreks saga: Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks konungs, ed. Helgason, Jón, STUAGNL 48 (Copenhagen: Jørgensen, 1924).Google Scholar
Sigurðsson, Helgi (ed.), Safn til bragfræði íslenzka rímna að fornu og nýju (Reykjavík: Ísafold, 1891).Google Scholar
Hethmon, Heather, ‘Völsungsrímur: A new English translation with commentary and analysis’, unpublished MA thesis, University of Iceland (2015).Google Scholar
Historia Norwegie, ed. Ekrem, Inger and Mortensen, Lars Boje and trans. Peter Fisher (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Homilíubók: Ísländska homilier, ed. Wisén, Theodor (Lund: C. W. K. Gleerup, 1872).Google Scholar
Hrólfs saga Gautrekssonar, in Detter, Ferdinand (ed.), Zwei Fornaldarsögur: Hrólfssaga Gautrekssonar und Ásmundarsaga kappabana, nach Cod. Holm. 7, 4to (Halle: Max Niemeyer, 1891), pp. 178.Google Scholar
Hrólfs saga kraka, ed. Slay, Desmond, EA B 1 (Copenhagen: Munksgaard, 1960).Google Scholar
The Icelandic Homily Book: Perg. 15 4° in the Royal Library, Stockholm, ed. Leeuw van Weenen, Andrea de, Íslensk handrit, Series in quarto 3 (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1993).Google Scholar
[Isidore of Seville, ], Isidorus Hispalensis: Sententiae, ed. Cazier, Pierre, CCSL 111 (Turnhout: Brepols, 1998).Google Scholar
Íslendingabók, Kristni Saga: The Book of the Icelanders, The Story of the Conversion, trans. Siân Grønlie (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 2006).Google Scholar
Íslendingabók, Landnámabók, ed. Benediktsson, Jakob, ÍF 1 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1968).Google Scholar
Islendzk æventyri: Isländische Legenden, Novellen und Märchen, ed. Gering, Hugo, 2 vols. (Halle: Buchhandlung des Waisenhauses, 1882–4).Google Scholar
Íslensk hómilíubók: Fornar stólræður, ed. Einarsson, Sigurbjörn, Kvaran, Guðrún and Ingólfsson, Gunnlaugur (Reykjavík: Hið íslenska bókmenntafélag, 1993).Google Scholar
Íslenzk miðaldakvæði: Islandske digte fra senmiddelalderen, ed. Helgason, Jón, 2 vols. (Copenhagen: Gyldendal, 1936–8).Google Scholar
[Jerome, ], Sancti Eusebii Hieronymi Epistulae, Pars 2: Epistulae LXXI–CXX, ed. Hilberg, Isidorus (Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1996).Google Scholar
Jiroušková, Lenka (ed.), Der heilige Wikingerkönig Olav Haraldsson und sein hagiographisches Dossier: Text und Kontext der Passio Olavi (mit kritischer Edition), 2 vols. (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2014).Google Scholar
Friðriksdóttir, Jóhanna Katrín and Þorgeirsson, Haukur (eds.), ‘Hrólfs rímur Gautrekssonar’, Gripla, 26 (2015), 81137.Google Scholar
Jómsvíkinga saga, ed. Hauksson, Þorleifur and Sigurðsson, Marteinn Helgi, ÍF 33 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 2018).Google Scholar
Jóns saga Hólabyskups ens helga, ed. Foote, Peter, EA A 14 (Copenhagen: C. A. Reitzel, 2003).Google Scholar
[Jóns saga] The Saga of St Jón of Hólar, trans. Margaret Cormack, with introduction by Peter Foote (Tempe, AZ: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2021).Google Scholar
Jung, C. G., Civilization in Transition, vol. X in Adler, Gerhard and Hull, R. F. C. (eds.), The Collected Works of C. G. Jung (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1970).Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E., ‘Gvímars saga’, Opuscula, 7 (1979), 106–39.Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E.Jóhannes saga gullmanns: The Icelandic legend of the hairy anchorite’, in Doane, A. N. and Wolf, Kirsten (eds.), Beatus vir: Studies in Early English and Norse Manuscripts in Memory of Phillip Pulsiano (Tempe, AZ: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2006), pp. 175228.Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E. St Oswald of Northumbria: Continental Metamorphoses (Tempe, AZ: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2005).Google Scholar
Kock, Ernst A. (ed.), Den norsk-isländska skaldediktningen, 2 vols. (Lund: C. W. K. Gleerup, 1946–9).Google Scholar
Kollsbók, ed. Halldórsson, Ólafur, Íslensk handrit, Series in quarto 5 (Reykjavík: Handritastofnun Íslands, 1968).Google Scholar
Konungs skuggsiá, ed. Holm-Olsen, Ludvig, 2nd ed., Norrøne tekster 1 (Oslo: Norsk historisk kjeldeskrift-institutt, 1983).Google Scholar
Kormaks saga, ed. Möbius, Theodor (Halle: Buchhandlung des Waisenhauses, 1886).Google Scholar
[Kormaks saga] The Sagas of Kormák and The Sworn Brothers, trans. L. M. Hollander (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1949).Google Scholar
Kvæðasafn eptir nafngreinda íslenzka menn frá miðöldum og síðari öldum, ed. Þorkelsson, Jón (Reykjavík: Ísafold, 1922–7).Google Scholar
Kvæði og dansleikir, ed. Samsonarson, Jón, 2 vols. (Reykjavík: Almenna bókafélagið, 1964).Google Scholar
Langland, William, The Vision of Piers Plowman, ed. Schmidt, A. V. C. (London: Dent, 1995).Google Scholar
Laurentius saga biskups, ed. Björnsson, Árni (Reykjavík: Handritastofnun Íslands, 1969).Google Scholar
Laws of Early Iceland: Grágás, The Codex Regius of Grágás with Material from Other Manuscripts, trans. Andrew Dennis, Peter Foote and Richard Perkins, 2 vols. (Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press, 1980 –2000).Google Scholar
Laxdœla saga, ed. Einar, Ól. Sveinsson, ÍF 5 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1934).Google Scholar
Stephensen, Magnús, Hiálprædi í neyd (Leirárgarðar: n. p., 1801).Google Scholar
Maríu saga, ed. Unger, C. R. (Christiania: Brögger and Christie, 1871).Google Scholar
McNallen, Stephen, Asatru Book of Faith: For Those in Harm’s Way (Nevada City, CA: Asatru Folk Assembly, 2010).Google Scholar
Messuskýringar: Liturgisk symbolik frå den norsk-islandske kyrkja i millomalderen, ed. Kolsrud, Oluf (Oslo: Jacob Dybwad, 1952).Google Scholar
Mills, Alexander Rud, The Odinist Religion: Overcoming Jewish Christianity (Melbourne: A. R. Mills, 1939).Google Scholar
Mitchell, Stephen and Sigurðsson, Gísli, ‘Virgilessrímur’, in Ziolkowski, Jan M. and Michael, C. J. Putnam (eds.), The Virgilian Tradition: The First Fifteen Hundred Years (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2008), pp. 881–8.Google Scholar
Monumenta historica Norvegiæ: Latinske kildeskrifter til Norges historie i middelalderen, ed. Storm, Gustav (Christiania: A. W. Brøgger, 1880).Google Scholar
Morkinskinna, ed. Jakobsson, Ármann and Guðjónsson, Þórður Ingi, 2 vols., ÍF 23–4 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 2011).Google Scholar
Morkinskinna, ed. Jónsson, Finnur, STUAGNL 53 (Copenhagen: Jørgensen, 1932).Google Scholar
Niðrstigningar saga: Sources, Transmission, and Theology of the Old Norse ‘Descent into Hell’, ed. Bullitta, Dario (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2017).Google Scholar
[Njáls saga] Brennu-Njáls saga, ed. Einar, Ól. Sveinsson, ÍF 12 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1954).Google Scholar
Norges gamle love indtil 1387, ed. Keyser, Rudolf et al., 5 vols. (Christiania: Chr. Grøndahl, 1846–95).Google Scholar
Ordo Nidrosiensis Ecclesiae (Orðubók), ed. Gjerløw, Lilli, Libri liturgici provinciae Nidrosiensis medii aevi 2 (Oslo: Norsk historisk kjeldeskrift-institutt, 1968).Google Scholar
Orkneyinga saga, ed. Guðmundsson, Finnbogi, ÍF 34 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1965).Google Scholar
Örvar-Odds saga, ed. Boer, R. C. (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1888).Google Scholar
Østrem, Eyolf (ed.), The Office of Saint Olav: A Study in Chant Transmission (Uppsala: Uppsala University Library, 2001).Google Scholar
Partalopa saga, ed. Andersen, Lise Præstgaard, EA B 28 (Copenhagen: C. A. Reitzel, 1983).Google Scholar
Patrologia Latina Database, http://pld.chadwyck.com/Google Scholar
Pelle, Stephen, ‘An Old Norse adaptation of a Christmas sermon by Honorius Augustodunensis’, Medieval Sermon Studies, 61:1 (2017), 4458.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pelle, StephenAn Old Norse homily and two homiletic fragments from AM 624 4to’, Gripla, 27 (2016), 263–81.Google Scholar
Pelle, StephenAn unedited sermon from the eve of the Icelandic Reformation’, Opuscula, 16 (2018), 113–48.Google Scholar
Pelle, StephenFragments of an Icelandic Christmas sermon based on two sermons of Vincent Ferrer’, Gripla, 29 (2018), 231–59.Google Scholar
Plácidus saga, ed. Tucker, John, with an ed. of Plácitus drápa by Louis-Jensen, Jonna, EA B 31 (Copenhagen: C. A. Reitzel, 1998).Google Scholar
The Poetic Edda, Volume One: Heroic Poems, ed. Dronke, Ursula (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1969).Google Scholar
The Poetic Edda, trans. Carolyne Larrington, 2nd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Pontus rímur, ed. Helgason, Grímur M, Rit Rímnafélagsins 10 (Reykjavík: Rímnafélagið, 1961).Google Scholar
Postola sögur, ed. Unger, C. R. (Christiania: Bentzen, 1874).Google Scholar
Qualiscunque descriptio Islandiae, ed. Burg, Fritz (Hamburg: Selbstverlag der Staats- und Universitäts- Bibliothek, 1928).Google Scholar
Ragnars saga loðbrókar, in Olsen, Magnus (ed.), Völsunga saga ok Ragnars saga loðbrókar, STUAGNL 36 (Copenhagen: S. L. Møller, 1906–8), pp. 111–75.Google Scholar
Ragnarssona þáttr, in Jónsson, Eiríkur and Jónsson, Finnur (eds.), Hauksbók (Copenhagen: Thiele, 1892–6), pp. 458–67.Google Scholar
Reykjahólabók: Islandske helgenlegender, ed. and trans. Loth, Agnete, 2 vols., EA A 15–16 (Copenhagen: Munksgaard, 1969–70).Google Scholar
Riddara-rímur, ed. Wisén, Theodor, STUAGNL 4 (Copenhagen: Berling, 1881).Google Scholar
Rímnasafn: Samling af de ældste islandske rimer, ed. Jónsson, Finnur, 2 vols., STUAGNL 35 (Copenhagen: S. L. Møller, 1905–23).Google Scholar
Samsons saga fagra, ed. Wilson, John, STUAGNL 65 (Copenhagen: Jørgensen, 1953).Google Scholar
Grammaticus, Saxo, Gesta Danorum: The History of the Danes, ed. Friis-Jensen, Karsten and trans. Peter Fisher, 2 vols. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Sigurðar saga þögla, in Loth, Agnete (ed.), Late Medieval Icelandic Romances II, EA B 21 (Copenhagen: Munksgaard, 1963), pp. 93259.Google Scholar
Sigurðar saga þögla: The Shorter Redaction, edited from AM 596 4to, ed. Driscoll, M. J. (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1992).Google Scholar
Die Skída-ríma, ed. Maurer, Konrad (Munich: Akademie, 1869).Google Scholar
Skíðaríma: An Inquiry into Written and Printed Texts, References and Commentaries, ed. Homan, Theo (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1975).Google Scholar
Skikkju rímur, in Cederschiöld, Gustaf and Wulff, F. A. (eds.), Versions nordiques du fabliau français ‘Le mantel mautaillié’ (Lund: C. W. K. Gleerup, 1877).Google Scholar
Skikkjurímur, ed. and trans. Driscoll, M. J., in Kalinke, Marianne E. (eds.), Norse Romance II: The Knights of the Round Table (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1999), pp. 267329.Google Scholar
SkP = Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages (Turnhout: Brepols, 2007–).Google Scholar
I Poetry from the Kings’ Sagas 1: From Mythical Times to c. 1035, ed. Whaley, Diana (2012).Google Scholar
II Poetry from the Kings’ Sagas 2: From c. 1035 to c. 1300, ed. Gade, Kari Ellen (2009).Google Scholar
III Poetry from Treatises on Poetics, ed. Gade, Kari Ellen and Marold, Edith (2017).Google Scholar
IV Poetry on Icelandic History, ed. Nordal, Guðrún et al. (forthcoming).Google Scholar
V Poetry in Sagas of Icelanders, ed. Clunies Ross, Margaret, Gade, Kari Ellen and Wills, Tarrin (2023).Google Scholar
VI Runic Poetry, ed. Marold, Edith, Busch, Vivian and Krüger, Jana (forthcoming).Google Scholar
VII Poetry on Christian Subjects, ed. Clunies Ross, Margaret (2007).Google Scholar
VIII Poetry in fornaldarsögur, ed. Clunies Ross, Margaret (2017).Google Scholar
[Sturluson, Snorri], Codex Regius of the Younger Edda, ed. Wessén, Elias (Copenhagen: Munksgaard, 1940).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri Codex Trajectinus: The Utrecht Manuscript of the Prose Edda, ed. Faulkes, Anthony (Copenhagen: Rosenkilde and Bagger, 1985).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri De Codex Trajectinus van de Snorra Edda, ed. van Eeden, Willem (Leiden: Eduard Ijdo, 1913).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri Codex Wormianus (The Younger Edda): Ms. no. 242 fol. in the Arnemagnean Collection in the University Library of Copenhagen, ed. Nordal, Sigurður (Copenhagen: Levin & Munksgaard, 1931).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri Edda, trans. Anthony Faulkes (London: Dent, 1987).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri Edda: Háttatal, ed. Anthony Faulkes (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 1999).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri Edda: Prologue and Gylfaginning, ed. Faulkes, Anthony, 2nd ed. (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 2005).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri Edda: Skáldskaparmál, ed. Faulkes, Anthony, 2 vols. (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 1998).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri Edda Snorra Sturlusonar, ed. Jónsson, Finnur (Copenhagen: Gyldendal, 1931).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri Edda Snorra Sturlusonar: Edda Snorronis Sturlaei, ed. Sigurðsson, Jón et al., 3 vols. (Copenhagen: Legatum Arnamagnaeanum, 1848–87).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri Heimskringla, ed. Aðalbjarnarson, Bjarni, 3 vols., ÍF 26–8 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1941–51).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri Heimskringla, Volume 1: The Beginnings to Óláfr Tryggvason, trans. Alison Finlay and Anthony Faulkes, 2nd ed. (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 2016).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri The Prose Edda: Norse Mythology, trans. Jesse L. Byock (London: Penguin, 2005).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri Snorre Sturlasons Edda: Uppsala-handskriften DG 11, ed. Grape, Anders (Uppsala: Almqvist & Wiksell, 1962).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri The Uppsala Edda: DG 11 4to, ed. Pálsson, Heimir and trans. Anthony Faulkes (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 2012).Google Scholar
Sturluson, Snorri Two Versions of Snorra Edda from the 17th Century, 1: Edda Magnúsar Ólafssonar (Laufás Edda); 2: Edda Islandorum: Völuspá, Hávamál, ed. Faulkes, Anthony (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar, 1979).Google Scholar
Stjórn, ed. Unger, C. R. (Christiania: Feilberg & Landmark, 1862).Google Scholar
Sturlaugs saga starfsama, in Zitzelsberger, Otto J. (ed. and trans.), The Two Versions of Sturlaugs saga starfsama: A Decipherment, Edition, and Translation of a Fourteenth-Century Icelandic Mythical-Heroic Saga (Düsseldorf: Michael Triltsch, 1969).Google Scholar
Sturlunga saga, ed. Grímsdóttir, Guðrún Ása, 3 vols., ÍF 20–2 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 2021).Google Scholar
Sturlunga saga, ed. Jóhannesson, Jón, Finnbogason, Magnús and Eldjárn, Kristján, 2 vols. (Reykjavík: Sturlunguútgáfan, 1946).Google Scholar
Sturlunga saga: Árna saga biskups, Hrafns saga Sveinbjarnarsonar hin sérstaka, ed. Thorsson, Örnólfur et al. (Reykjavík: Svart á hvítu, 1988).Google Scholar
Sturlúnga-saga edr Islendínga-saga hin mikla, ed. Brynjúlfsson, Gísli et al. (Copenhagen: Þorsteinn Einarsson Rangel, 1817–20).Google Scholar
Sturlunga saga: Efter membranen Króksfjarðarbók, udfyldt efter Reykjarfjarðarbók, ed. Kålund, Kristian, 2 vols. (Copenhagen: Gyldendal, 1906–11).Google Scholar
Sturlunga saga, including the Islendinga saga of Lawman Sturla Thordsson and Other Works, ed. Vigfússon, Guðbrandur, 2 vols. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1878).Google Scholar
Sverris saga, ed. Hauksson, Þorleifur, ÍF 30 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 2007).Google Scholar
Monachus, Theodoricus, Historia de Antiquitate Regum Norwagiensium: An Account of the Ancient History of the Norwegian Kings, trans. David and Ian McDougall (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 1998).Google Scholar
The Third Grammatical Treatise, in Ólsen, Björn Magnússon (ed.), Det tredje og fjærde grammatiske afhandling i Snorres Edda tilligemed de grammatiske afhandlingers prolog og to andre tillæg (Copenhagen: Knudtzon, 1884).Google Scholar
Tristrams saga ok Ísöndar, ed. and trans. Jorgensen, Peter, in Kalinke, Marianne E. (ed.), Norse Romance I: The Tristan Legend (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1999), pp. 23226.Google Scholar
Van Deusen, Natalie M. (ed.), The Saga of the Sister Saints: The Legend of Martha and Mary Magdalen in Norse-Icelandic Translation (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 2019).Google Scholar
Vatnsdœla saga, Hallfreðar saga, Kormáks saga, Hrómundar þáttr halta, Hrafns þáttr Guðrúnarsonar, ed. Einar Ól, Sveinsson, ÍF 8 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1939).Google Scholar
Vestfirðinga sögur, ed. Þórólfsson, Björn K and Jónsson, Guðni, ÍF 6 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenzka fornritafélag, 1943).Google Scholar
Hreinsson, Viðar (ed.), The Complete Sagas of Icelanders, including 49 Tales, 5 vols. (Reykjavík: Leifur Eiríksson, 1997).Google Scholar
Viktors saga ok Blávus, ed. Kristjánsson, Jónas, Riddarasögur 2 (Reykjavík: Handritastofnun Íslands, 1964).Google Scholar
Vilmundar rímur viðutan, ed. Halldórsson, Ólafur, Íslenzkar miðaldarímur 4 (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1975).Google Scholar
Vita Anskarii auctore Rimberto, accedit Vita Rimberti, ed. Waitz, G. (Hanover: Impensis Bibliopolii Hahniani, 1884).Google Scholar
Völsunga saga ok Ragnars saga loðbrókar, ed. Olsen, Magnus, STUAGNL 36 (Copenhagen: S. L. Møller, 1906–8).Google Scholar
van Weenen, de Leeuw, Andrea (ed.), AM 677 4°: Four Early Translations of Theological Texts (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar í íslenskum fræðum, 2018).Google Scholar
Wessén, Elias (ed.), Fragments of the Elder and the Younger Edda (Copenhagen: Munksgaard, 1945).Google Scholar
Whaley, Diana (ed.), The Poetry of Arnórr jarlaskáld: An Edition and Study (Turnhout: Brepols, 1998).Google Scholar
Wolf, Kirsten (ed.), A Female Legendary from Iceland: Kirkjubæjarbók (AM 429 12mo) in the Arnamagnæan Collection, Copenhagen (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Wolf, KirstenA treatise on the seven deadly sins in Icelandic translation’, Gripla, 25 (2014), 163–92.Google Scholar
Wolf, KirstenMargrétar saga II’, Gripla, 21 (2010), 61104.Google Scholar
Wrightson, Kellinde (ed.), Fourteenth-Century Icelandic Verse on the Virgin Mary (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 2001).Google Scholar
Yngvars saga víðförla, ed. Olson, Emil, STUAGNL 39 (Copenhagen: S. L. Møller, 1912).Google Scholar
[Þorláks saga] The Saga of Bishop Thorlak, trans. Ármann Jakobsson and David Clark (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 2013).Google Scholar
Bjarnarson, Þorvaldur (ed.), Leifar fornra kristinna fræða íslenzkra (Copenhagen: Hagerup, 1878).Google Scholar

Secondary Sources

Abram, Christopher, ‘Anglo-Saxon influence on the Old Norwegian Homily Book’, Mediaeval Scandinavia, 14 (2004), 135.Google Scholar
Abram, ChristopherEinarr Skúlason, Snorri Sturluson, and the post-pagan mythological kenning’, in Chase, Martin (ed.), Eddic, Skaldic, and Beyond: Poetic Variety in Medieval Iceland and Norway (New York: Fordham University Press, 2014), pp. 4461.Google Scholar
Abram, ChristopherGylfaginning and early medieval conversion theory’, Saga-Book, 33 (2009), 524.Google Scholar
Abram, ChristopherModeling religious experience in Old Norse conversion narratives: The case of Óláfr Tryggvason and Hallfreðr vandræðaskáld’, Speculum, 90:1 (2015), 114–57.Google Scholar
Abram, Christopher Myths of the Pagan North: The Gods of the Norsemen (London: Continuum, 2011).Google Scholar
Aceto, Maurizio et al., ‘Non invasive analysis of miniature paintings: Proposal for an analytical protocol’, Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy, 91 (2012), 352–9.Google Scholar
Acker, Paul and Larrington, Carolyne (eds.), Revisiting the Poetic Edda: Essays on Old Norse Heroic Legend (London and New York: Routledge, 2013).Google Scholar
Guðmundsdóttir, Aðalheiður, Arfur aldanna I: Handan Hindarfjalls (Reykjavík: Háskólaútgáfan, 2021).Google Scholar
Guðmundsdóttir, Aðalheiður“How do you know if it is love or lust?” On gender, status, and violence in Old Norse literature’, Interfaces, 2 (2016), 189209.Google Scholar
Arnórsdóttir, Agnes Siggerður, Konur og Vígamenn: Staða Kynjanna á Íslandi á 12. og 13. Öld (Reykjavík: Sagnfræðistofnun Háskóla Íslands, 1995).Google Scholar
Agostino, A. et al., ‘On the hierarchical use of colourants in a 15th century Book of Hours’, Heritage, 4 (2021), 1786–806.Google Scholar
Ahronson, Kristján, Into the Ocean: Vikings, Irish, and Environmental Change in Iceland and the North (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Andersson, Gunnar, ‘Among trees, bones, and stones: The sacred grove at Lunda’, in Andrén, Anders, Jennbert, Kristina and Raudvere, Catharina (eds.), Old Norse Religion in Long-Term Perspectives: Origins, Changes, and Interactions (Lund: Nordic Academic, 2006), pp. 195–9.Google Scholar
Andersson, Theodore M., ‘The first Icelandic king’s saga: Oddr Snorrason’s Óláfs saga Tryggvasonar or The Oldest Saga of Saint Olaf?’, JEPG, 103:2 (2004), 139–55.Google Scholar
Andersson, Theodore M. The Growth of the Medieval Icelandic Sagas (1180–1280) (Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Andersson, Theodore M. The Icelandic Family Saga: An Analytic Reading (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1967).Google Scholar
Andersson, Theodore M.Kings’ sagas (konungasögur)’, in Clover, Carol J. and Lindow, John (eds.), Old Norse-Icelandic Literature: A Critical Guide (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 197238.Google Scholar
Andersson, Theodore M. The Legend of Brynhild (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1980).Google Scholar
Andersson, Theodore M. The Partisan Muse in the Early Icelandic Sagas (1200–1250) (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Andersson, Theodore M. The Problem of Icelandic Saga Origins: A Historical Survey (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1964).Google Scholar
Andersson, Theodore M.Skald sagas in their literary context 3: The love triangle theme’, in Poole, Russell (ed.), Skaldsagas: Text, Vocation, and Desire in the Icelandic Sagas of Poets (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2001), pp. 272–84.Google Scholar
Andersson, Theodore M. and Miller, William Ian, Law and Literature in Medieval Iceland: Ljósvetninga saga and Valla-Ljóts saga (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1989).Google Scholar
Jakobsson, Ármann, A Sense of Belonging: Morkinskinna and Icelandic Identity, c. 1220, trans. Fredrik Heinemann (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2014).Google Scholar
Jakobsson, ÁrmannThe Homer of the north or: Who was Sigurður the blind?’, European Journal of Scandinavian Studies, 44:1 (2014), 419.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, ÁrmannLaw personified: The ignored climactic speeches of Brennu-Njáls saga’, in Scheel, Roland (ed.), Narrating Law and Laws of Narration in Medieval Scandinavia (Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter, 2020), pp. 7787.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, ÁrmannMasculinity and politics in Njáls saga’, Viator, 38:1 (2007), 191215.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, ÁrmannLe roi chevalier: The royal ideology and genre of Hrólfs saga kraka’, SS, 71:2 (1999), 139–66.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, ÁrmannRoyal biography’, in McTurk, Rory (ed.), A Companion to Old Norse-Icelandic Literature and Culture (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005), pp. 388402.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, ÁrmannSnorri and his death: Youth, violence, and autobiography in medieval Iceland’, SS, 75:3 (2003), 317–40.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, ÁrmannThe taxonomy of the non-existent: Some medieval Icelandic concepts of the paranormal’, Fabula, 54 (2013), 199213.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, Ármann The Troll Inside You: Paranormal Activity in the Medieval North (Santa Barbara, CA: Punctum Books, 2017).Google Scholar
Jakobsson, ÁrmannViews to a kill: Sturla Þórðarson and the murder in the cellar’, Saga-Book, 39 (2015), 520.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, Ármann and Mayburd, Miriam (eds.), Paranormal Encounters in Iceland 1150–1400 (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020).Google Scholar
Jakobsson, Ármann, Lassen, Annette and Ney, Agneta (eds.), Fornaldarsagornas struktur och ideologi: Handlingar från ett symposium i Uppsala 31.8–2.9 2001 (Uppsala: Uppsala Universitet, 2003).Google Scholar
Stefánsdóttir, Arna Björk, ‘Um upptöku pappírs á Íslandi á sextandu og sautjándu öld’, Sagnir, 30 (2013), 226–36.Google Scholar
Björnsson, Árni, Wagner and the Volsungs: Icelandic Sources of Der Ring des Nibelungen (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 2003).Google Scholar
Júlíusson, Árni Daníel, ‘Signs of power: Manorial demesnes in medieval Iceland’, VMS, 6 (2010), 129.Google Scholar
Arthur, Susanne M., ‘The importance of marital and maternal ties in the distribution of Icelandic manuscripts from the Middle Ages to the seventeenth century’, Gripla, 23 (2012), 201–33.Google Scholar
Arthur, Susanne M.“Njáls saga er þetta. Loftur hefur lesið mig.” Readership and reception of Njáls saga: A selection of marginal notes and paratextual features’, in Lethbridge, Emily and Óskarsdóttir, Svanhildur (eds.), New Studies in the Manuscript Tradition of Njáls saga: The historia mutila of Njála (Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Institute Publications, 2018), pp. 231–55.Google Scholar
Egilsdóttir, Ásdís, ‘Eru biskupasögur til?’, Skáldskaparmál, 2 (1992), 207–20.Google Scholar
Egilsdóttir, ÁsdísFrom orality to literacy: Remembering the past and the present in Jóns saga helga’, in Jakobsson, Ármann et al. (eds.), Fræðinæmi: Greinar gefnar út í tilefni af 70 ára afmæli Ásdísar Egilsdóttur (Reykjavík: Hið íslenska bókmenntafélag, 2016), pp. 219–28.Google Scholar
Egilsdóttir, ÁsdísHrafn Sveinbjarnarson, pilgrim and martyr’, in Williams, Gareth and Bibire, Paul (eds.), Sagas, Saints and Settlements (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2004), pp. 2939.Google Scholar
Egilsdóttir, ÁsdísKvendýrlingar og kvenímynd trúarlegra bókmennta á Íslandi’, in Jakobsson, Ármann et al. (eds.), Fræðinæmi: Greinar gefnar út í tilefni af 70 ára afmæli Ásdísar Egilsdóttur (Reykjavík: Hið íslenska bókmenntafélag, 2016), pp. 181202.Google Scholar
Egilsdóttir, ÁsdísMasculinity, Christianity, and (non)violence’, in Evans, Gareth Lloyd and Hancock, Jessica Clare (eds.), Masculinities in Old Norse Literature (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2020), pp. 113–26.Google Scholar
Egilsdóttir, ÁsdísMiracles and emotions in Old Norse-Icelandic literature’, in Bullitta, Dario and Van Deusen, Natalie M. (eds.), Sainthood, Scriptoria, and Secular Erudition in Medieval and Early Modern Scandinavia: Essays in Honour of Kirsten Wolf (Turnhout: Brepols, 2022), pp. 85100.Google Scholar
Egilsdóttir, ÁsdísRemembering saints and bishops in medieval Iceland’, in Bullitta, Dario and Wolf, Kirsten (eds.), Saints and Their Legacies in Medieval Iceland (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2021), pp. 175–96.Google Scholar
Egilsdóttir, ÁsdísSkjaldmær drottins: Frásögnin af Hildi einsetukonu í Jóns sögu helga’, Studia Theologica Islandica, 31 (2010), 2942.Google Scholar
Egilsdóttir, ÁsdísStudy, memorize, compose’, in Ruggerini, Maria Elena (ed.), Studi Anglo-Norreni in Onore di John S. McKinnell (Cagliari: Cooperativa Universitaria Editrice Cagliaritana, 2009), pp. 378–86.Google Scholar
Ashby, Steven P., A Viking Way of Life: Combs and Communities in Britain and Scandinavia c. AD 800–1100 (Stroud: Amberley, 2014).Google Scholar
Ashby, Steven P. and Leonard, Alison, Vikings (London: Thames and Hudson, 2018).Google Scholar
Ashurst, David, The Ethics of Empire in the Saga of Alexander the Great: A Study Based on MS AM 519a 4to (Reykjavík: Bókmenntafræðistofnun Háskóla Íslands, 2009).Google Scholar
Assmann, Jan, Das kulturelle Gedächtnis: Schrift, Erinnerung und politische Identität in frühen Hochkulturen (Munich: Beck, 1992), translated into English as Cultural Memory and Early Civilization: Writing, Remembrance, and Political Imagination (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Attwood, Katrina, ‘Christian poetry’, in McTurk, Rory (ed.), A Companion to Old Norse-Icelandic Literature and Culture (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005), pp. 4363.Google Scholar
Baetke, Walter, Die Götterlehre der Snorra-Edda (Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, 1950).Google Scholar
Bagge, Sverre, From Gang Leader to the Lord’s Anointed: Kingship in Sverris saga and Hákonar saga Hákonarsonar (Odense: Odense University Press, 1996).Google Scholar
Bakhtin, M. M., The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays, trans. Caryl Emerson and Michael Holquist (Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 1981).Google Scholar
Hafstað, Baldur, Die Egils saga und ihr Verhältnis zu anderen Werken des nordischen Mittelalters (Reykjavík: Rannsóknarstofnun Kennaraháskóla Íslands, 1995).Google Scholar
Bampi, Massimiliano, ‘Genre’, in Jakobsson, Ármann and Jakobsson, Sverrir (eds.), The Routledge Research Companion to the Medieval Icelandic Sagas (London and New York: Routledge, 2017), pp. 414.Google Scholar
Bampi, Massimiliano and Richter, Anna Katharina (eds.), The Eufemiaviser and the Reception of Courtly Culture in Late Medieval Denmark (Tübingen: Narr Francke Attempto, 2021).Google Scholar
Bampi, Massimiliano, Larrington, Carolyne and Rikhardsdottir, Sif (eds.), A Critical Companion to Old Norse Literary Genre (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2020).Google Scholar
Bandlien, Bjørn, ‘Arthurian knights in fourteenth-century Iceland: Erex saga and Ívens saga in the world of Ormur Snorrason’, Arthuriana, 23:4 (2013) 637.Google Scholar
Bandlien, Bjørn Strategies of Passion: Love and Marriage in Medieval Iceland and Norway, trans. Betsy van der Hoek (Turnhout: Brepols, 2005).Google Scholar
Barnes, Geraldine, The Bookish Riddarasögur: Writing Romance in Late Mediaeval Iceland (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2014).Google Scholar
Barnes, GeraldineParcevals saga: Riddara Skuggsjá?’, ANF, 99 (1984), 4962.Google Scholar
Barnes, GeraldineRomance in Iceland’, in Ross, Margaret Clunies (ed.), Old Icelandic Literature and Society (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), pp. 266–86.Google Scholar
Barnes, GeraldineThe Tristan legend’, in Kalinke, Marianne E. (ed.), The Arthur of the North: The Arthurian Legend in the Norse and Rus’ Realms (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2011), pp. 6176.Google Scholar
Barraclough, Eleanor Rosamund, ‘Inside outlawry in Grettis Saga Ásmundarsonar and Gísla Saga Súrssonar: Landscape in the outlaw sagas’, SS, 82:4 (2010), 365–88.Google Scholar
Barraclough, Eleanor RosamundSailing the saga seas: Narrative, cultural, and geographical perspectives in the North Atlantic voyages of the Íslendingasögur’, Journal of the North Atlantic, 18 (2012), 112.Google Scholar
Bartlett, Robert, The Making of Europe: Conquest, Colonization and Cultural Change, 950–1350 (London: Allen Lane, 1993).Google Scholar
Bartlett, Robert Why Can the Dead Do Such Great Things? Saints and Worshippers from the Martyrs to the Reformation (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Batten, Caroline R., ‘Strengði hon elfi: Female reactions to male violence in eddic heroic poetry’, SS, 91:3 (2019), 289321.Google Scholar
Battista, Simonetta, ‘The “compilator” and contemporary literary culture in Old Norse hagiography’, VMS, 1 (2005), 113.Google Scholar
Battista, SimonettaInterpretations of the Roman pantheon in the Old Norse hagiographic sagas’, in Barnes, Geraldine and Ross, Margaret Clunies (eds.), Old Norse Myths, Literature and Society: The Proceedings of the 11th International Saga Conference, 2–7 July 2000, University of Sydney (Sydney: Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Sydney, 2000), pp. 2434.Google Scholar
Battista, SimonettaOld Norse hagiography and the question of the Latin sources’, in Simek, Rudolf and Meurer, Judith (eds.), Scandinavia and Christian Europe in the Middle Ages: Papers of the 12th International Saga Conference, Bonn, Germany, 28th July2nd August 2003 (Bonn: Universität Bonn, 2003), pp. 2633.Google Scholar
Bek-Pedersen, Karen, ‘Fate and weaving: Justification of a metaphor’, VMS, 5 (2009), 2339.Google Scholar
Bekker-Nielsen, Hans et al., Norrøn Fortællekunst: Kapitler af den norsk-islandske Middelalderlitteraturs Historie (Copenhagen: Akademisk Forlag, 1965).Google Scholar
Eyþórsson, Benedikt, ‘History of the Icelandic Church 1000–1300: Status of research’, in Þorláksson, Helgi (ed.), Church Centres: Church Centres in Iceland from the 11th to the 13th Century and Their Parallels in Other Countries (Reykholt: Snorrastofa Cultural and Medieval Centre, 2005), pp. 1969.Google Scholar
Berg, Kristin, ‘Homilieboka – for hvem og til hva?’, in Haugen, Odd Einar and Ommundsen, Åslaug (eds.), Vår eldste bok: Skrift, miljø og biletbruk i den norske homilieboka (Oslo: Novus, 2010), pp. 5572.Google Scholar
Berman, Melissa A., ‘The political sagas’, SS, 57:2 (1985), 113–29.Google Scholar
Best, Stephen P. et al., ‘Identification by Raman microscopy and visible reflectance spectroscopy of pigments on an Icelandic manuscript’, Studies in Conservation, 40 (1995), 3140.Google Scholar
Bibire, Paul, ‘Verses in the Íslendingasögur’, in Kristjánsson, Jónas (ed.), Alþjóðlegt fornsagnaþing, Reykjavík 2.–8. ágúst: Fyrirlestrar III (Reykjavík: University of Iceland, 1973), vol. I, 28 pp. separately paginated.Google Scholar
Eriksen, Bienko, Sarah, ‘Traversing the uncanny valley: Glámr in narratological space’, in Jakobsson, Ármann and Mayburd, Miriam (eds.), Paranormal Encounters in Iceland 1150–1400 (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020), pp. 89108.Google Scholar
Aðalbjarnarson, Bjarni, ‘Bemerkninger om de eldste bispesagaer’, Studia Islandica, 17 (1958), 2737.Google Scholar
Einarsson, Bjarni, ‘The last hour of Hallfreðr vandræðaskáld as described in Hallfreðarsaga’, in Bekker-Nielsen, Hans, Foote, Peter and Olsen, Olaf (eds.), Proceedings of the Eighth Viking Congress, Århus 24–31 August 1977 (Odense: Odense University Press, 1981), pp. 217–21.Google Scholar
Einarsson, Bjarni Litterære forudsætninger for Egils saga (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1975).Google Scholar
Einarsson, BjarniOn the role of verse in saga-literature’, Medieval Scandinavia, 7 (1974), 118–25.Google Scholar
Einarsson, Bjarni Skáldasögur: Um uppruna og eðli ástaskáldasagnanna fornu (Reykjavík: Bókaútgáfa Menningarsjóðs, 1961).Google Scholar
Guðnason, Bjarni, ‘Aldur og einkenni Bjarnar sögu Hítdœlakappa’, in Sigurðsson, Gísli et al. (eds.), Sagnaþing helgað Jónasi Kristjánssyni sjötugum 10. apríl 1994, 2 vols. (Reykjavík: Hið íslenska bókmenntafélag, 1994), vol. I, pp. 6986.Google Scholar
Guðnason, BjarniThe Icelandic sources of Saxo Grammaticus’, in Friis-Jensen, Karsten (ed.), Saxo Grammaticus: A Medieval Author between Norse and Latin Culture (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 1981), pp. 7993.Google Scholar
Guðnason, Bjarni Um Skjöldungasögu (Reykjavík: Bókaútgáfa Menningarsjóðs, 1963).Google Scholar
Ásgeirsson, Bjarni Gunnar, ‘Anecdotes of several archbishops of Canterbury: A lost bifolium from Reynistaðarbók discovered in the British Library’, Gripla, 32 (2021), 754.Google Scholar
Þorsteinsson, Bjarni, Íslenzk þjóðlög (Copenhagen: S. L. Møller, 1906–9).Google Scholar
Þórólfsson, Björn Karel, ‘Dróttkvætt og rímur’, Skírnir, 124 (1950), 175209.Google Scholar
Þórólfsson, Björn Karel Rímur fyrir 1600 (Copenhagen: S. L. Møller, 1934).Google Scholar
Ólsen, Björn Magnússon, Om den såkaldte Sturlunga-prolog og dens formodede vidnesbyrd om de islandske slætsagaers alder (Christiania: Jacob Dybwad, 1910).Google Scholar
Ólsen, Björn MagnússonUm Sturlungu’, Safn til sögu Íslands og íslenzkra bókmennta að fornu og nýju, 3 (1902), 193510.Google Scholar
Þorsteinsson, Björn, Íslensk miðaldasaga (Reykjavík: Sögufélag, 1980).Google Scholar
Blöndal, Sigfús and Benedikz, Benedikt S., The Varangians of Byzantium: An Aspect of Byzantine Military History (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1978).Google Scholar
Kvaran, Böðvar, Auðlegð Íslendinga: Brot úr sögu íslenzkrar bókaútgáfu og prentunar frá öndverðu fram á þessa öld (Reykjavík: Hið íslenska bókmenntafélag, 1995).Google Scholar
Böldl, Klaus, Der Mythos der Edda: Nordische Mythologie zwischen europäischer Aufklärung und nationaler Romantik (Tübingen: Francke, 2000).Google Scholar
Bonde, Niels and Springborg, Peter, ‘Wooden bindings and tree-rings: A preliminary report’, Care and Conservation of Manuscripts, 8 (2005), 918.Google Scholar
Bønding, Sophie, Martinsen, Lone Kølle and Stahl, Pierre-Brice (eds.), Mythology and Nation Building: N. F. S. Grundtvig and His European Contemporaries (Aarhus: Aarhus University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Bornholdt, Claudia, Engaging Moments: The Origins of Medieval Bridal-Quest Narrative (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2005).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boulhosa, Patricia Pires, ‘Of fish and ships in medieval Iceland’, in Imsen, Steinar (ed.), The Norwegian Domination and the Norse World c. 1100–c. 1400 (Trondheim: Tapir Academic Press, 2010), pp. 175–97.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre, Outline of a Theory of Practice, trans. Richard Nice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977).Google Scholar
Boyer, Régis, ‘Vita – historia – saga’, Gripla, 6 (1984), 113–28.Google Scholar
Bradley, Richard, A Geography of Offerings: Deposits of Valuables in the Landscapes of Ancient Europe (Oxford: Oxbow, 2017).Google Scholar
Bragg, Lois, ‘Generational tensions in Sturlunga saga’, ANF, 112 (1997), 534.Google Scholar
Bredsdorff, Thomas, Chaos and Love: The Philosophy of the Icelandic Family Sagas, trans. John Tucker (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2001), originally published in Danish as Kaos og Kærlighed: En Studie i Islændingesagaers Livsbillede (Copenhagen: Gyldendal, 1971).Google Scholar
Briggs, Charles F., ‘Literacy, reading, and writing in the medieval west’, Journal of Medieval History, 26:4 (2000), 397420.Google Scholar
Brown, Peter, ‘Society and the supernatural: A medieval change’, Daedalus, 104:2 (1975), 133–51.Google Scholar
Burrows, Hannah, ‘Cold cases: Law and legal detail in the Íslendingasögur’, Parergon, 26:1 (2009), 3555.Google Scholar
Burrows, HannahCourt poetry: Assemblies and skaldic verse’, in Scheel, Roland (ed.), Narrating Law and Laws of Narration in Medieval Scandinavia (Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter, 2020), pp. 91116.Google Scholar
Bynum, Caroline Walker, Christian Materiality: An Essay on Religion in Late Medieval Europe (New York: Zone Books, 2011).Google Scholar
Byock, Jesse L., Feud in the Icelandic Saga (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1982).Google Scholar
Byock, Jesse L.History and the sagas: The effect of nationalism’, in Pálsson, Gísli (ed.), From Sagas to Society: Comparative Approaches to Early Iceland (Enfield Lock: Hisarlik Press, 1992), pp. 4359.Google Scholar
Byock, Jesse L. Viking Age Iceland (London: Penguin, 2001).Google Scholar
Caldwell, Christopher, ‘What the alt-right really means’, The New York Times, 2 December 2016, www.nytimes.com/2016/12/02/opinion/sunday/what-the-alt-right-really-means.html.Google Scholar
Callow, Chris, ‘Iceland’s medieval coastal market places: Dögurðarnes in its economic, social and political context’, in Brendalsmo, Jan, Gansum, Terje and Eliassen, Finn-Einar (eds.), Strandsteder, utvikinglingssteder og småbyer i vikingtid, middelalder og tidlig nytid (ca. 800ca. 1800) (Oslo: Novus, 2010), pp. 213–29.Google Scholar
Callow, Chris Landscape, Tradition and Power in Medieval Iceland: Dalir and the Eyjafjörður Region c. 870–c. 1265 (Leiden: Brill, 2020).Google Scholar
Callow, Chris and Evans, Charles, ‘The mystery of plague in medieval Iceland’, Journal of Medieval History, 42:2 (2016), 254–84.Google Scholar
Cameron, Averil, Christianity and the Rhetoric of Empire: The Development of Christian Discourse (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1991).Google Scholar
Carlquist, Jonas, ‘The history of Old Nordic manuscripts III: Old Swedish’, in Bandle, Oskar et al. (eds.), The Nordic Languages: An International Handbook of the History of the North Germanic Languages, 2 vols. (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2002–5), vol. I, pp. 808–16.Google Scholar
Carruthers, Mary J., The Book of Memory: A Study of Memory in Medieval Culture (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990).Google Scholar
Carruthers, Mary J. The Craft of Thought: Meditation, Rhetoric, and the Making of Images, 4001200 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Carstens, Lydia, ‘Powerful space: The Iron-Age hall and its development during the Viking Age’, in Eriksen, Marianne Hem et al. (eds.), Viking Worlds: Things, Spaces and Movement (Oxford: Oxbow, 2015), pp. 1227.Google Scholar
Cartwright, Ben, ‘Making the cloth that binds us: The role of textile production in producing Viking Age identities’, in Hem Eriksen, Marianne et al. (eds.), Viking Worlds: Things, Spaces and Movement (Oxford: Oxbow, 2015), pp. 160–78.Google Scholar
Cattaneo, Grégory, ‘Réflexion sur les hreppar: Les communautés d’habitants de l’Islande médiévale’, Cahiers de Civilisation Médiévale, 57 (2014), 113–31.Google Scholar
Chandler, Alice, A Dream of Order: The Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth-Century English Literature (Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 1970).Google Scholar
Chandler, AliceCarlyle and the medievalism of the north’, in Utz, Richard and Shippey, Tom (eds.), Medievalism in the Modern World: Essays in Honour of Leslie J. Workman (Turnhout: Brepols, 1998), pp. 173–91.Google Scholar
Chase, Martin, ‘Christian poetry: 2. West Norse’, in Pulsiano, Phillip and Wolf, Kirsten (eds.), Medieval Scandinavia: An Encyclopedia (New York and London: Garland, 1993), pp. 73–7.Google Scholar
Chase, MartinDevotional poetry at the end of the Middle Ages in Iceland’, in Chase, Martin (ed.), Eddic, Skaldic, and Beyond: Poetic Variety in Medieval Iceland and Norway (New York: Fordham University Press, 2014), pp. 136–49.Google Scholar
Choe, Sharon, ‘Deformed bodies and Norse origins in William Blake’, Studies in English Literature, 1500–1900, 60:3 (2020), 529–49.Google Scholar
Christensen, Tom, ‘Lejre beyond legend: The archaeological evidence’, Journal of Danish Archaeology, 10:1 (1991), 163–85.Google Scholar
Ciklamini, Marlene, ‘Biographical reflections in Íslendinga saga: A mirror of personal values’, SS, 55:3 (1983), 205–21.Google Scholar
Ciklamini, MarleneDivine will and the guises of truth in Geirmundar þáttr heljarskinns’, Skandinavistik, 11:2 (1981), 81–8.Google Scholar
Ciklamini, MarleneSainthood in the making: The arduous path of Guðmundr the Good, Iceland’s uncanonized saint’, alvíssmál, 11 (2004), 5574.Google Scholar
Clark, David, Gender, Violence, and the Past in Edda and Saga (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Clark, DavidHeroic homosociality and homophobia in the Helgi poems’, in Acker, Paul and Larrington, Carolyne (eds.), Revisiting the Poetic Edda: Essays on Old Norse Heroic Legend (London and New York: Routledge, 2013), pp. 1127.Google Scholar
Clark, David and Friðriksdóttir, Jóhanna Katrín, ‘The representation of gender in eddic poetry’, in Larrington, Carolyne, Quinn, Judy and Schorn, Brittany (eds.), A Handbook to Eddic Poetry: Myths and Legends of Ancient Scandinavia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016), pp. 331–48.Google Scholar
Clover, Carol J., ‘Hallfreðar saga’, in Pulsiano, Phillip and Wolf, Kirsten (eds.), Medieval Scandinavia: An Encyclopedia (New York and London: Garland, 1993), p. 263.Google Scholar
Clover, Carol J.Hárbarðsljóð as generic farce’, SS, 51:2 (1979), 124–45.Google Scholar
Clover, Carol J.Hildigunnr’s lament’, in Lindow, John, Lönnroth, Lars and Weber, Gerd Wolfgang (eds.), Structure and Meaning in Old Norse Literature: New Approaches to Textual Analysis and Literary Criticism (Odense: Odense University Press, 1986), pp. 141–83.Google Scholar
Clover, Carol J.Maiden warriors and other sons’, JEGP, 85:1 (1986), 3549.Google Scholar
Clover, Carol J. The Medieval Saga (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1982).Google Scholar
Clover, Carol J.Regardless of sex: Men, women and power in early northern Europe’, Speculum, 68:2 (1993), 363–87.Google Scholar
Clover, Carol J.Scene in saga-composition’, ANF, 89 (1974), 5783.Google Scholar
Clover, Carol J.Völsunga saga and the missing lai of Marie de France’, in Simek, Rudolf, Kristjánsson, Jónas and Bekker-Nielsen, Hans (eds.), Sagnaskemmtun: Studies in Honour of Hermann Pálsson on His 65th Birthday, 26th May 1986 (Vienna: Hermann Böhlaus Nachfolger, 1986), pp. 7984.Google Scholar
Ross, Clunies, Margaret, A History of Old Norse Poetry and Poetics (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2005).Google Scholar
Ross, CluniesThe autographical turn in late medieval Icelandic poetry’, in Müller-Wille, Klaus et al. (eds.), Skandinavische Schriftlandschaften: Vänbok till Jürg Glauser (Tübingen: Narr Francke Attempto, 2017), pp. 150–4.Google Scholar
Ross, Clunies The Cambridge Introduction to the Old Norse-Icelandic Saga (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Ross, CluniesThe Eddica minora: A lesser Poetic Edda?’, in Acker, Paul and Larrington, Carolyne (eds.), Revisiting the Poetic Edda: Essays on Old Norse Heroic Legend (London and New York: Routledge, 2013), pp. 183201.Google Scholar
Ross, CluniesFimm líkamsins vit: The development of a new lexical set in early Norse Christian literature’, ANF, 102 (1987), 197206.Google Scholar
Ross, CluniesLiterary recreations of pre-Christian religion in sagas and independent þættir of Icelanders’, in McKinnell, John (ed.), The Pre-Christian Religions of the North: Written Sources (Turnhout: Brepols, forthcoming).Google Scholar
Ross, CluniesLove in a cold climate – with the Virgin Mary’, in Wolf, Kirsten and Denzin, Johanna (eds.), Romance and Love in Late Medieval and Early Modern Iceland: Essays in Honor of Marianne Kalinke (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2008), pp. 303–17.Google Scholar
Ross, CluniesPoetry in fornaldarsögur: Origins, nature and purpose’, in Lassen, Annette, Ney, Agneta and Jakobsson, Ármann (eds.), The Legendary Sagas: Origins and Development (Reykjavík: University of Iceland Press, 2012), pp. 121–38.Google Scholar
Ross, Clunies Poetry in Sagas of Icelanders (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2022).Google Scholar
Ross, Clunies Prolonged Echoes: Old Norse Myths in Medieval Northern Society, 2 vols. (Odense: Odense University Press, 1994–8).Google Scholar
Ross, CluniesRealism and the fantastic in the Old Icelandic sagas’, SS, 74:4 (2002), 443–54.Google Scholar
Ross, CluniesReginnaglar’, in Kaplan, Merrill and Tangherlini, Timothy R. (eds.), News from Other Worlds: Studies in Nordic Folklore, Mythology and Culture in Honor of John F. Lindow (Berkeley, CA: North Pinehurst Press, 2012), pp. 321.Google Scholar
Ross, CluniesRoyal ideology in early Scandinavia: A theory versus the texts’, JEGP, 113:1 (2014), 1833.Google Scholar
Ross, CluniesThe skald sagas as a genre: Definitions and typical features’, in Poole, Russell (ed.), Skaldsagas: Text, Vocation, and Desire in the Icelandic Sagas of Poets (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2001), pp. 2549.Google Scholar
Ross, Clunies Skáldskaparmál: Snorri Sturluson’s Ars Poetica and Medieval Theories of Language (Odense: Odense University Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Ross, CluniesVerse and prose in Egils Saga Skallagrímssonar’, in Quinn, Judy and Lethbridge, Emily (eds.), Creating the Medieval Saga: Versions, Variability and Editorial Interpretations of Old Norse Saga Literature (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2010), pp. 191212.Google Scholar
Ross, Clunies (ed.), The Pre-Christian Religions of the North: Research and Reception, 2 vols. (Turnhout: Brepols, 2018).Google Scholar
Cole, Richard, ‘The Jew who wasn’t there: Studies on Jews and their absence in Old Norse literature’, unpublished PhD thesis, Harvard University (2015).Google Scholar
Collings, Lucy, ‘The Codex Scardensis: Studies in Icelandic hagiography’, unpublished PhD thesis, Cornell University (1969).Google Scholar
Collings, Lucy ‘The Málskrúðsfræði and the Latin tradition in Iceland’, unpublished MA thesis, Cornell University (1967).Google Scholar
Cook, Robert, ‘The reader in Grettis saga’, Saga-Book, 21 (1982–5), 133–54.Google Scholar
Cormack, Margaret, ‘Better off dead: Approaches to medieval miracles’, in DuBois, Thomas A. (ed.), Sanctity in the North: Saints, Lives, and Cults in Medieval Scandinavia (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2008), pp. 334–52.Google Scholar
Cormack, Margaret The Saints in Iceland: Their Veneration from the Conversion to 1400 (Brussels: Société des Bollandistes, 1994).Google Scholar
Cormack, MargaretSaints of medieval Hólar: A statistical survey of the veneration of saints in the diocese’, Peregrinations, 3:2 (2011), 737.Google Scholar
Cormack, MargaretSt Cecilia’s Icelandic miracles in Holm Perg 2 fol.’, in Bullitta, Dario and Van Deusen, Natalie M. (eds.), Sainthood, Scriptoria, and Secular Erudition in Medieval and Early Modern Scandinavia: Essays in Honour of Kirsten Wolf (Turnhout: Brepols, 2022), pp. 101–14.Google Scholar
Coroban, Costel, Ideology and Power in Norway and Iceland, 1150–1250 (Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2018).Google Scholar
Craigie, W. A., The Romantic Poetry of Iceland (Glasgow: Jackson, 1950).Google Scholar
Crawford, Jackson, ‘Bleikr, gulr, and the categorization of color in Old Norse’, JEGP, 115:2 (2016), 239–52.Google Scholar
Cronan, Dennis, ‘A Reading of Guðrúnarqviða Önnor’, SS, 57:2 (1985), 174–87.Google Scholar
Crumlin-Pedersen, Ole and Thye, Birgitte Munch (eds.), The Ship as Symbol in Prehistoric and Medieval Scandinavia (Copenhagen: National Museum of Denmark, 1995).Google Scholar
Cruse, D. A., Lexical Semantics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986).Google Scholar
Culler, Jonathan, ‘Structuralism’, in Kritzman, Lawrence D. (ed.), The Columbia History of Twentieth-Century French Thought (New York: Columbia University Press, 2006), pp. 110–17.Google Scholar
Curschman, Michael, ‘Eddic poetry and continental heroic legend: The case of the Third Lay of Guðrún (Guðrúnarqviða)’, in Calder, Daniel G. and Craig Christy, T. (eds.), Germania: Comparative Studies in the Old Germanic Languages and Literatures (Woodbridge: D. S. Brewer, 1988), pp. 143–60.Google Scholar
Damico, Helen, ‘Dystopic conditions of the mind: Toward a study of landscape in Grettissaga’, In Geardagum, 7 (1986), 115.Google Scholar
Danielsson, Tommy, Hrafnkels Saga: Eller fallet med den undflyende traditionen (Stockholm: Gidlunds Förlag, 2002).Google Scholar
Danielsson, Tommy Om den isländska släktsagans uppbyggnad (Uppsala: Uppsala Universitet, 1986).Google Scholar
Danielsson, Tommy Sagorna om Norges kungar: Från Magnús Góði till Magnús Erlingsson (Stockholm: Gidlunds Förlag, 2002).Google Scholar
Davidson, Daphne, ‘Earl Hákon and his poets’, unpublished DPhil dissertation, University of Oxford (1984).Google Scholar
Erlingsson, Davíð, ‘Prose and verse in Icelandic legendary fiction’, in Catháin, Séamas Ó, Héalaí, Pádraig Ó and Almqvist, Bo (eds.), The Heroic Process: Form, Function and Fantasy in Folk Epic: The Proceedings of the International Folk Epic Conference, University College Dublin, 26 September 1985 (Dublin: Glendale Press, 1987), pp. 371–93.Google Scholar
Ólafsson, Davíð, ‘Sagas in handwritten and printed books in nineteenth-century Iceland’, in Würth, Stefanie, Jonuks, Tõnno and Kristinsson, Axel (eds.), Sagas and Societies: International Conference at Borgarnes, Iceland, September 5.–9. 2002 (Tübingen: Universität Tübingen, 2002), 11 pp.Google Scholar
Ólafsson, DavíðScribal communities in Iceland: The case of Sighvatur Grímsson’, in Kuismin, Anna and Driscoll, M. J. (eds.), White Field, Black Seeds: Nordic Literacy Practices in the Long Nineteenth Century (Helsinki: Finnish Literature Society, 2013), pp. 40–9.Google Scholar
Deliyannis, Deborah, Dey, Hendrik and Squatriti, Paolo, Fifty Early Medieval Things: Materials of Culture in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Dennis, Andrew, ‘Grágás: An examination of the content and technique of the Old Icelandic law books, focused on Þingskapaþáttr (the “Assembly Section”)’, unpublished PhD thesis, University of Cambridge (1974).Google Scholar
DiBranco, Alex, ‘Mobilizing misogyny’, The Public Eye (winter, 2017), 1116.Google Scholar
Divjak, Alenka, Studies in the Traditions of Kirialax saga (Ljubljana: Inštitut Nove revije, zavod za humanistiko, 2009).Google Scholar
Drechsler, Stefan, Illuminated Manuscript Production in Medieval Iceland: Literary and Artistic Activities of the Monastery at Helgafell in the Fourteenth Century (Turnhout: Brepols, 2021).Google Scholar
Þrastardóttir, Drífa Kristín, ‘The making of the Codex Regius’, in Gunnlaugsson, Guðvarður Már, Bernharðsson, Haraldur and Ólason, Vésteinn (eds.), The Codex Regius of the Poetic Edda: Konungsbók Eddukvæða GKS 2365 4to (Reykjavík: Mál og Menning, 2019), pp. 257344.Google Scholar
Driscoll, Matthew James, ‘The cloak of fidelity: A late-medieval Icelandic version of Le Mantel mautaillié’, The Arthurian Yearbook, 1 (1991), 107–33.Google Scholar
Driscoll, Matthew JamesFinnur Jónsson: Editor of everything’, in Gunnlaugsson, Gylfi and Glad, Clarence E. (eds.), Old Norse-Icelandic Philology and National Identity in the Long Nineteenth Century (Leiden: Brill, 2021), pp. 417–39.Google Scholar
Driscoll, Matthew JamesLate prose fiction (lygisögur)’, in McTurk, Rory (ed.), A Companion to Old Norse-Icelandic Literature and Culture (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005), pp. 190204.Google Scholar
Driscoll, Matthew James The Unwashed Children of Eve: The Production, Dissemination and Reception of Popular Literature in Post-Reformation Iceland (Enfield Lock: Hisarlik Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Driscoll, Matthew JamesWords, words, words: Textual variation in Skikkjurímur’, Skáldskaparmál, 4 (1997), 227–37.Google Scholar
Driscoll, Matthew J. et al. (eds.), The Legendary Legacy: Transmission and Reception of the Fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2018).Google Scholar
Dronke, Peter, Verse with Prose from Petronius to Dante: The Art and Scope of the Mixed Form (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Dronke, Ursula, ‘The poet’s persona in the skalds’ sagas’, Parergon, 22 (1978), 23–8.Google Scholar
Dronke, Ursula The Role of Sexual Themes in Njáls saga, The Dorothea Coke Memorial Lecture in Northern Studies 1980 (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 1981).Google Scholar
Dronke, UrsulaSem jarlar forðum: The influence of Rígsþula on two saga-episodes’, in Dronke, Ursula et al. (eds.), Speculum Norroenum: Norse Studies in Memory of Gabriel Turville-Petre (Odense: Odense University Press, 1981), pp. 5672.Google Scholar
Dronke, Ursula and Dronke, Peter, ‘The Prologue of the Prose Edda: Explorations of a Latin background’, in Pétursson, Einar G. and Kristjánsson, Jónas (eds.), Sjötíu ritgerðir helgaðar Jakobi Benediktssyni 20. júlí 1977, 2 vols. (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1977), vol. I, pp. 153–76.Google Scholar
Durrenberger, E. Paul, The Dynamics of Medieval Iceland: Political Economy & Literature (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 1992).Google Scholar
Edwards, Diana C., ‘Clause arrangement in skaldic poetry’, ANF, 98 (1983), 123–75.Google Scholar
Sveinsson, Einar Ólafur, Á Njálsbúð: Bók um mikið listaverk (Reykjavík: Hið íslenska bókmenntafélag, 1943).Google Scholar
Sveinsson, Einar Ólafur Dating the Icelandic Sagas: An Essay in Method (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 1958).Google Scholar
Sveinsson, Einar Ólafur Um Njálu (Reykjavík: Bókadeild Menningarsjóðs, 1933).Google Scholar
Eriksen, Marianne Hem, Architecture, Society, and Ritual in Viking Age Scandinavia: Doors, Dwellings, and Domestic Space (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Eriksen, Stefka Georgieva, ‘Courtly literature’, in Jakobsson, Ármann and Jakobsson, Sverrir (eds.), The Routledge Research Companion to the Medieval Icelandic Sagas (London and New York: Routledge, 2017), pp. 5973.Google Scholar
Eriksen, Stefka Georgieva Writing and Reading in Medieval Manuscript Culture: The Translation and Transmission of the Story of Elye in Old French and Old Norse Literary Contexts (Turnhout: Brepols, 2013).Google Scholar
Eriksen, Stefka Georgieva and Johansson, Karl G., ‘Francia et Germania – Translations and the Europeanisation of Old Norse narratives’, in Johansson, Karl G. and Flaten, Rune (eds.), Francia et Germania: Studies in Strengleikar and Þiðreks saga af Bern (Oslo: Novus, 2012), pp. 952.Google Scholar
Evans, D. A. H., ‘Hugsvinnsmál’, in Pulsiano, Phillip and Wolf, Kirsten (eds.), Medieval Scandinavia: An Encyclopedia (New York and London: Garland, 1993), p. 306.Google Scholar
Evans, Gareth Lloyd, Men and Masculinities in the Sagas of Icelanders (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019).Google Scholar
Even-Zohar, Itamar, ‘Polysystem theory’, Poetics Today, 11:1 (1990), 926.Google Scholar
Fairise, Christelle R., ‘Relating Mary’s life in medieval Iceland: Maríu saga; similarities and differences with the continental Lives of the Virgin’, ANF, 129 (2014), 165–96.Google Scholar
Falk, Ann-Britt, ‘My home is my castle: Protection against evil in medieval times’, in Andrén, Anders, Jennbert, Kristina and Raudvere, Catharina (eds.), Old Norse Religion in Long-Term Perspectives: Origins, Changes, and Interactions (Lund: Nordic Academic, 2006), pp. 200–5.Google Scholar
Falk, Oren, Violence and Risk in Medieval Iceland: This Spattered Isle (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Faulkes, Anthony, ‘Edda’, Gripla, 2 (1977), 32–9.Google Scholar
Ferrari, Fulvio, ‘La Lárentíus saga biskups nel sistema letterario antico nordico’, in Falluomini, Carla (ed.), XVI Seminario avanzato in filologia germanica: Intorno alle saghe norrene (Alessandria: Edizioni dell’Orso, 2014), pp. 324.Google Scholar
Fiddyment, Sarah et al., ‘So you want to do biocodicology? A field guide to the biological analysis of parchment’, Heritage Science 7, 35 (2019).Google Scholar
Fidjestøl, Bjarne, ‘Algirdas Julien Greimas and Hrafnkell Freysgoði: Semiological models applied to an Icelandic saga’, in Bjarne Fidjestøl, Selected Papers, ed. Haugen, Odd Einar and Mundal, Else (Odense: Odense University Press, 1997), pp. 151–67, translated by Peter Foote from ‘Algirdas Julien Greimas og Ramnkjell Frøysgode: Nokre semiologiske modellar nytta på ei norrøn soge’, Edda, 77:4 (1977), 193–203.Google Scholar
Fidjestøl, Bjarne Det norrøne fyrstediktet (Øvre Ervik: Alvheim & Eide, 1982).Google Scholar
Finlay, Alison, ‘Interpretation or over-interpretation: The dating of two Íslendingasögur’, Gripla, 14 (2003), 6191.Google Scholar
Finlay, AlisonJómsvíkinga saga and genre’, Scripta Islandica, 65 (2014), 6379.Google Scholar
Finlay, AlisonMonstrous allegations: An exchange of ýki in Bjarnar saga Hítdœlakappa’, alvíssmál, 10 (2001), 2144.Google Scholar
Finlay, AlisonNíð, adultery and feud in Bjarnar saga Hítdœlakappa’, Saga-Book, 23 (1990–3), 158–78.Google Scholar
Finlay, Alison“Þat þótti illr fundr”: Phallic aggression in Bjarnar saga Hítdœlakappa’, in Evans, Gareth Lloyd and Hancock, Jessica Clare (eds.), Masculinities in Old Norse Literature (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2020), pp. 167–82.Google Scholar
Jónsson, Finnur, ‘Sagaernes lausavísur’, Aarbøger for nordisk Oldkyndighed og Historie (1912), 157.Google Scholar
Sigmundsson, Finnur, Rímnatal, 2 vols. (Reykjavík: Rímnafélagið, 1966).Google Scholar
Foote, Peter, ‘On legal terms in Færeyinga saga’, Fróðskaparrit, 18 (1970), 159–75.Google Scholar
Foote, Peter On the Saga of the Faroe Islanders (London: H. K. Lewis, 1965).Google Scholar
Foote, PeterSaints’ lives and sagas’, in Bekker-Nielsen, Hans and Carlé, Birte (eds.), Saints and Sagas: A Symposium (Odense: Odense University Press, 1994), pp. 7388.Google Scholar
Foote, PeterSome lines in Lögréttuþáttr’, in Peter Foote, , Aurvandilstá: Norse Studies (Odense: Odense University Press, 1984), pp. 155–64.Google Scholar
Foote, PeterSturlusaga and its background’, Saga-Book, 13 (1946–53), 207–37.Google Scholar
Frank, Roberta, ‘The lay of the land in skaldic praise poetry’, in Glosecki, Stephen O. (ed.), Myth in Early Northwest Europe (Tempe, AZ: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2007), pp. 175–95.Google Scholar
Frank, Roberta Old Norse Court Poetry: The Dróttkvætt Stanza (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1978).Google Scholar
Frank, RobertaSkaldic poetry’, in Clover, Carol J. and Lindow, John (eds.), Old Norse-Icelandic Literature: A Critical Guide (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 157–96.Google Scholar
Frederiksen, Britta Olrik, ‘The history of Old Nordic manuscripts IV: Old Danish’, in Bandle, Oskar et al. (eds.), The Nordic Languages: An International Handbook of the History of the North Germanic Languages, 2 vols. (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2002–5), vol. I, pp. 816–24.Google Scholar
Frederiksen, Britta OlrikTil engleafsnittet i Gregors 34. evangeliehomilie i norrøn oversættelse’, Opuscula, 7 (1979), 6293.Google Scholar
Frei, Karin M. et al., ‘Was it for walrus? Viking Age settlement and medieval walrus ivory trade in Iceland and Greenland’, World Archaeology, 47:3 (2015), 439–66.Google Scholar
Friis-Jensen, Karsten, Saxo Grammaticus as Latin Poet: Studies in the Verse Passages of the Gesta Danorum (Rome: L’Erma di Bretschneider, 1987).Google Scholar
Frog, , ‘Speech-acts in skaldic verse: Genre, compositional strategies and improvisation’, in Dewey, Tonya Kim and Frog, (eds.), Versatility in Versification: Multidisciplinary Approaches to Metrics (New York: Peter Lang, 2009), pp. 223–46.Google Scholar
Frye, Northrop, The Great Code: The Bible and Literature (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1982).Google Scholar
Fulk, R. D., ‘Eddic metres’, in Larrington, Carolyne, Quinn, Judy and Schorn, Brittany (eds.), A Handbook to Eddic Poetry: Myths and Legends of Ancient Scandinavia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016), pp. 252–70.Google Scholar
Fulk, R. D.Kennings in Old English verse and in the Poetic Edda,European Journal of Scandinavian Studies, 51:1 (2021), 6991.Google Scholar
Gade, Kari Ellen, ‘Homosexuality and rape of males in Old Norse law and literature’, SS, 58:2 (1986), 124–41.Google Scholar
Gade, Kari EllenOn the recitation of Old Norse skaldic poetry’, in Uecker, Heiko (ed.), Studien zum Altgermanischen: Festschrift für Heinrich Beck (Berlin: De Gruyter, 1994), pp. 126–51.Google Scholar
Gade, Kari EllenPoetry and its changing importance in medieval Icelandic culture’, in Ross, Margaret Clunies (ed.), Old Icelandic Literature and Society (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), pp. 6195.Google Scholar
Gade, Kari Ellen The Structure of Old Norse Dróttkvætt Poetry (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1995).Google Scholar
Gardell, Mattias, Gods of the Blood: The Pagan Revival and White Separatism (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Geertz, Clifford, ‘Thick description: Toward an interpretative theory of culture’, in Geertz, Clifford, The Interpretation of Cultures: Selected Essays (New York: Basic Books, 1973), pp. 330.Google Scholar
Ghosh, Shami, Kings’ Sagas and Norwegian History: Problems and Perspectives (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2011).Google Scholar
Gilchrist, Roberta, Medieval Life: Archaeology and the Life Course (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 2012).Google Scholar
Pálsson, Gísli (ed.), From Sagas to Society: Comparative Approaches to Early Iceland (Enfield Lock: Hisarlik Press, 1992).Google Scholar
Sigurðsson, Gísli, ‘Orality’, in Glauser, Jürg, Hermann, Pernille and Mitchell, Stephen A. (eds.), Handbook of Pre-Modern Nordic Memory Studies (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2018), pp. 391–8.Google Scholar
Sigurðsson, Gísli Túlkun Íslendingasagna í Ljósi munnlegrar Hefðar: Tilgáta um Aðferð (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 2002), trans. Nicholas Jones as The Medieval Icelandic Saga and Oral Tradition: A Discourse on Method (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2004).Google Scholar
Glauser, Jürg, Isländische Märchensagas: Studien zur Prosaliteratur im spätmittelalterlichen Island (Basle: Helbing & Lichtenhahn, 1983).Google Scholar
Glauser, JürgRomance – a case study’, in Bampi, Massimiliano, Larrington, Carolyne and Rikhardsdottir, Sif (eds.), A Critical Companion to Old Norse Literary Genre (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2020), pp. 299311.Google Scholar
Glauser, JürgRomance (translated riddarasögur)’, in McTurk, Rory (ed.), A Companion to Old Norse-Icelandic Literature and Culture (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005), pp. 372–87.Google Scholar
Glauser, JürgSagas of Icelanders (Íslendinga sögur) and þættir as the literary representation of a new social space’, trans. John Clifton-Everest, in Ross, Margaret Clunies (ed.), Old Icelandic Literature and Society (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), pp. 203–20.Google Scholar
Glauser, Jürg and Kramarz-Bein, Susanne (eds.), Rittersagas: Übersetzung, Überlieferung, Transmission (Tübingen: Narr Francke Attempto, 2014).Google Scholar
Glauser, Jürg, Hermann, Pernille and Mitchell, Stephen A. (eds.), Handbook of Pre-Modern Nordic Memory Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2018).Google Scholar
Glendinning, Robert James, Träume und Vorbedeutung in der Islendinga Saga Sturla Thordarsons: Eine Form- und Stiluntersuchung (Bern: Herbert Lang, 1974).Google Scholar
Goeres, Erin Michelle, ‘The many conversions of Hallfreðr vandræðaskáld’, VMS, 7 (2011), 4562.Google Scholar
Goeres, Erin Michelle The Poetics of Commemoration: Skaldic Verse and Social Memory, c. 8901070 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Goodrick-Clarke, Nicholas, The Occult Roots of Nazism: Secret Aryan Cults and Their Influence on Nazi Ideology (New York: New York University Press, 1993).Google Scholar
Jensson, Gottskálk, ‘Bishop Jón Halldórsson and 14th-century innovations in saga narrative: The case of Egils saga einhenda ok Ásmundar berserkjabana’, in Harðarson, Gunnar and Johansson, Karl G. (eds.), Dominican Resonances in Medieval Iceland: The Legacy of Bishop Jón Halldórsson of Skálholt (Leiden: Brill, 2021), pp. 5978.Google Scholar
Jensson, GottskálkThe evidence for the lost *Vita et miracula Godemundi boni of Brother Arngrímr’, in Bullitta, Dario and Van Deusen, Natalie M. (eds.), Sainthood, Scriptoria, and Secular Erudition in Medieval and Early Modern Scandinavia: Essays in Honour of Kirsten Wolf (Turnhout: Brepols, 2022), pp. 133–70.Google Scholar
Jensson, GottskálkLatin hagiography in medieval Iceland’, in Goullet, Monique (ed.), Corpus Christianiorum: Hagiographies (Turnhout: Brepols, 2017), vol. VII, pp. 875949.Google Scholar
Jensson, GottskálkThe Latin of the north: Arngrímur Jónsson’s Crymogæa (1609) and the discovery of Icelandic as a classical language’, Renæssanceforum, 5 (2008), www.renaessanceforum.dk/.Google Scholar
Jensson, GottskálkLatin oratory at the edge of the world: The fragments of Gizurr Hallsson’s *Gesta Scalotensis ecclesie presulum and the *Vita sancti Thorlaci’, in Bullitta, Dario and Wolf, Kirsten (eds.), Saints and Their Legacies in Medieval Iceland (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2021), pp. 99133.Google Scholar
Jensson, GottskálkThe lost Latin literature of medieval Iceland: The fragments of the Vita sancti Thorlaci and other evidence’, Symbolae Osloenses, 79 (2004), 150–70.Google Scholar
Jensson, GottskálkNokkrar athugasemdir um latínubrotin úr Vita sancti Thorlaci episcopi et confessoris’, in Jón, Ma. Ásgeirsson, Kristinn Ólason, Svavar Hrafn Svavarsson, (eds.), Pulvis Olympicus: Afmælisrit tileinkað Sigurði Péturssyni (Reykjavík: Háskólaútgáfan, 2009), pp. 97109.Google Scholar
Jensson, GottskálkWere the earliest fornaldarsögur written in Latin?’, in Ney, Agneta, Jakobsson, Ármann and Lassen, Annette (eds.), Fornaldarsagaerne: Myter og virkelighed (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2009), pp. 7991.Google Scholar
Graham-Campbell, James, Viking Art (London: Thames & Hudson, 2021).Google Scholar
Greene, Kevin, Archaeology: An Introduction (London: Routledge, 2010).Google Scholar
Grønlie, Siân, ‘Preaching, insult, and wordplay in the Old Icelandic “kristniboðsþœttir”’, JEGP, 103:4 (2004), 458–74.Google Scholar
Grønlie, Siân The Saint and the Saga Hero: Hagiography and Early Icelandic Literature (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2017).Google Scholar
Grønlie, Siân ‘“There is hope for a tree”: Two laments on the loss of sons’, in Siân Grønlie and Carl Phelpstead (eds.), The Medieval North and its Afterlife: Essays in Honor of Heather O’Donoghue (Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter, 2023) pp. 13–26.Google Scholar
Gropper, Stefanie, ‘Breta sögur and Merlínússpá’, in Kalinke, Marianne E. (ed.), The Arthur of the North: The Arthurian Legend in the Norse and Rus’ Realms (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2011), pp. 4860.Google Scholar
Gropper, StefanieThe human condition’, in Bampi, Massimiliano, Larrington, Carolyne and Rikhardsdottir, Sif (eds.), A Critical Companion to Old Norse Literary Genre (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2020), pp. 177–92.Google Scholar
Gruszczyński, Jacek, Viking Silver, Hoards and Containers: The Archaeological and Historical Context of Viking-Age Silver Coin Deposits in the Baltic c. 800–1050 (Abingdon: Routledge, 2019).Google Scholar
Kristjánsdóttir, Guðbjörg, ‘Handritalýsingar í benediktínaklaustrinu á Þingeyrum’, in Bernharðsson, Haraldur (ed.), Íslensk klausturmenning á miðöldum (Reykjavík: Háskólaútgáfan, 2016), pp. 227311.Google Scholar
Grímsdóttir, Guðrún Ása, ‘Um sárafar í Íslendinga sögu Sturlu Þórðarsonar’, in Grímsdóttir, Guðrún Ása and Kristjánsson, Jónas (eds.), Sturlustefna: Ráðstefna haldin á sjö alda ártíð Sturlu Þórðarsonar sagnaritara 1984 (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1988), pp. 184203.Google Scholar
Ingólfsdóttir, Guðrún, ‘Um hlutverk vísna í Íslendinga sögum’, Skáldskaparmál, 1 (1990), 226–40.Google Scholar
Ingólfsdóttir, GuðrúnWomen’s manuscript culture in Iceland, 1600–1900’, in Eggertsdóttir, Margrét and Driscoll, Matthew James (eds.), Mirrors of Virtue: Manuscript and Print in Late Pre-Modern Iceland (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2017), pp. 195224.Google Scholar
Ingólfsdóttir, Guðrún“Þar ber eg litla hugsan fyrir”: Konan, forsjónin og karlinn í Haukdæla þætti’, in Tómasson, Sverrir (ed.), Samtíðarsögur/The Contemporary Sagas: Preprints from the Ninth International Saga Conference (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar, 1994), pp. 237–46.Google Scholar
Nordal, Guðrún, ‘Að hugsa í myndum’, Skírnir, 176 (2002), 231–56.Google Scholar
Nordal, GuðrúnThe art of poetry and the sagas of Icelanders’, in Quinn, Judy, Heslop, Kate and Wills, Tarrin (eds.), Learning and Understanding in the Old Norse World: Essays in Honour of Margaret Clunies Ross (Turnhout: Brepols, 2007), pp. 219–37.Google Scholar
Nordal, GuðrúnAttraction of opposites: Skaldic verse in Njáls saga’, in Hermann, Pernille (ed.), Literacy in Medieval and Early Modern Scandinavian Culture (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2005), pp. 211–36.Google Scholar
Nordal, GuðrúnThe dialogue between audience and text: The variants in verse citations in Njáls saga’s manuscripts’, in Mundal, Else and Wellendorf, Jonas (eds.), Oral Art Forms and Their Passage into Writing (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2008), pp. 185202.Google Scholar
Nordal, Guðrún Ethics and Action in Thirteenth-Century Iceland (Odense: Odense University Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Nordal, GuðrúnFreyr fífldur’, Skírnir, 166 (1992), 271–94.Google Scholar
Nordal, GuðrúnThe lessons of GKS 1812 4to: Íslendingabók as an encyclopedic text’, in Harðarson, Gunnar et al. (eds.), A World in Fragments: Studies on the Encyclopedic Manuscript GKS 1812 4to (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar í íslenskum fræðum, 2021), pp. 115–29.Google Scholar
Nordal, GuðrúnNú er hin skarpa skálmöld komin’, Skáldskaparmál, 1 (1990), 211–25.Google Scholar
Nordal, GuðrúnSagnarit um innlend efni – Sturlunga saga’, in Nordal, Guðrún, Tómasson, Sverrir and Ólason, Vésteinn (eds.), Íslensk bókmenntasaga, vol. I (Reykjavík: Mál og Menning, 1992), pp. 309–44.Google Scholar
Nordal, GuðrúnSkaldic citations and settlement stories as parameters for saga dating’, in Mundal, Else (ed.), Dating the Sagas: Reviews and Revisions (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2013), pp. 195212.Google Scholar
Nordal, GuðrúnSkaldic poets and the making of the sagas of Icelanders’, in Turco, Jeffrey (ed.), New Norse Studies: Essays on the Literature and Culture of Medieval Scandinavia (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2015), pp. 117–42.Google Scholar
Nordal, Guðrún Skaldic Versifying and Social Discrimination in Medieval Iceland, The Dorothea Coke Memorial Lecture in Northern Studies 2001 (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 2003).Google Scholar
Nordal, GuðrúnSkáldið Snorri Sturluson’, in Bragason, Úlfar (ed.), Snorrastefna: 25.–27. júlí 1990 (Reykjavík: Stofnun Sigurðar Nordals, 1992), pp. 5269.Google Scholar
Nordal, GuðrúnSturla: The poet and the creator of prosimetrum’, in Sigurðsson, Jón Viðar and Jakobsson, Sverrir (eds.), Sturla Þórðarson: Skald, Chieftain and Lawman (Leiden: Brill, 2017), pp. 120–32.Google Scholar
Nordal, Guðrún Tools of Literacy: The Role of Skaldic Verse in Icelandic Textual Culture of the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Helgadóttir, Guðrún P, ‘Hrafns saga Sveinbjarnarsonar and Sturlunga saga’, Gripla, 8 (1993), 5580.Google Scholar
Gunnlaugsson, Guðvarður Már, ‘Latin fragments related to Iceland’, in Ommundsen, Åslaug and Heikkilä, Tuomas (eds.), Nordic Latin Manuscript Fragments: The Destruction and Reconstruction of Medieval Books (London and New York: Routledge, 2017), pp. 163–83.Google Scholar
Gunnlaugsson, Guðvarður MárManuscripts and palaeography’, in McTurk, Rory (ed.), A Companion to Old Norse-Icelandic Literature and Culture (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005), pp. 245–64.Google Scholar
Gunnlaugsson, Guðvarður MárThe speed of the scribes: How fast could Flateyjarbók have been written?’, in Heslop, Kate and Glauser, Jürg (eds.), RE:writing: Medial Perspectives on Textual Culture in the Icelandic Middle Ages (Zurich: Chronos, 2018), pp. 195224.Google Scholar
Gunnlaugsson, Guðvarður Már Sýnisbók Íslenskrar skriftar, 2nd ed. (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar í íslenskum fræðum, 2007).Google Scholar
Gullick, Michael, ‘A preliminary list of manuscripts, manuscript fragments and documents of English origin or the work of English scribes in Norway datable to before 1225’, in Karlsen, Espen (ed.), Latin Manuscripts of Medieval Norway: Studies in Memory of Lilli Gjerløw (Oslo: Novus, 2013), pp. 123–97.Google Scholar
Guðmundsson, Gunnar F., Íslenskt samfélag og Rómakirkja, Kristni á Íslandi, vol. II (Reykjavík: Alþingi, 2000).Google Scholar
Harðarson, Gunnar, ‘The argument from design in the Prologue to the Prose Edda’, VMS, 12 (2016), 6185.Google Scholar
Harðarson, GunnarMedieval encyclopedic literature and Icelandic manuscripts’, in Harðarson, Gunnar et al. (eds.), A World in Fragments: Studies on the Encyclopedic Manuscript GKS 1812 4to (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar í íslenskum fræðum, 2021), pp. 1338.Google Scholar
Harðarson, Gunnar and Karlsson, Stefán, ‘Hauksbók’, in Pulsiano, Phillip and Wolf, Kirsten (eds.), Medieval Scandinavia: An Encyclopedia (New York and London: Garland, 1993), pp. 271–2.Google Scholar
Karlsson, Gunnar, Goðamenning: Staða og áhrif goðorðsmanna í Þjóðveldi Íslendinga (Reykjavík: Mál og Menning, 2004).Google Scholar
Karlsson, Gunnar Iceland’s 1100 Years: History of a Marginal Society (London: Hurst, 2000).Google Scholar
Gunnell, Terry, The Origins of Drama in Scandinavia (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1995).Google Scholar
Gunnell, TerryPantheon? What pantheon? Concepts of a family of gods in pre-Christian Scandinavian religions’, Scripta Islandica, 66 (2015), 5576.Google Scholar
Karlsdóttir, Gunnvör S, Guðmundar sögur biskups: Þróun og ritunarsamhengi (Reykjavík: Háskóli Íslands, 2017).Google Scholar
Gurevich, A. Ya., ‘Wealth and gift-bestowal among the ancient Scandinavians’, Scandinavica, 7 (1968), 126–38.Google Scholar
Hadley, Dawn and Richards, Julian, The Viking Great Army and the Making of England (London: Thames & Hudson, 2021).Google Scholar
Hagland, Jan Ragnar, ‘Ingimundr prestr Þorgeirsson and Icelandic runic literacy in the twelfth century’, alvíssmál, 6 (1996), 99108.Google Scholar
Hagland, Jan RagnarKyrkja og den folkespråklege skriftkulturen’, in Imsen, Steinar (ed.), Den kirkehistoriske utfordring (Trondheim: Tapir Academic Press, 2005), pp. 170–80.Google Scholar
Haimerl, Edgar, ‘Sigurðr, a medieval hero: A manuscript-based interpretation of the “young Sigurðr poems”’, in Acker, Paul and Larrington, Carolyne (eds.), Revisiting the Poetic Edda: Essays on Old Norse Heroic Legend (London and New York: Routledge, 2013), pp. 3252.Google Scholar
Antonsson, Haki, ‘Árna saga biskups as literature and history’, JEGP, 116:3 (2017), 261–85.Google Scholar
Antonsson, HakiThe conversion and Christianization of Scandinavia: A critical review of recent scholarly writings’, in Garipzanov, Ildar (ed.), Conversion and Identity in the Viking Age (Turnhout: Brepols, 2014), pp. 4973.Google Scholar
Antonsson, HakiTraditions of conversion in medieval Scandinavia: A synthesis’, Saga-Book, 24 (2010), 2574.Google Scholar
Halbwachs, Maurice, Les Cadres sociaux de la mémoire (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1952), originally published in Les Travaux de L’Année Sociologique (Paris, F. Alcan, 1925); translated into English as On Collective Memory (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992).Google Scholar
Halink, Simon, ‘Nordic, Germanic, German: Jacob Grimm and the German appropriation of Old Norse religion and myth’, in Clunies Ross, Margaret (ed.), The Pre-Christian Religions of the North: Research and Reception (Turnhout: Brepols, 2018), vol. II, pp. 101–30.Google Scholar
Hall, Alaric and Parsons, Katelin, ‘Making stemmas with small samples, and digital approaches to publishing them: Testing the stemma of Konráðs saga keisarasonar’, Digital Medievalist, 9 (2013).Google Scholar
Hall, Alaric and Zeevaert, Ludger, ‘Njáls saga stemmas, old and new’, in Lethbridge, Emily and Óskarsdóttir, Svanhildur (eds.), New Studies in the Manuscript Tradition of Njáls saga: The historia mutila of Njála (Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Institute Publications, 2018), pp. 179202.Google Scholar
Hall, Thomas N., ‘Old Norse-Icelandic sermons’, in Kienzle, Beverly Mayne (ed.), The Sermon (Turnhout: Brepols, 2000), pp. 661709.Google Scholar
Hallberg, Peter, ‘Some aspects of the fornaldarsögur as a corpus’, ANF, 97 (1982), 135.Google Scholar
Hallberg, PeterTvå mordbrånder i det medeltida Island’, Gardar, 7 (1976), 2545.Google Scholar
Eiríksson, Hallfreður Örn, ‘On Icelandic rímur: An orientation’, Arv, 31 (1975), 139–50.Google Scholar
Hamre, Anne-Marie, ‘Visitasen’, in Imsen, Steinar (ed.), Ecclesia nidrosiensis 1153–1537: Søkelys på nidaroskirkens og nidarosprovinsens historie (Trondheim: Tapir Academic Press, 2003), pp. 215–29.Google Scholar
Bernharðsson, Haraldur, ‘Kirkja, klaustur og norskublandið ritmálsviðmið á Íslandi á miðöldum’, in Bernharðsson, Haraldur (ed.), Íslensk klausturmenning á miðöldum (Reykjavík: Háskólaútgáfan, 2016), pp 149–72.Google Scholar
Bernharðsson, HaraldurScribal culture in thirteenth-century Iceland: The introduction of the Anglo-Saxon “f” in Icelandic script’, JEGP, 117:3 (2018), 279314.Google Scholar
Bessason, Haraldur, ‘Mythological overlays’, in Pétursson, Einar G. and Kristjánsson, Jónas (eds.), Sjötíu ritgerðir helgaðar Jakobi Benediktssyni 20. júli 1977, 2 vols. (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1977), vol. I, pp. 273–92.Google Scholar
Hreinsson, Haraldur, Force of Words: A Cultural History of Christianity and Politics in Medieval Iceland (11th–13th Centuries) (Leiden: Brill, 2021).Google Scholar
Harris, Anne F., ‘The performative terms of Jewish iconoclasm and conversion in two Saint Nicholas windows at Chartres Cathedral’, in Merback, Mitchell B. (ed.), Beyond the Yellow Badge: Anti-Judaism and Antisemitism in Medieval and Early Modern Culture (Leiden: Brill, 2008), pp. 119–44.Google Scholar
Harris, Joseph C., ‘Eddic poetry as oral poetry: The evidence of parallel passages in the Helgi poems for questions of composition and performance’, in Glendenning, Robert J. and Bessason, Haraldur (eds.), Edda: A Collection of Essays (Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press, 1983), pp. 210–42.Google Scholar
Harris, Joseph C.Genre and narrative structure in some Íslendinga þættir’, SS, 44:1 (1972), 127.Google Scholar
Harris, Joseph C.The prosimetrum of Icelandic saga and some relatives’, in Harris, Joseph and Reichl, Karl (eds.), Prosimetrum: Crosscultural Perspectives on Narrative in Prose and Verse (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1997), pp. 131–63.Google Scholar
Harris, Joseph C.Traditions of eddic scholarship’, in Larrington, Carolyne, Quinn, Judy and Schorn, Brittany (eds.), A Handbook to Eddic Poetry: Myths and Legends of Early Scandinavia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016), pp. 3357.Google Scholar
Harrison, Jane, ‘Analogy and archaeological process: Creating places in the Scandinavian diaspora of the Viking–Late Norse period c. AD 800–1200’, in Marila, Marko et al. (eds.), Archaeology and Analogy: Papers from the Eighth Theoretical Seminar of the Baltic Archaeologists (Helsinki: University of Helsinki, 2020), pp. 6582.Google Scholar
Harrison, JaneBuilding mounds: Longhouses, coastal mounds and cultural connections, Norway and the Northern Isles, c. AD 800–1200’, Medieval Archaeology, 57:1 (2013), 3560.Google Scholar
Harrison, JaneScandinavian settlement in Cleveland’, in O’Donoghue, Heather and Vohra, Pragya (eds.), The Vikings in Cleveland (Nottingham: Centre for the Study of the Viking Age, University of Nottingham, 2014), pp. 1321.Google Scholar
Harrison, JaneSettlement change in Viking and Late Norse Orkney c. AD 850–1200: Placed deposits in domestic contexts’, in Pedersen, Anne and Sindbæk, Søren M (eds.), Viking Encounters: Proceedings of the Eighteenth Viking Congress (Aarhus: Aarhus University Press, 2020), pp. 355–70.Google Scholar
Hastrup, Kirsten, Culture and History in Medieval Iceland: An Anthropological Analysis of Structure and Change (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1985).Google Scholar
Haugen, Einar, The Ecology of Language (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1972).Google Scholar
Haugen, Odd Einar and Ommundsen, Åslaug, ‘Nye blikk på Homilieboka’, in Haugen, Odd Einar and Ommundsen, Åslaug (eds.), Vår eldste bok: Skrift, miljø og biletbruk i den norske homilieboka (Oslo: Novus, 2010), pp. 933.Google Scholar
Haugen, Odd Einar and Ommundsen, Åslaug (eds.), Vår eldste bok: Skrift, miljø og biletbruk i den norske homilieboka (Oslo: Novus, 2010).Google Scholar
Þorgeirsson, Haukur, ‘Hljóðkerfi og bragkerfi: Stoðhljóð, tónkvæði og önnur úrlausnarefni í íslenskri bragsögu ásamt útgáfu á Rímum af Ormari Fraðmarssyni’, unpublished PhD thesis, University of Iceland (2013).Google Scholar
Hawkes, Christopher, ‘Archaeological theory and method: Some suggestions from the Old World’, American Anthropologist, 56 (1954), 155–68.Google Scholar
Haymes, Edward R., ‘Richard Wagner, the Ring and its influence’, in Clunies Ross, Margaret (ed.), The Pre-Christian Religions of the North: Research and Reception (Turnhout: Brepols, 2018), vol. II, pp. 151–79.Google Scholar
Hedeager, Lotte, Iron Age Myth and Materiality: An Archaeology of Scandinavia, AD 400–1000 (London: Routledge, 2011).Google Scholar
Hedenstierna‐Jonson, Charlotte et al., ‘A female viking warrior confirmed by genomics’, American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 164:4 (2017), 853–60.Google Scholar
Heffernan, Thomas J., Sacred Biography: Saints and Their Biographers in the Middle Ages (New York: Oxford University Press, 1988).Google Scholar
Heikkilä, Tuomas and Ommundsen, Åslaug, ‘Piecing together the past: The accidental manuscript collections of the north’, in Ommundsen, Åslaug and Heikkilä, Tuomas (eds.), Nordic Latin Manuscript Fragments: The Destruction and Reconstruction of Medieval Books (London and New York: Routledge, 2017), pp. 123.Google Scholar
Pálsson, Heimir, ‘Reflections on the creation of Snorri Sturluson’s Prose Edda’, Scripta Islandica, 68 (2017), 189232.Google Scholar
Heiniger, Anna Katharina, ‘On the threshold: The liminality of doorways’, in Jakobsson, Ármann and Mayburd, Miriam (eds.), Paranormal Encounters in Iceland 11501400 (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020), pp. 109–29.Google Scholar
Heizmann, Wilhelm, ‘Hvanndalir – Glæsisvellir – Avalon: Traditionswanderungen in Norden und Nordwesten Europas’, Frühmittelalterliche Studien, 32 (1998), 72100.Google Scholar
Kress, Helga, Máttugar Meyjar: Íslensk Fornbókmenntasaga (Reykjavík: Háskóli Íslands, 1993).Google Scholar
Þorláksson, Helgi, ‘Aristocrats between kings and tax-paying farmers: Iceland c. 1280 to c. 1450. Political culture, the political actors and the evidence of the sagas’, in Imsen, Steinar (ed.), Rex Insularum: The King of Norway and His ‘Skattlands’ as a Political System c. 1260–c. 1450 (Bergen: Fagbokforlaget, 2014), pp. 265303.Google Scholar
Þorláksson, HelgiThe fantastic fourteenth century’, in McKinnell, John, Ashurst, David and Kick, Donata (eds.), The Fantastic in Old Norse/Icelandic Literature: Sagas and the British Isles: Preprint Papers of the Thirteenth International Saga Conference, Durham and York, 6th–12th August 2006 (Durham: Centre for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Durham University, 2006), pp. 365–71.Google Scholar
Þorláksson, HelgiHistorical background: Iceland 870–1400’, in McTurk, Rory (ed.), A Companion to Old Norse-Icelandic Literature and Culture (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005), pp. 136–54.Google Scholar
Þorláksson, HelgiSturlunga: Tilurð og markmið’, Gripla, 23 (2012), 5392.Google Scholar
Þorláksson, HelgiSturlusaga og Einar Þorgilsson’, in Jónsson, Guðmundur, Kjartansson, Helgi Skúli and Ólason, Vésteinn (eds.), Heimtur: Ritgerðir til heiðurs Gunnari Karlssyni sjötugum (Reykjavík: Mál og Menning, 2009), pp. 215–29.Google Scholar
Heller, Rolf, Die literarische Darstellung der Frau in den Isländersagas (Halle: Max Niemeyer, 1958).Google Scholar
Pálsson, Hermann, Art and Ethics in Hrafnkel’s Saga (Copenhagen: Munksgaard, 1971).Google Scholar
Hermann, Pernille, ‘The horror of Vínland: Topographies and otherness in the Vínland sagas’, SS, 93:1 (2021), 122.Google Scholar
Hermann, PernilleLiteracy’, in Jakobsson, Ármann and Jakobsson, Sverrir (eds.), The Routledge Research Companion to the Medieval Icelandic Sagas (London and New York: Routledge, 2017), pp. 3447.Google Scholar
Hermann, PernilleSaga literature, cultural memory, and storage’, SS, 85:3 (2013), 332–54.Google Scholar
Herschend, Frands, Livet i Hallen (Uppsala: Uppsala Universitet, 1997).Google Scholar
Herva, Vesa-Pekka, ‘Buildings as persons: Relationality and the life of buildings in a northern periphery of early modern Sweden’, Antiquity, 84:324 (2010), 440–52.Google Scholar
Heslop, Kate, Viking Mediologies: A New History of Skaldic Poetics (New York: Fordham University Press, 2022).Google Scholar
Heslop, Kate and Glauser, Jürg (eds.), RE:writing: Medial Perspectives on Textual Culture in the Icelandic Middle Ages (Zurich: Chronos, 2018).Google Scholar
Heusler, Andreas, ‘Der Dialog in der altgermanischen erzählenden Dichtung’, reprinted in Heusler, Andreas, Kleine Schriften, ed. Reuschel, Helga and Sonderegger, Stefan, 2 vols. (Berlin: De Gruyter, 1943–69), vol. II, pp. 611–89.Google Scholar
Heusler, Andreas Das Strafrecht der Isländersagas (Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, 1911).Google Scholar
Heusler, Andreas Zum isländischen Fehdewesen in der Sturlungenzeit (Berlin: Verlag der königlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1912).Google Scholar
Hill, Thomas D., ‘Lilja’, in Pulsiano, Phillip and Wolf, Kirsten (eds.), Medieval Scandinavia: An Encyclopedia (New York and London: Garland, 1993), pp. 391–2.Google Scholar
Hugason, Hjalti, Frumkristni og upphaf kirkju, Kristni á Íslandi, vol. I (Reykjavík: Alþingi, 2000).Google Scholar
Hjelde, Oddmund, ‘Norsk preken i det 12. århundre: Studier i gammel norsk homiliebok’, unpublished PhD thesis, University of Oslo (1990).Google Scholar
Hochschild, Arlie Russell, Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the American Right (New York: The New Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Höfig, Verena, ‘Re-wild yourself: Old Norse myth and radical white nationalist groups in Trump’s America’, in Meylan, Nicolas and Rösli, Lukas (eds.), Old Norse Myths as Political Ideologies: Critical Studies in the Appropriation of Medieval Narratives (Turnhout: Brepols, 2020), pp. 209–31.Google Scholar
Höfig, VerenaVinland and white nationalism’, in Machan, Tim William and Helgason, Jón Karl (eds.), From Iceland to the Americas: Vinland and Historical Imagination (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2019), pp. 77100.Google Scholar
Hofmann, Dietrich, ‘Sagaprosa als Partner von Skaldenstrophen’, Medieval Scandinavia, 11 (1978–9), 6881.Google Scholar
Hofmann, DietrichDie Yngvars saga víðförla und Oddr munkr inn fróði’, in Dronke, Ursula et al. (eds.), Speculum Norroenum: Norse Studies in Memory of Gabriel Turville-Petre (Odense: Odense University Press, 1981), pp. 188222.Google Scholar
Holm, Gösta, ‘Ättestupan’, in Lundgreen-Nielsen, Flemming, Nielsen, Marita Akhøj and Sørensen, John Kousgård (eds.), Ord, Sprog oc artige Dict: Et overblik og 28 indblik 1500–1700: Festskrift til Poul Lindegård Hjorth (Copenhagen: C. A. Reitzel, 1997), pp. 455–62.Google Scholar
Benediktsson, Hreinn, Early Icelandic Script as Illustrated in Vernacular Texts from the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries (Reykjavík: Manuscript Institute of Iceland, 1965).Google Scholar
Steingrímsson, Hreinn, Kvæðaskapur: Icelandic Epic Song, ed. Stone, Dorothy and Mosko, Stephen L. (Reykjavík: Mál og Mynd, 2000).Google Scholar
Hufnagel, Silvia, ‘“Helga á þessa lögbók”: A dry point ownership statement in Bodleian Library, Oxford, MS Boreal 91’, Gripla, 29 (2018), 293308.Google Scholar
Hufnagel, SilviaThe paper trails of Guðbrandur Þorláksson: A case study of the official and private paths used for purchasing paper by the sixteenth-century bishop of Hólar, Iceland’, in Bellingradt, Daniel and Reynolds, Anna (eds.), The Paper Trade in Early Modern Europe: Practices, Materials, Networks (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2021), pp. 302–24.Google Scholar
Hufnagel, SilviaTradition and innovation: Design and development in Pétur Jónsson’s title pages between 1773 and 1780’, in Eggertsdóttir, Margrét and Driscoll, Matthew James (eds.), Mirrors of Virtue: Manuscript and Print in Late Pre–Modern Iceland (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2017), pp. 167–94.Google Scholar
Hufnagel, SilviaDer Wechsel von Pergament und Wachstafeln zu Papier in Island im 15. und 16. Jahrhundert’, Gutenberg-Jahrbuch, 95 (2020), 176–91.Google Scholar
Hughes, Shaun F. D., ‘Klári saga as an indigenous romance’, in Wolf, Kirsten and Denzin, Johanna (eds.), Romance and Love in Late Medieval and Early Modern Iceland: Essays in Honor of Marianne Kalinke (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2008), pp. 135–63.Google Scholar
Hughes, Shaun F. D.Late secular poetry’, in McTurk, Rory (ed.), A Companion to Old-Norse Icelandic Literature and Culture (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005), pp. 205–22.Google Scholar
Hughes, Shaun F. D.Reading the landscape in Grettis saga: Þórhallur, the meinvættur, and Glámur’, in Jakobsson, Ármann and Mayburd, Miriam (eds.), Paranormal Encounters in Iceland 1150–1400 (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020), pp. 367–94.Google Scholar
Hughes, Shaun F. D.Report on rímur 1980’, JEGP, 79:4 (1980), 477–98.Google Scholar
Hume, Kathryn, ‘From saga to romance: The use of monsters in Old Norse literature’, Studies in Philology, 77:1 (1980), 125.Google Scholar
Hunt, Margaret Cushing, A Study of Authorial Perspective in Guðmundar saga A and Guðmundar saga D: Hagiography and the Icelandic Bishop’s Saga (Ann Arbor, MI: University Microfilms, 1986).Google Scholar
Ingold, Tim, The Perception of the Environment: Essays on Livelihood, Dwelling and Skill (London: Routledge, 2000).Google Scholar
Iser, Wolfgang, Der Akt des Lesens: Theorie ästhetischer Wirkung (Munich: W. Fink, 1976).Google Scholar
Jacobs, M. A., ‘“Undir ilmöndum laufum ok nýsprungnum blómstrum”: Sensual pleasure in Old Norse Arthurian romance’, SS, 87:1 (2015), 107–28.Google Scholar
Benediktsson, Jakob, ‘Some observations on Stjórn and the manuscript AM 227 fol.’, Gripla, 15 (2004), 742.Google Scholar
Jakobsen, Alfred, ‘Om forfatteren av Sturlu saga’, Scripta Islandica, 37 (1986), 311.Google Scholar
Jarman, Catrine L., et al., ‘The Viking Great Army in England: New dates from the Repton charnel’, Antiquity, 92:361 (2018), 183–99.Google Scholar
Jauss, Hans Robert, Literaturgeschichte als Provokation der Literaturwissenschaft, 2nd ed. (Konstanz: Universitätsverlag, 1969).Google Scholar
Jesch, Judith, ‘Diaspora’, in Glauser, Jürg, Hermann, Pernille and Mitchell, Stephen A. (eds.), Handbook of Pre-Modern Nordic Memory Studies (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2018), pp. 583–93.Google Scholar
Jesch, JudithHistory in the “political sagas”’, Medium Ævum, 62:2 (1993), 210–20.Google Scholar
Jesch, JudithKirkwall, Orkney’, in Wallace, David (ed.), Europe: A Literary History 13481418, 2 vols. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016), vol. I, pp. 375–83.Google Scholar
Jesch, JudithNarrating Orkneyinga saga’, SS, 64:3 (1992), 336–55.Google Scholar
Jesch, JudithOrkneyinga saga: A work in progress?’, in Quinn, Judy and Lethbridge, Emily (eds.), Creating the Medieval Saga: Versions, Variability and Editorial Interpretations of Old Norse Saga Literature (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2010), pp. 153–73.Google Scholar
Jesch, Judith The Poetry of Orkneyinga Saga (Cambridge: Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, University of Cambridge, 2020).Google Scholar
Jesch, JudithPresenting traditions in Orkneyinga saga’, Leeds Studies in English, 27 (1996), 6986.Google Scholar
Jesch, Judith Ships and Men in the Late Viking Age: The Vocabulary of Runic Inscriptions and Skaldic Verse (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 2001).Google Scholar
Jesch, Judith The Viking Diaspora (London: Routledge, 2015).Google Scholar
Jesch, Judith Women in the Viking Age (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 1991).Google Scholar
Jessen, Mads Dengsø et al., ‘A palisade fit for a king: Ideal architecture in King Harald Bluetooth’s Jelling’, Norwegian Archaeological Review, 47:1 (2014), 4264.Google Scholar
Jochens, Jenny, ‘Late and peaceful: Iceland’s conversion through arbitration in 1000’, Speculum, 74:3 (1999), 621–55.Google Scholar
Jochens, Jenny Old Norse Images of Women (Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1996).Google Scholar
Jochens, JennyRepresentations of skalds in the sagas 2: Gender relations’, in Poole, Russell (ed.), Skaldsagas: Text, Vocation, and Desire in the Icelandic Sagas of Poets (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2001), pp. 309–32.Google Scholar
Jochens, JennyTriangularity in the pagan north: The case of Björn Arngeirsson and Þórðr Kolbeinsson’, in Murray, Jacqueline (ed.), Conflicted Identities and Multiple Masculinities: Men in the Medieval West (New York and London: Garland, 1999), pp. 111–34.Google Scholar
Jochens, Jenny Women in Old Norse Society (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1995).Google Scholar
Friðriksdóttir, Jóhanna Katrín, ‘Gender’, in Jakobsson, Ármann and Jakobsson, Sverrir (eds.), The Routledge Research Companion to the Medieval Icelandic Sagas (London and New York: Routledge, 2017), pp. 226–39.Google Scholar
Friðriksdóttir, Jóhanna Katrín“Gerðit hon … sem konor aðrar”: Women and subversion in eddic heroic poetry’, in Acker, Paul and Larrington, Carolyne (eds.), Revisiting the Poetic Edda: Essays on Old Norse Heroic Legend (London and New York: Routledge, 2013), pp. 117–36.Google Scholar
Friðriksdóttir, Jóhanna KatrínKonungs skuggsjá [The King’s Mirror] and women patrons and readers in late medieval and early modern Iceland’, Viator, 49 (2018), 277305.Google Scholar
Friðriksdóttir, Jóhanna KatrínManuscripts and codicology’, in Bampi, Massimiliano, Larrington, Carolyne and Rikhardsdottir, Sif (eds.), A Critical Companion to Old Norse Literary Genre (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2020), pp. 89111.Google Scholar
Friðriksdóttir, Jóhanna Katrín Women in Old Norse Literature: Bodies, Words, and Power (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013).Google Scholar
Johansson, Karl G., ‘Bergr Sokkason och Arngrímur Brandsson – översättare och författare i samma miljö’, in Barnes, Geraldine and Ross, Margaret Clunies (eds.), Old Norse Myths, Literature and Society: The Proceedings of the 11th International Saga Conference, 2–7 July 2000, University of Sydney (Sydney: Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Sydney, 2000), pp. 181–97.Google Scholar
Johansson, Karl G. Studier i Codex Wormianus: Skrifttradition och avskriftsverksamhet vid ett isländskt skriptorium under 1300-talet (Gothenburg: Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis, 1997).Google Scholar
Johansson, Karl G. and Mundal, Else (eds.), Riddarasögur: The Translation of European Court Culture in Medieval Scandinavia (Oslo: Novus, 2014).Google Scholar
Johansson, Karl G. and Flaten, Rune (eds.), Francia et Germania: Studies in Strengleikar and Þiðreks saga af Bern (Oslo: Novus, 2012).Google Scholar
Johnsen, Arne Odd, Studier vedrørende Kardinal Nicolaus Brekespears legasjon til Norden (Oslo: Fabritus & Sønners Forlag, 1945), pp. 305–11.Google Scholar
Johnson, Matthew, Archaeological Theory: An Introduction (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell, 2020).Google Scholar
Helgason, Jón, Handritaspjall (Reykjavík: Mál og Menning, 1958).Google Scholar
Helgason, Jón Jón Ólafsson frá Grunnavík (Copenhagen: S. L. Möller, 1926).Google Scholar
Helgason, Jón Karl, Echoes of Valhalla: The Afterlife of the Eddas and Sagas, trans. Jane Appleton (London: Reaktion Books, 2017).Google Scholar
Helgason, Jón Karl The Rewriting of Njáls Saga: Translation, Ideology, and Icelandic Sagas (Clevedon and Buffalo: Multilingual Matters, 1999).Google Scholar
Sigurðsson, Jón Viðar, ‘Chieftains and the legal culture in Iceland, c. 1100–1260’, in Scheel, Roland (ed.), Narrating Law and Laws of Narration in Medieval Scandinavia (Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter, 2020), pp. 3955.Google Scholar
Sigurðsson, Jón Viðar Chieftains and Power in the Icelandic Commonwealth, trans. Jean Lundskær-Nielsen (Odense: Odense University Press, 1999).Google Scholar
Sigurðsson, Jón ViðarThe making of a “skattland”: Iceland 1247–1450’, in Imsen, Steinar (ed.), Rex Insularum: The King of Norway and his ‘Skattlands’ as a Political System c. 1260–c. 1450 (Bergen: Fagbokforlaget, 2014), pp. 181225.Google Scholar
Sigurðsson, Jón ViðarThe organisation of Hólar bishopric according to Auðunarmáldagar’, in Imsen, Steinar (ed.), ‘Ecclesia Nidrosiensis’ and ‘Noregs veldi’: The Role of the Church in the Making of Norwegian Domination in the Norse World (Trondheim: Akademika, 2012), pp. 243–59.Google Scholar
Þorkelsson, Jón, Om Digtningen på Island i det 15. og 16. Århundrede (Copenhagen: A. F. Høst, 1888).Google Scholar
Kristjánsson, Jónas, Eddas and Sagas: Iceland’s Medieval Literature, trans. Peter Foote (Reykjavík: Hið íslenska bókmenntafélag, 1988).Google Scholar
Kristjánsson, JónasLearned style or saga style?’, in Dronke, Ursula et al. (eds.), Speculum Norroenum: Norse Studies in Memory of Gabriel Turville-Petre (Odense: Odense University Press, 1981), pp. 260–92.Google Scholar
Kristjánsson, Jónas Um Fóstbrœðra sögu (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1972).Google Scholar
Jorgensen, Peter A., ‘The neglected genre of rímur-derived prose and post-Reformation Jónatas saga’, Gripla, 7 (1990), 187201.Google Scholar
Jorgensen, Peter A.Rímur’, in Pulsiano, Phillip and Wolf, Kirsten (eds.), Medieval Scandinavia: An Encyclopedia (New York and London: Garland, 1993), pp. 536–7.Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E. (ed.), The Arthur of the North: The Arthurian Legend in the Norse and Rus’ Realms (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E. The Book of Reykjahólar: The Last of the Great Medieval Legendaries (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1996).Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E. Bridal-Quest Romance in Medieval Iceland (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1990).Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E.Clári saga: A case of Low German infiltration’, Scripta Islandica, 59 (2008), 526.Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E.Gibbons saga, an exemplary frame-tale narrative’, SS, 90:2 (2018), 265–88.Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E. King Arthur, North-by-Northwest: The Matière de Bretagne in Old Norse-Icelandic Romances (Copenhagen: C. A. Reitzel, 1981).Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E.Norse romance (riddarasögur)’, in Clover, Carol J. and Lindow, John (eds.), Old Norse-Icelandic Literature: A Critical Guide (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 316–63.Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E.Riddarasögur: 1. Indigenous’, in Pulsiano, Phillip and Wolf, Kirsten (eds.), Medieval Scandinavia: An Encyclopedia (New York and London: Garland, 1993), pp. 528–31.Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E.Sources, translations, redactions, manuscript transmission’, in Kalinke, (ed.), The Arthur of the North: The Arthurian Legend in the Norse and Rus’ Realms (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2011), pp. 2247.Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E. Stories Set Forth with Fair Words: The Evolution of Medieval Romance in Iceland (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E.Transgression in Hrólfs saga kraka’, in Jakobsson, Ármann, Lassen, Annette and Ney, Agneta (eds.), Fornaldarsagornas struktur och ideologi: Handlingar från ett symposium i Uppsala 31.8–2.9 2001 (Uppsala: Uppsala Universitet, 2003), pp. 157–71.Google Scholar
Kalinke, Marianne E. and Mitchell, P. M., Bibliography of Old Norse-Icelandic Romances (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1985).Google Scholar
Kapitan, Katarzyna Anna, ‘A choice of relationship-revealing variants for a cladistic analysis of Old Norse texts: Some methodological considerations’, in Golub, Koraljka and Milrad, Marcelo (eds.), Digital Humanities Symposium Proceedings (Växjö: CEUR Workshop Proceedings, 2017), pp. 5274.Google Scholar
Kapitan, Katarzyna AnnaDating paper manuscripts based on watermarks: A case study of selected nineteenth-century Icelandic manuscripts’, Care and Conservation of Manuscripts, 17 (2021), 1526.Google Scholar
Karlsen, Espen, ‘Liturgiske bøker i Norge inntil år 1300: Import og egenproduksjon’, in Imsen, Steinar (ed.), Den kirkehistoriske utfordring (Trondheim: Tapir Academic Press, 2005), pp. 147–70.Google Scholar
Axelsdóttir, Katrín, ‘Gunnlaugur Leifsson og Ambrósíus saga’, Skírnir, 179 (2005), 337–49.Google Scholar
Kedwards, Dale, The Mappae Mundi of Medieval Iceland (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2020).Google Scholar
Kershaw, Jane F., Viking Identities: Scandinavian Jewellery in England (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Kershaw, Jane and Røyrvik, Ellen C., ‘The “People of the British Isles” project and Viking settlement in England’, Antiquity, 90:354 (2016), 1670–80.Google Scholar
Kestemont, Mike et al., ‘Forgotten books: The application of unseen species models to the survival of culture’, Science, 375 (2022), 765–9.Google Scholar
Kıvılcım Yavuz, N., ‘Judging a book by its cover: Manuscripts with limp bindings in the Arnamagnæan Collection’, in Kapitan, Katarzyna Anna, Stegmann, Beeke and Vrieland, Seán D (eds.), From Text to Artefact: Studies in Honour of Anne Mette Hansen (Leeds: Kismet Press, 2019), pp. 121–40.Google Scholar
Knirk, James E., Oratory in the Kings’ Sagas (Oslo: Universitetsforlaget, 1981).Google Scholar
Kock, Ernst A., Notationes Norrœnæ: Anteckningar till Edda och skaldediktning, Lunds Universitets årsskrift, New Series, section 1, 28 vols. (Lund: C. W. K. Gleerup, 1923–41).Google Scholar
Kozielek, Gerard (ed.), Mittelalterrezeption: Texte zur Aufnahme altdeutscher Literatur in der Romantik (Tübingen: Max Niemeyer, 1977).Google Scholar
Kramarz-Bein, Susanne, ‘“Modernität” der Laxdæla saga’, in Uecker, Heiko (ed.), Studien zum Altgermanischen: Festchrift für Heinrich Beck (Berlin: De Gruyter, 1994), pp. 421–2.Google Scholar
Kreutzer, Gert, Die Dichtungslehre der Skalden, 2nd ed. (Meisenheim am Glan: Hain, 1977).Google Scholar
Árnason, Kristján, ‘Upptök íslensks ritmáls’, Íslenskt mál, 24 (2002), 157–93.Google Scholar
Kuhn, Hans, ‘The rímur-poet and his audience’, Saga-Book, 23 (1990–3), 454–68.Google Scholar
Kuhn, HansZur Wortstellung und -betonung im Altgermanischen’, Beiträge zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache und Literatur, 57 (1933), 1109.Google Scholar
La Farge, Beatrice and Tucker, John (eds.), Glossary to the Poetic Edda (Heidelberg: Winter, 1992).Google Scholar
Lambertus, Hendrik, Von monströsen Helden und heldenhaften Monstern: Zur Darstellung und Funktion des Fremden in den originalen Riddarasögur (Tübingen and Basle: Francke, 2013).Google Scholar
Lange, Wolfgang, Studien zur Christlichen Dichtung der Nordgermanen 1000–1200 (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1958).Google Scholar
Larrington, Carolyne, ‘A textscape: On Sámsey’, in Müller-Wille, Klaus et al. (eds.), Skandinavische Schriftlandschaften: Vänbok till Jürg Glauser (Tübingen: Narr Francke Attempto, 2017), pp. 84–9.Google Scholar
Larrington, CarolyneA viking in shining armour? Vikings and chivalry in the fornaldarsögur’, VMS, 4 (2008), 269–88.Google Scholar
Larrington, Carolyne Brothers and Sisters in Medieval European Literature (Woodbridge: York Medieval Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Larrington, CarolyneEddic poetry and heroic legend’, in Larrington, Carolyne, Quinn, Judy and Schorn, Brittany (eds.), A Handbook to Eddic Poetry: Myths and Legends of Ancient Scandinavia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016), pp. 147–72.Google Scholar
Larrington, Carolyne“I have long desired to cure you of old age”: Sibling drama in the later heroic poems of the Edda’, in Acker, Paul and Larrington, Carolyne (eds.), Revisiting the Poetic Edda: Essays on Old Norse Heroic Legend (London and New York: Routledge, 2013), pp. 140–56.Google Scholar
Larrington, CarolyneLearning to feel in the Old Norse Camelot?’, SS, 87:1 (2015), 7494.Google Scholar
Larrington, CarolyneSibling drama: Laterality in the heroic poems of the Edda’, in Anlezark, Daniel (ed.), Myths, Legends, and Heroes: Essays on Old Norse and Old English Literature in Honour of John McKinnell (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2011), pp. 169–87.Google Scholar
Larrington, CarolyneThe translated lais’, in Kalinke, Marianne E. (ed.), The Arthur of the North: The Arthurian Legend in the Norse and Rus’ Realms (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2011), pp. 7797.Google Scholar
Larrington, Carolyne“Undruðusk þá, sem fyrir var”: Wonder, Vínland and mediaeval travel narratives’, Medieval Scandinavia, 14 (2004), 91114.Google Scholar
Larrington, CarolyneWhat does woman want? Mær and munr in Skírnismal’, alvíssmál, 1 (1992), 316.Google Scholar
Larrington, Carolyne and Quinn, Judy, ‘“I remember giants”: Mythological remembering through Völuspá’, in Glauser, Jürg and Hermann, Pernille (eds.), Myth, Magic, and Memory in Early Scandinavian Narrative Culture: Studies in Honour of Stephen A. Mitchell (Turnhout: Brepols, 2021), pp. 4762.Google Scholar
Larrington, Carolyne, Quinn, Judy and Schorn, Brittany (eds.), A Handbook to Eddic Poetry: Myths and Legends of Ancient Scandinavia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Larsson, Lars, ‘A ceremonial building as a “home of the gods”? Central buildings in the central place of Uppåkra’ (2020), conference paper published on researchgate.net.Google Scholar
Larsson, LarsExpressions of cosmology at the central place of Uppåkra, southern Sweden’, in Ruhmann, Christiane and Brieske, Vera (eds.), Dying Gods: Religious Beliefs in Northern and Eastern Europe in the Time of Christianisation (Hanover: Niedersächsisches Landesmuseum, 2015), pp. 145–58.Google Scholar
Larsson, LarsRitual building and ritual space: Aspects of investigations at the Iron Age central site Uppåkra, Scania, Sweden’, in Andrén, Anders, Jennbert, Kristina and Raudvere, Catharina (eds.), Old Norse Religion in Long-Term Perspectives: Origins, Changes, and Interactions (Lund: Nordic Academic, 2006), pp. 248–53.Google Scholar
Lassen, Annette, ‘A fragment of the younger redaction of the lost Skjöldunga saga’, in Driscoll, Matthew James and Óskarsdóttir, Svanhildur (eds.), 66 Manuscripts from the Arnamagnæan Collection (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2015), pp. 58–9.Google Scholar
Lassen, Annette Odin’s Ways: A Guide to the Pagan God in Medieval Literature, trans. Helen F. Leslie-Jacobsen and Margaret Cormack (London: Routledge, 2022).Google Scholar
Lassen, Annette Oldtidssagaernes verden (Copenhagen: Gyldendal, 2021).Google Scholar
Lassen, AnnetteOrigines gentium and the learned origin of fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda’, in Lassen, Annette, Ney, Agneta and Jakobsson, Ármann (eds.), The Legendary Sagas: Origins and Development (Reykjavík: University of Iceland Press, 2012), pp. 3358.Google Scholar
Lassen, AnnetteSkurðgoð, trégoð, hofgyðjur og heiðinglig hof: En gruppe hedenske elementer og deres kontekst i Örvar-Odds saga, Sturlaugs saga starfsama og Bósa saga’, in Ney, Agneta, Jakobsson, Ármann and Lassen, Annette (eds.), Fornaldarsagaerne: Myter og virkelighed (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2009), pp. 255–80.Google Scholar
Lavender, Philip, Long Lives of Short Sagas: The Irrepressibility of Narrative and the Case of Illuga Saga Gríðarfóstra (Copenhagen: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2020).Google Scholar
Lecouturier, Solveig, Population and Housing in Iceland in the Days of the Landnám: Foundation Deposit Ritual (Paris: Université Paris Ouest, 2011).Google Scholar
Leslie, Helen F., ‘The death-songs of Örvar-Odds saga’, in Grifoll, Isabel, Acebrón, Julián and Sabaté, Flocel (eds.), Cartografies de l’ànima: Identitat, memòria i escriptura (Lleida: Pagès editors, 2014), pp. 231–44.Google Scholar
Lethbridge, Emily, ‘Gráskinna: Material aspects of a pocket, patchwork Njála’, in Lethbridge, Emily and Óskarsdóttir, Svanhildur (eds.), New Studies in the Manuscript Tradition of Njáls saga: The historia mutila of Njála (Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Institute Publications, 2018), pp. 5585.Google Scholar
Lévi-Strauss, Claude and Éribon, Didier, Le Regard éloigné (Paris: Plon, 1983), translated into English as The View from Afar (New York: Basic Books, 1985).Google Scholar
Lincoln, Bruce, Gods and Demons, Priests and Scholars: Critical Explorations in the History of Religions (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Lindow, John, ‘Narrative and the nature of skaldic poetry’, ANF, 97 (1982), 94121.Google Scholar
Lindow, JohnNorse mythology and the lives of the saints’, SS, 73:3 (2001), 437–56.Google Scholar
Lindow, JohnSt Olaf and the skalds’, in DuBois, Thomas A. (ed.), Sanctity in the North: Saints, Lives, and Cults in Medieval Scandinavia (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2008), pp. 103–27.Google Scholar
Lobrichon, Guy, ‘Un nouveau genre pour un public novice: La paraphrase biblique dans l’espace roman du XIIe siècle’, in Kullmann, Dorothea (ed.), The Church and Vernacular Literature in Medieval France (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 2009), pp. 87108.Google Scholar
Lodén, Sofia, French Romance, Medieval Sweden and the Europeanisation of Culture (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2021).Google Scholar
Long, Ann-Marie, Iceland’s Relationship with Norway c. 870c. 1100: Memory, History and Identity (Leiden: Brill, 2017).Google Scholar
Lönnroth, Lars, ‘Charlemagne, Hrolf kraki, Olaf Tryggvason: Parallels in the heroic tradition’, Les Relations littéraires franco-scandinaves au Moyen Âge: Actes du Colloque de Liège, avril 1972 (Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1975), pp. 2952.Google Scholar
Lönnroth, Lars European Sources of Icelandic Saga-Writing: An Essay Based on Previous Studies (Stockholm: Thule, 1965), reprinted in Lars Lönnroth, The Academy of Odin: Selected Papers on Old Norse Literature (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2011), pp. 13–23.Google Scholar
Lönnroth, LarsFornaldarsagans genremässiga metamorfoser: Mellan Edda-myt och ridderroman’, in Jakobsson, Ármann, Lassen, Annette and Ney, Agneta (eds.), Fornaldarsagornas struktur och ideologi: Handlingar från ett symposium i Uppsala 31.8–2.9 2001 (Uppsala: Uppsala Universitet, 2003), pp. 3745.Google Scholar
Lönnroth, LarsHjálmar’s death-song and the delivery of eddic poetry’, Speculum, 46:1 (1971), 120, reprinted in Lars Lönnroth, The Academy of Odin: Selected Papers on Old Norse Literature (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2011), pp. 191–218.Google Scholar
Njáls saga: A Critical Introduction (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1976).Google Scholar
The noble heathen: A theme in the sagas’, SS, 41:1 (1969), 129.Google Scholar
Structuralist approaches to saga literature’, in Quinn, Judy, Heslop, Kate and Wills, Tarrin (eds.), Learning and Understanding in the Old Norse World: Essays in Honour of Margaret Clunies Ross (Turnhout: Brepols, 2007), pp. 6374.Google Scholar
Lord, Albert Bates, The Singer of Tales (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1960).Google Scholar
Louis-Jensen, Jonna, ‘Vöndr er María mynduð’, in Dronke, Ursula et al. (eds.), Speculum Norroenum: Norse Studies in Memory of Gabriel Turville-Petre (Odense: Odense University Press, 1981), pp. 328–36.Google Scholar
Love, J. S., ‘The organization of poetic quotations in Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks’, in Lassen, Annette, Ney, Agneta and Jakobsson, Ármann (eds.), The Legendary Sagas: Origins and Development (Reykjavík: University of Iceland Press, 2012), pp. 153–70.Google Scholar
Lucas, Gavin (ed.), Hofstaðir: Excavations of a Viking Age Feasting Hall in North-Eastern Iceland (Reykjavík: Institute of Archaeology, 2009).Google Scholar
Lund, Julie, ‘Connectedness with things: Animated objects of Viking Age Scandinavia and early medieval Europe’, Archaeological Dialogues, 24:1 (2017), 89108.Google Scholar
Lund, Julie and Sindbæk, Søren M, ‘Crossing the maelstrom: New departures in Viking archaeology’, Journal of Archaeological Research, 30 (2022), 169229.Google Scholar
Lundgreen-Nielsen, Flemming, ‘Grundtvig’s Norse mythological imagery: An experiment that failed’, in Wawn, Andrew (ed.), Northern Antiquity: The Post-Medieval Reception of Edda and Saga (Enfield Lock: Hisarlik Press, 1994), pp. 4167.Google Scholar
Lyons, Matthew N., ‘Jack Donovan and male tribalism’, in Sedgwick, Mark (ed.), Key Thinkers of the Radical Right: Behind the New Threat to Liberal Democracy (New York: Oxford University Press, 2019), pp. 242–58.Google Scholar
Cana, Mac, Proinsias, , ‘Notes on the combination of prose and verse in early Irish narrative’, in Tranter, Stephen N. and Hildegard, L. C. Tristram (eds.), Early Irish Literature: Media and Communication (Tübingen: Gunter Narr, 1989), pp. 125–47.Google Scholar
Macpherson, Michael, ‘Digitizing Early Icelandic Script for learners, human and machine: Justification, methodology, and a prototype’, unpublished MA dissertation, University of Iceland (2016).Google Scholar
Macpherson, Michael and Tirosh, Yoav, ‘A stylometric analysis of Ljósvetninga saga’, Gripla, 31 (2020), 740.Google Scholar
Magerøy, Hallvard, ‘Skaldestrofer som retardasjonmiddel i islendingesogene’, in Pétursson, Einar G. and Kristjánsson, Jónas (eds.), Sjötíu ritgerðir helgaðar Jakobi Benediktssyni 20. júli 1977, 2 vols. (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1977), vol. II, pp. 586–99.Google Scholar
Gíslason, Magnús, Kvällsvaka: En isländsk kulturtradition belyst genom studier i bondebefolkningens vardagsliv och miljö under senare hälften av 1800-talet och början av 1900-talet (Uppsala: Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis, 1977).Google Scholar
Jónsson, Magnús, Guðmundar saga dýra: Nokkrar athuganir um uppruna hennar og samsetning (Reykjavík: Ísafoldarprentsmiðja, 1940).Google Scholar
Stefánsson, Magnús, ‘Frá goðakirkju til biskupskirkju’, in Líndal, Sigurður (ed.), Saga Íslands 3 (Reykjavík: Hið íslenska bókmenntafélag, 1978), pp. 111257.Google Scholar
Stefánsson, Magnús Staðir og staðamál: Studier i islandske egenkirkelige og beneficialrettslige forhold i middelalderen (Bergen: Universitetet i Bergen, 2000).Google Scholar
Males, Mikael, ‘The last pagan’, JEGP, 116:4 (2017), 491514.Google Scholar
Males, Mikael The Poetic Genesis of Old Icelandic Literature (Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter, 2020).Google Scholar
Malm, Mats, ‘The humanist reception in Scandinavia’, in Clunies Ross, Margaret (ed.), The Pre-Christian Religions of the North: Research and Reception (Turnhout: Brepols, 2018), vol. I, pp. 187218.Google Scholar
Malm, MatsThe Nordic demand for Icelandic manuscripts’, in Sigurðsson, Gísli and Ólason, Vésteinn (eds.), The Manuscripts of Iceland (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 2004), pp. 101–8.Google Scholar
Malm, MatsOlaus Rudbeck’s Atlantica and Old Norse poetics’, in Wawn, Andrew (ed.), Northern Antiquity: The Post-Medieval Reception of Edda and Saga (Enfield Lock: Hisarlik Press, 1994), pp. 125.Google Scholar
Jónsson, Már, Arnas Magnæus philologus (16631730) (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2012).Google Scholar
Jónsson, Már ‘Hversu mörg íslensk handrit eru varðveitt í útlöndum?’, Vísindavefurinn, 4 May 2021, online at www.visindavefur.is/svar.php?id=81724.Google Scholar
Jónsson, MárManuscript design in medieval Iceland’, in Þorláksson, Helgi and Sigurðardóttir, Þóra Björg (eds.), From Nature to Script: Reykholt, Environment, Centre, and Manuscript Making (Reykholt: Snorrastofa Cultural and Medieval Centre, 2012), pp. 231–43.Google Scholar
Jónsson, MárMegindlegar handritarannsóknir’, in Ornato, Ezio (ed.), Lofræða um handritamergð: Hugleiðingar um bóksögu miðalda, trans. Már Jónsson and Björg Birgisdóttir (Reykjavík: Sagnfræðistofnun Háskóla Íslands, 2003), pp. 734.Google Scholar
Eggertsdóttir, Margrét, ‘Script and print in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Iceland: The case of Hólar í Hjaltadal’, in Eggertsdóttir, Margrét and Driscoll, Matthew James (eds.), Mirrors of Virtue: Manuscript and Print in Late Pre-Modern Iceland (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2017), pp. 127–65.Google Scholar
Marner, Astrid, ‘Glosur lesnar af undirdiupi omeliarum hins mikla Gregorij, Augustini, Ambrosij ok Jeronimi ok annarra kennifedra: Väterzitate und Politik in der Jóns saga baptista des Grímr Hólmsteinsson’, unpublished PhD thesis, University of Bonn (2013).Google Scholar
Marner, AstridLiturgical change and liturgical plurality in the province of Nidaros: New light on the Ordo Nidrosiensis Ecclesiae’, in Harðarson, Gunnar and Johansson, Karl G. (eds.), Dominican Resonances in Medieval Iceland: The Legacy of Bishop Jón Halldórsson of Skálholt (Leiden: Brill, 2021), pp. 183202.Google Scholar
Marner, AstridThemata sermonum in Skálholt: AM 241b Iα fol. and Uppsala UB C 301’, Viator, 48:3 (2017), 169–90.Google Scholar
Marner, Astrid and Jensson, Gottskálk, ‘Seven pieces of Latin poetry: A study in the mise-en-page and poetic style of medieval Icelandic-Latin verse’, in Heidi Walther, Sabine et al. (eds.), Res, Artes et Religio: Essays in Honour of Rudolf Simek (Leeds: Kismet Press, 2021), pp. 385414.Google Scholar
Marold, Edith, ‘Die Eykyndilsvísur des Björn Hítdœlakappi’, in Andersen, Stig Toftgaard (ed.), Die Aktualität der Saga: Festschrift für Hans Schottmann (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 1999), pp. 135–48.Google Scholar
Marold, EdithMansöngr – a phantom genre?’, in Quinn, Judy, Heslop, Kate and Wills, Tarrin (eds.), Learning and Understanding in the Old Norse World: Essays in Honour of Margaret Clunies Ross (Turnhout: Brepols, 2007), pp. 239–62.Google Scholar
Marold, EdithThe relation between verses and prose in Bjarnar saga Hítdœlakappa’, in Poole, Russell (ed.), Skaldsagas: Text, Vocation, and Desire in the Icelandic Sagas of Poets (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2001), pp. 75124.Google Scholar
Marti, Suzanne, ‘Svá var þá siðr at gera riddara: The chronology of the riddarasögur re-examined’, in Johansson, Karl G. and Mundal, Else (eds.), Riddarasögur: The Translation of European Court Culture in Medieval Scandinavia (Oslo: Novus, 2014), pp. 155–74.Google Scholar
Mayburd, Miriam, ‘Between a rock and a soft place: The materiality of Old Norse dwarves and paranormal ecologies in fornaldarsögur’, in Sävborg, Daniel and Bek-Pedersen, Karen (eds.), Supernatural Encounters in Old Norse Literature and Tradition (Turnhout: Brepols, 2018), pp. 189214.Google Scholar
Mayburd, MiriamThe hills have eyes: Post-mortem mountain dwelling and the (super)natural landscape in the Íslendingasögur’, VMS, 10 (2014), 129–54.Google Scholar
Mayburd, MiriamIt was a dark and stormy night: Haunted saga homesteads, climate fluctuations, and the vulnerable self’, in Jakobsson, Ármann and Mayburd, Miriam (eds.), Paranormal Encounters in Iceland 11501400 (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020), pp. 2137.Google Scholar
McDonald, Werronen, Sheryl, ‘Icelandic scribes: Results of a 2-year project’, in Mäkelä, Eetu, Tolonen, Mikko and Tuominen, Jouni (eds.), Proceedings of the Digital Humanities in the Nordic Countries 3rd Conference, Helsinki, Finland, March 7–9, 2018 (Helsinki: CEUR Workshop Proceedings, 2018), pp. 179–87.Google Scholar
McDonald, Werronen, Sheryl Popular Romance in Iceland: The Women, Worldviews, and Manuscript Witnesses of Nítíða saga (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
McKinnell, John, Ashurst, David and Kick, Donata (eds.), The Fantastic in Old Norse/ Icelandic Literature: Sagas and the British Isles: Preprint Papers of the Thirteenth International Saga Conference, Durham and York, 6th–12th August 2006 (Durham: Centre for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Durham University, 2006).Google Scholar
Mees, Bernard, ‘Hitler and Germanentum’, Journal of Contemporary History, 39:2 (2004), 255–70.Google Scholar
Meissner, Rudolf, Die Kenningar der Skalden: Ein Beitrag zur skaldischen Poetik (Bonn and Leipzig: Schroeder, 1921).Google Scholar
Merkel, Stephen et al., ‘Isotopic analysis of silver from Hedeby and nearby hoards: Preliminary results’, in Eriksen, Marianne Hem et al. (eds.), Viking Worlds: Things, Spaces and Movement (Oxford: Oxbow, 2015), pp. 193210.Google Scholar
Merkelbach, Rebecca and Knight, Gwendolyne (eds.), Margins, Monsters, Deviants: Alterities in Old Norse Literature and Culture (Turnhout: Brepols, 2020).Google Scholar
Meulengracht, Sørensen, Preben, ‘Næsten alle sagaer var skrevet: En kommentar til den såkaldte Sturlunga-prolog’, in Hødnebø, Finn et al. (eds.), Eyvindarbók: Festskrift til Eyvind Fjeld Halvorsen 4. mai 1992 (Oslo: Institutt for nordistikk og litteraturvitenskap, Universitetet i Oslo, 1992), pp. 333–46.Google Scholar
Meulengracht, Sørensen, Preben Norrønt Nid: Forestillingen om den umandige Mand i de islandske Sagaer (Odense: Odense University Press, 1980), translated by Joan Turville-Petre as The Unmanly Man: Concepts of Sexual Defamation in Early Northern Society (Odense: Odense University Press, 1983).Google Scholar
Meulengracht, Sørensen, PrebenThe prosimetrum form 1: Verses as the voice of the past’, in Poole, Russell (ed.), Skaldsagas: Text, Vocation, and Desire in the Icelandic Sagas of Poets (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2001), pp. 172–90.Google Scholar
Meulengracht, Sørensen, Preben Saga og Samfund: En Indføring i oldislandsk Litteratur (Copenhagen: Berling, 1977), translated by John Tucker as Saga and Society: An Introduction to Old Norse Literature (Odense: Odense University Press, 1993).Google Scholar
Meulengracht, Sørensen, Preben The Unmanly Man: Concepts of Sexual Defamation in Early Northern Society, trans. Joan Turville-Petre (Odense: Odense University Press, 1983).Google Scholar
Michelet, Fabienne, ‘La Plainte et le tissage: Voix et action des personnages féminins dans les poèmes Eddaiques de l’Islande médiévale’, Equinoxe, 23 (autumn, 2002), 6779.Google Scholar
Miller, William Ian, Bloodtaking and Peacemaking: Feud, Law, and Society in Saga Iceland (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990).Google Scholar
Miller, William IanEmotions and the sagas’, in Pálsson, Gísli (ed.), From Sagas to Society: Comparative Approaches to Early Iceland (Enfield Lock: Hisarlik Press, 1992), pp. 90109.Google Scholar
Miller, William Ian Eye for an Eye (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Miller, William Ian and Vogt, Helle, ‘Finding, sharing and risk of loss: Of whales, bees and other valuable finds in Iceland, Denmark and Norway’, Comparative Legal History, 3 (2015), 3859.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Stephen A., Heroic Sagas and Ballads (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1991).Google Scholar
Mitchell, Stephen A.Memory, mediality, and the “performative turn”: Recontextualizing remembering in medieval Scandinavia’, SS, 85:3 (2013), 282305.Google Scholar
Morcom, Thomas, Structuring Disruption: The Þættir in the Sagas of Kings (Oxford: Oxford University Press, forthcoming).Google Scholar
Mortensen, Lars Boje, ‘The Nordic archbishoprics as literary centres around 1200’, in Friis-Jensen, Karsten and Skovgaard-Petersen, Inge (eds.), Archbishop Absalon of Lund and His World (Roskilde: Roskilde Museums Forlag, 2000), pp. 133–57.Google Scholar
Mortensen, Lars BojeSaxo og Geoffrey af Monmouth’, Renæssanceforum, 3 (2007), www.renaessanceforum.dk.Google Scholar
Mundal, Else, ‘Fornaldarsogene – vurderinga og vurderingskriteria’, in Jakobsson, Ármann, Lassen, Annette and Ney, Agneta (eds.), Fornaldarsagornas struktur och ideologi: Handlingar från ett symposium i Uppsala 31.8–2.9 2001 (Uppsala: Uppsala Universitet, 2003), pp. 2535.Google Scholar
Mundal, ElseRögnvaldr Kali Kolsson: Orkneyinga saga’s portrait of a good ruler’, New Orkney Antiquarian Journal, 8 (2018), 2431.Google Scholar
Myrvoll, Klaus Johan, ‘The authenticity of Gísli’s verse’, JEGP, 119:2 (2020), 220–57.Google Scholar
van Nahl, Jan Alexander, Snorri Sturlusons Mythologie und die mittelalterliche Theologie (Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter, 2013).Google Scholar
Najork, Daniel C., Reading the Old Norse-Icelandic ‘Maríu saga’ in Its Manuscript Contexts (Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Institute Publications, 2021).Google Scholar
Naumann, Hans-Peter, ‘Das Polyphem-Abenteuer in der altnordischen Sagaliteratur’, Schweizerisches Archiv für Volkskunde, 75: 3–4 (1979), 17389.Google Scholar
Nielsen, Svend, Stability in Musical Improvisation: A Repertoire of Icelandic Epic Songs (Rímur) (Copenhagen: Forlaget Kragen, 1982).Google Scholar
Niermeyer, J. F., Mediae Latinitatis Lexicon Minus (Leiden: Brill, 1984).Google Scholar
Nordeide, Sæbjørg Wallaker, The Viking Age as a Period of Religious Transformation: The Christianization of Norway from AD 56–1150/1200 (Turnhout: Brepols, 2011).Google Scholar
Nordvig, Mathias, Volcanoes in Old Norse Mythology: Myth and Environment in Early Iceland (Leeds: Arc Humanities Press, 2021).Google Scholar
Noreen, Adolf, Altnordische Grammatik I: Altisländische und altnorwegische Grammatik (Laut- und Flexionslehre) unter Berücksichtigung des Urnordischen, 5th unrevised ed. (Tübingen: Max Niemeyer, 1970).Google Scholar
Oberlin, Adam, ‘Vita Sancti, Vita Regis: The saintly king in Hákonar saga Hákonarsonar’, Neophilologus, 95 (2011), 313–28.Google Scholar
Ralph, O’Connor, ‘History or fiction? Truth-claims and defensive narrators in Icelandic romance-sagas’, Medieval Scandinavia, 15 (2005), 101–69.Google Scholar
Ralph, O’ConnorTruth and lies in the fornaldarsögur: The prologue to Göngu-Hrólfs saga’, in Ney, Agneta, Jakobsson, Ármann and Lassen, Annette (eds.), Fornaldarsagaerne: Myter og virkelighed (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2009), pp. 361–78.Google Scholar
Heather, O’Donoghue, ‘Figura in Njáls saga’, The Dorothea Coke Memorial Lecture in Northern Studies, Saga-Book, 42 (2018), 153–66.Google Scholar
Heather, O’Donoghue From Asgard to Valhalla: The Remarkable History of the Norse Myths (London: I. B. Tauris, 2007).Google Scholar
Heather, O’Donoghue The Genesis of a Saga Narrative: Verse and Prose in Kormaks saga (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991).Google Scholar
Heather, O’Donoghue Narrative in the Icelandic Family Saga: Meanings of Time in Old Norse Literature (London: Bloomsbury, 2021).Google Scholar
Heather, O’Donoghue Old Norse-Icelandic Literature: A Short Introduction (Oxford: Blackwell, 2004).Google Scholar
Heather, O’Donoghue Skaldic Verse and the Poetics of Saga Narrative (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005).Google Scholar
O’Donoghue, Heather and Vohra, Pragya (eds.), The Vikings in Cleveland (Nottingham: Centre for the Study of the Viking Age, University of Nottingham, 2014).Google Scholar
Ohly, Friedrich, ‘Vom geistigen Sinn des Wortes im Mittelalter’, Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum und deutsche Literatur, 89 (1958), 123.Google Scholar
Einarsdóttir, Ólafía, Studier i kronologisk metode i tidlig islandsk historieskrivning (Stockholm: C. W. K. Gleerup, 1964).Google Scholar
Halldórsson, Ólafur, Helgafellsbækur fornar (Reykjavík: Heimspekideild Háskóla Íslands og Bókaútgáfa Menningarsjóðs, 1966).Google Scholar
Olmer, Emil, ‘Boksamlingar på Island 1179–1490’, Göteborgs högskolas årsskrift, 7:2 (1902), 184.Google Scholar
Olrik, Axel, Kilderne til Sakses Oldhistorie, vol. II, Norrøne sagaer og danske sagn (Copenhagen: Gad, 1894).Google Scholar
Ommundsen, Åslaug, ‘Homilieboka og dei liturgiske fragmenta’, in Haugen, Odd Einar and Ommundsen, Åslaug (eds.), Vår eldste bok: Skrift, miljø og biletbruk i den norske homilieboka (Oslo: Novus, 2010), pp. 131–50.Google Scholar
Ong, Walter J., Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word (London: Methuen, 1982).Google Scholar
Thorsson, Örnólfur, ‘“Leitin að landinu fagra”: Hugleiðing um rannsóknir á íslenskum fornbókamenntum’, Skáldskaparmál, 1 (1990), 2853.Google Scholar
Vésteinsson, Orri, ‘Archaeology of economy and society’, in McTurk, Rory (ed.), A Companion to Old-Norse Icelandic Literature and Culture (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005), pp. 726.Google Scholar
Vésteinsson, Orri The Christianization of Iceland: Priests, Power, and Social Change 1000–1300 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Vésteinsson, OrriCommercial fishing and the political economy of medieval Iceland’, in Barrett, James H. and Orton, David C. (eds.), Cod and Herring: The Archaeology and History of Medieval Sea Fishing (Oxford: Oxbow, 2016), pp. 71–9.Google Scholar
Vésteinsson, OrriLocal church organization and state formation in medieval Iceland’, in Sveinbjarnardóttir, Guðrún and Þorsteinsson, Bergur (eds.), The Buildings of Medieval Reykholt: The Wider Context (Reykjavík: Snorrastofa and University of Iceland Press, 2017), pp. 5372.Google Scholar
Vésteinsson, Orri and McGovern, Thomas H., ‘The peopling of Iceland’, Norwegian Archaeological Review, 45:2 (2012), 206–18.Google Scholar
Halldórsson, Óskar, Uppruni og þema Hrafnkels sögu (Reykjavík: Hið íslenska bókmenntafélag, 1976).Google Scholar
Owen, Olwyn and Dalland, Magnar, Scar: A Viking Boat Burial on Sanday, Orkney (East Lothian: Tuckwell Press, 1999).Google Scholar
Ólason, Páll Eggert, ‘Fólgin nöfn í rímum’, Skírnir, 89 (1915), 118–32.Google Scholar
Ólason, Páll Eggert Menn og menntir siðskiptaaldarinnar á Íslandi, 4 vols. (Reykjavík: Bókaverzlun Guðmundar Gamalíelssonar, 1919–26).Google Scholar
Patzuk-Russell, Ryder, The Development of Education in Medieval Iceland (Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Institute Publications, 2021).Google Scholar
Perkins, Richard, The Verses in Eric the Red’s Saga; And Again: Norse Visits to America, The Dorothea Coke Memorial Lecture in Northern Studies 2009 (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 2011).Google Scholar
Sigurðsson, Pétur, ‘Um Haukdælaþátt’, in Brandum-Nielsen, Johannes et al. (eds.), Festskrift til Finnur Jónsson 29. Maj 1928 (Copenhagen: Levin & Munksgaard, 1928), pp. 8494.Google Scholar
Phelpstead, Carl, ‘Companions, conflicts, and concubines: Clerical masculinities in Lárentíus saga biskups’, in Evans, Gareth Lloyd and Hancock, Jessica Clare (eds.), Masculinities in Old Norse Literature (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2020), pp. 203–16.Google Scholar
Phelpstead, CarlEco-criticism and Eyrbyggja saga’, Leeds Studies in English, New Series, 45 (2014), 118.Google Scholar
Phelpstead, Carl Holy Vikings: Saints’ Lives in the Old Icelandic Kings’ Sagas (Tempe, AZ: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2007).Google Scholar
Poilvez, Marion, ‘A troll did it?: Trauma as a paranormal state in the Íslendingasögur’, in Jakobsson, Ármann and Mayburd, Miriam (eds.), Paranormal Encounters in Iceland 1150–1400 (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020), pp. 7188.Google Scholar
Poilvez, MarionOutlaws of the northern seas: A comparison in the Norse corpus’, in Jennings, Andrew, Reeploeg, Silke and Watt, Angela (eds.), Northern Atlantic Islands and the Sea: Seascapes and Dreamscapes (Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2017), pp. 97112.Google Scholar
Poole, Russell, ‘The origins of the Máhlíðingavísur’, SS, 57:3 (1985), 244–85.Google Scholar
Poole, RussellThe relation between verses and prose in Hallfreðar saga and Gunnlaugs saga’, in Poole, Russell (ed.), Skaldsagas: Text, Vocation, and Desire in the Icelandic Sagas of Poets (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2001), pp. 125–71.Google Scholar
Poole, RussellVariants and variability in the text of Egill’s Höfuðlausn’, in Frank, Roberta (ed.), The Politics of Editing Medieval Texts (New York: AMS Press, 1993), pp. 65105.7Google Scholar
Poole, Russell Viking Poems on War and Peace: A Study in Skaldic Narrative (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1991).Google Scholar
Price, Neil, The Children of Ash and Elm: A History of the Vikings (London: Allen Lane, 2020).Google Scholar
Price, NeilFrom Ginnungagap to the Ragnarök: Archaeologies of the Viking worlds’, in Eriksen, Marianne Hem et al. (eds.), Viking Worlds: Things, Spaces and Movement (Oxford: Oxbow, 2015), pp. 111.Google Scholar
Price, NeilPassing into poetry: Viking-Age mortuary drama and the origins of Norse mythology’, Medieval Archaeology, 54 (2010), 123–56.Google Scholar
Price, Neil The Viking Way: Magic and Mind in Late Iron Age Scandinavia (Oxford: Oxbow, 2019).Google Scholar
Price, NeilWhat’s in a name? An archaeological identity crisis for the Norse gods (and some of their friends)’, in Andrén, Anders, Jennbert, Kristina and Raudvere, Catharina (eds.), Old Norse Religion in Long-Term Perspectives: Origins, Changes, and Interactions (Lund: Nordic Academic, 2006), pp. 179–83.Google Scholar
Price, T. Douglas, et al., ‘Isotopic provenancing of the Salme ship burials in pre-Viking Age Estonia’, Antiquity, 90 (2016), 1022–37.Google Scholar
Pulsiano, Phillip and Wolf, Kirsten (eds.), Medieval Scandinavia: An Encyclopedia (New York and London: Garland, 1993).Google Scholar
Quinn, Judy, ‘Dialogue with a völva: Hyndluljóð, Baldrs draumar and Völuspá’, in Acker, Paul and Larrington, Carolyne (eds.), The Poetic Edda: Essays on Old Norse Mythology (New York: Routledge, 2002), pp. 245–74.Google Scholar
Quinn, JudyThe endless triangles of eddic tragedy: Reading Oddrúnargrátr (The Lament of Oddrún)’, in Ruggerini, Maria Elena (ed.), Studi Anglo-Norreni in Onore di John S. McKinnell (Cagliari: Cooperativa Universitaria Editrice Cagliaritana, 2009), pp. 304–26.Google Scholar
Quinn, JudyFifth-column mother: Týr’s parentage according to Hymiskviða’, in Losquiño, Irene García, Sundqvist, Olof and Taggart, Declan (eds.), Making the Profane Sacred in the Viking Age: Essays in Honour of Stefan Brink (Turnhout: Brepols, 2020), pp. 171–82.Google Scholar
Quinn, JudyFrom orality to literacy in medieval Iceland’, in Ross, Margaret Clunies (ed.), Old Icelandic Literature and Society (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), pp. 3060.Google Scholar
Quinn, JudyThe gendering of death in eddic cosmology’, in Andrén, Anders, Jennbert, Kristina and Raudvere, Catharina (eds.), Old Norse Religion in Long-Term Perspectives: Origins, Changes, and Interactions (Lund: Nordic Academic, 2006), pp. 54–7.Google Scholar
Quinn, JudyLiquid knowledge: Traditional conceptualisations of learning in eddic poetry’, in Ranković, Slavica, Melve, Leidulf and Mundal, Else (eds.), Along the Oral-Written Continuum: Types of Texts, Relations and Their Implications (Turnhout: Brepols, 2010), pp. 175217.Google Scholar
Quinn, Judy“Ok er þetta upphaf”: First-stanza quotation in Old Norse prosimetrum’, alvíssmál, 7 (1997), 6180.Google Scholar
Quinn, JudyOrality, textuality and performance’, in Bampi, Massimiliano, Larrington, Carolyne and Rikhardsdottir, Sif (eds.), A Critical Companion to Old Norse Literary Genre (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2020), pp. 7388.Google Scholar
Quinn, JudyPrecarious ties: The social critique of dynastic networking in eddic heroic poetry’, in Kramarz-Bein, Susanne and Hilsmann, Birge (eds.), Applications of Network Theories (Berlin: LIT, 2014), pp. 3370.Google Scholar
Quinn, JudyThe realisation of mythological design: The early generations of the Völsung dynasty’, in Ney, Agneta, Jakobsson, Ármann and Lassen, Annette (eds.), Fornaldarsagaerne: Myter og virkelighed (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2009), pp. 123–42.Google Scholar
Quinn, JudyScenes of vindication: Three Icelandic heroic poems in relation to the continental traditions of Þiðreks saga af Bern and the Nibelungenlied’, in Mundal, Else (ed.), Medieval Nordic Literature in Its European Context (Oslo: Dreyer, 2015), pp. 78125.Google Scholar
Quinn, JudyTrust in words: Verse quotation and dialogue in Völsunga saga’, in Jakobsson, Ármann, Lassen, Annette and Ney, Agneta (eds.), Fornaldarsagornas struktur och ideologi: Handlingar från ett symposium i Uppsala 31.8–2.9 2001 (Uppsala: Uppsala Universitet, 2003), pp. 89100.Google Scholar
Quinn, JudyVöluspá and the composition of eddic verse’, in Pàroli, Teresa (ed.), Atti del 12° Congresso internazionale di studi sull’alto medioevo: Poetry in the Scandinavian Middle Ages (Spoleto: Centro italiano di studi sull’alto medioevo, 1990), pp. 303–20.Google Scholar
Quinn, JudyThe “wind of the giantess”: Snorri Sturluson, Rudolf Meissner and the interpretation of mythological kennings along taxonomic lines’, VMS, 8 (2012), 207–59.Google Scholar
Quinn, Judy and Kalinke, Marianne et al., ‘Interrogating genre in the fornaldarsögur: Round-table discussion’, VMS, 2 (2006), 275–96.Google Scholar
Raffield, Ben, ‘“A river of knives and swords”: Ritually deposited weapons in English watercourses and wetlands during the Viking Age’, European Journal of Archaeology, 17:4 (2014), 634–55.Google Scholar
Aðalsteinsson, Ragnar Ingi, Traditions and Continuities: Alliteration in Old and Modern Icelandic Verse, trans. Sigurlína Davíðsdóttir (Reykjavík: University of Iceland Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Mósesdóttir, Ragnheiður, ‘“Good white paper, with a new, clear and elegant typeface”: Early Arnamagnæan editions’, Variants: The Journal of the European Society for Textual Scholarship, 4 (2005), 5776.Google Scholar
Ranković, Slavica, ‘Who is speaking in traditional texts? On the distributed author of the sagas of Icelanders and Serbian epic poetry’, New Literary History, 38:2 (2007), 293307.Google Scholar
Reichardt, Konstantin, Studien zu den Skalden des 9. und 10. Jahrhunderts (Leipzig: Mayer & Müller, 1928).Google Scholar
Reuschel, Helga, Untersuchungen über Stoff und Stil der Fornaldarsaga (Bühl: Konkordia, 1933).Google Scholar
Rindal, Magnus, ‘The history of Old Nordic manuscripts II: Old Norwegian (incl. Faroese)’, in Bandle, Oskar et al. (eds.), The Nordic Languages: An International Handbook of the History of the North Germanic Languages, 2 vols. (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2002–5), vol. I, pp. 801–8.Google Scholar
Robertson, D. W., Jr., A Preface to Chaucer: Studies in Medieval Perspectives (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1962).Google Scholar
Roelli, Philipp (ed.), Handbook of Stemmatology: History, Methods, Digital Approaches (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020).Google Scholar
Rohrbach, Lena, ‘The chronotopes of Íslendinga saga: Narrativizations of history in thirteenth-century Iceland’, SS, 89:3 (2017), 351–74.Google Scholar
Rohrbach, LenaNarrative negotiations of literary practices in Íslendinga saga and Hákonar saga Hákonarsonar’, in Sigurðsson, Jón Viðar and Jakobsson, Sverrir (eds.), Sturla Þórðarson: Skald, Chieftain and Lawman (Leiden: Brill, 2017), pp. 93106.Google Scholar
Rohrbach, Lena (ed.), The Power of the Book: Medial Approaches to Medieval Nordic Legal Manuscripts (Berlin: Nordeuropa-Institut der Humbolt-Universität, 2014).Google Scholar
Rose, Els, Ritual Memory: The Apocryphal Acts and Liturgical Commemoration in the Early Medieval West (c. 500–1215) (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2009).Google Scholar
Rosenwein, Barbara H., Anger’s Past: The Social Uses of an Emotion in the Middle Ages (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Rösli, Lukas, Topographien der eddischen Mythen: Eine Untersuchung zu den Raumnarrativen und den narrative Räumen in der Lieder-Edda und der Prosa-Edda (Tübingen: Narr Francke Attempto, 2015).Google Scholar
Roughton, Philip, ‘AM 645 4to and AM 652/630 4to: Study and translation of two thirteenth-century Icelandic collections of apostles’ and saints’ lives’, unpublished PhD thesis, University of Colorado (2002).Google Scholar
Roughton, PhilipStylistics and sources of the Postola sögur in AM 645 4to and AM 652/630 4to’, Gripla, 16 (2005), 750.Google Scholar
Rowbotham, T. P., ‘Fornaldarsögur, prosimetrum, and history-writing in medieval Iceland’, unpublished PhD thesis, University of York (2018).Google Scholar
Rowe, Elizabeth Ashman, The Development of Flateyjarbók: Iceland and the Norwegian Dynastic Crisis of 1389 (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2005).Google Scholar
Rowe, Elizabeth AshmanFornaldarsögur and heroic legends of the Edda’, in Acker, Paul and Larrington, Carolyne (eds.), Revisiting the Poetic Edda: Essays on Old Norse Heroic Legend (London and New York: Routledge, 2013), pp. 202–18.Google Scholar
Sanmark, Alexandra, Viking Law and Order: Places and Rituals of Assembly in the Medieval North (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Sävborg, Daniel, ‘Kärleken i fornaldarsagorna – höviskt eller heroiskt?’, in Jakobsson, Ármann, Lassen, Annette and Ney, Agneta (eds.), Fornaldarsagornas struktur och ideologi: Handlingar från ett symposium i Uppsala 31.8–2.9 2001 (Uppsala: Uppsala Universitet, 2003), pp. 4772.Google Scholar
Sävborg, DanielKärleken i Laxdæla saga – höviskt och sagatypiskt’, alvíssmál, 11 (2004), 75104.Google Scholar
Sävborg, DanielStyle’, in Jakobsson, Ármann and Jakobsson, Sverrir (eds.), The Routledge Research Companion to the Medieval Icelandic Sagas (London and New York: Routledge, 2017), pp. 111–26.Google Scholar
Sayers, William, ‘Textual evidence for spilling lines in the rigging of medieval Scandinavian keels’, The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology, 28:4 (1999), 343–54.Google Scholar
Schach, Paul, ‘Fóstbrœðra saga’, in Pulsiano, Phillip and Wolf, Kirsten (eds.), Medieval Scandinavia: An Encyclopedia (New York and London: Garland, 1993), pp. 218–19.Google Scholar
Schjødt, Jens Peter, Lindow, John and Andrén, Anders (eds.), The Pre-Christian Religions of the North: History and Structures, 4 vols. (Turnhout: Brepols, 2020).Google Scholar
Schlauch, Margaret, Romance in Iceland (London: Allen & Unwin, 1934).Google Scholar
Schmitt, Jean-Claude, ‘Anthropologie historique’, Bulletin du centre d’études médiévales d’Auxerre, Hors-série, 2 (2008), https://doi.org/10.4000/cem.8862.Google Scholar
von Schnurbein, Stefanie, ‘Germanic Neopaganism’, in Clunies Ross, Margaret (ed.), The Pre-Christian Religions of the North: Research and Reception (Turnhout: Brepols, 2018), vol. II, pp. 485523.Google Scholar
von Schnurbein, Stefanie Norse Revival: Transformations of Germanic Neopaganism (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2016).Google Scholar
Schorn, Brittany Erin, Speaker and Authority in Old Norse Wisdom Poetry (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2017).Google Scholar
von See, Klaus, ‘Skaldenstrophe und Sagaprosa: Ein Beitrag zum Problem der mündlichen Überlieferung in der altnordischen Literatur’, Medieval Scandinavia, 10 (1977), 5882.Google Scholar
von See, KlausSnorri Sturluson and the creation of a Norse cultural ideology’, trans. Bill McCann, Saga-Book, 25 (1998–2001), 367–93.Google Scholar
von See, Klaus and La Farge, Beatrice et al. (eds.), Kommentar zu den Liedern der Edda, 7 vols. (Heidelberg: Winter, 1997–2019).Google Scholar
Seelow, Hubert, ‘Der Geirmundar þáttr heljarskinns in der Sturlunga saga’, in Tómasson, Sverrir (ed.), Samtíðarsögur/The Contemporary Sagas: Preprints from the Ninth International Saga Conference (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar, 1994), pp. 698711.Google Scholar
Seelow, Hubert Die isländischen Übersetzungen der deutschen Volksbücher: Handschriftenstudien zur Rezeption und Überlieferung ausländischer unterhaltender Literatur in Island in der Zeit zwischen Reformation und Aufklärung (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar, 1989).Google Scholar
Shippey, Tom, ‘A revolution reconsidered: Mythography and mythology in the nineteenth century’, in Shippey, Tom (ed.), The Shadow-Walkers: Jacob Grimm’s Mythology of the Monstrous (Tempe, AZ: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2005), pp. 128.Google Scholar
Shippey, TomForeword’, in Acker, Paul and Larrington, Carolyne (eds.), Revisiting the Poetic Edda: Essays on Old Norse Heroic Legend (London and New York: Routledge, 2013), pp. xiiixix.Google Scholar
Shippey, TomGoths and Huns: The rediscovery of northern cultures in the nineteenth century’, in Haarder, Andreas et al. (eds.), The Medieval Legacy: A Symposium (Odense: Odense University Press, 1982), pp. 5169.Google Scholar
Siddiqui, Tash, ‘Specters of Nazism’, in Berry, Mark and Vazsonyi, Nicholas (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Wagner’s Ring des Nibelungen (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020), pp. 297316.Google Scholar
Sievers, Eduard, Altgermanische Metrik (Halle: Max Niemeyer, 1893).Google Scholar
Rikhardsdottir, Sif, Emotion in Old Norse Literature: Translations, Voices, Contexts (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2017).Google Scholar
Rikhardsdottir, Sif Medieval Translations and Cultural Discourse: The Movement of Texts in England, France and Scandinavia (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2012).Google Scholar
Rikhardsdottir, SifOceanic networks: Literary production, transmission, and mediation across the north’, in Horn, Anna Catharina and Johansson, Karl G. (eds.), The Meaning of Media: Texts and Materiality in Medieval Scandinavia (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2021), pp. 103–24.Google Scholar
Rikhardsdottir, SifThe phantom of a romance: Traces of romance transmission and the question of originality’, in Edlich-Muth, Miriam (ed.), Medieval Romances across European Borders (Turnhout: Brepols, 2018), pp. 133–51.Google Scholar
Rikhardsdottir, Sif and Eriksen, Stefka G., ‘État present: Arthurian literature in the north’, Journal of the International Arthurian Society, 1:1 (2013), 328.Google Scholar
Sigurdson, Erika, The Church in Fourteenth-Century Iceland: The Formation of an Elite Clerical Identity (Leiden: Brill, 2016).Google Scholar
Nordal, Sigurður, Hrafnkatla (Reykjavík: Ísafoldarprentsmiðja, 1940), translated by R. George Thomas as Hrafnkels saga Freysgoða: A Study (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1958).Google Scholar
Nordal, SigurðurSagalitteraturen’, Nordisk kultur, 8 B (1953), 180273.Google Scholar
Simek, Rudolf, Altnordische Kosmographie: Studien und Quellen zu Weltbild und Weltbeschreibung in Norwegen und Island vom 12. bis zum 14. Jahrhundert (Berlin: De Gruyter, 1990).Google Scholar
Simpson, Jacqueline, ‘Advocacy and art in Gudmundar saga dýra’, Saga-Book, 15 (1957–61), 327–45.Google Scholar
Skórzewska, Joanna A., Constructing a Cult: The Life and Veneration of Guðmundr Arason (1161–1237) in the Icelandic Written Sources (Leiden: Brill, 2011).Google Scholar
Skre, Dagfinn (ed.), Avaldsnes: A Sea-Kings’ Manor in First-Millennium Western Scandinavia (Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter, 2017).Google Scholar
Skre, DagfinnThe social context of settlement in Norway in the first millennium AD’, Norwegian Archaeological Review, 34:1 (2001), 112.Google Scholar
Smalley, Beryl, The Study of the Bible in the Middle Ages (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1978).Google Scholar
Snook, Jennifer, American Heathens: The Politics of Identity in a Pagan Religious Movement (Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Guðmundsdóttir, Soffía Guðný and Guðnadóttir, Laufey, ‘Book production in the Middle Ages’, in Sigurðsson, Gísli and Ólason, Vésteinn (eds.), The Manuscripts of Iceland (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 2004), pp. 4562.Google Scholar
Sot, Michel, Gesta episcoporum, gesta abbatum (Turnhout: Brepols, 1981).Google Scholar
Spencer, Helen L., ‘Vernacular and Latin versions of a sermon for Lent: “A lost penitential homily” found’, Medieval Studies, 44 (1982), 271305.Google Scholar
Springborg, Peter, ‘Types of bindings in the Arnamagnæan Collection’, Care and Conservation of Manuscripts, 5 (2000), 129–47.Google Scholar
Spurkland, Terje, ‘Literacy and “runacy” in medieval Scandinavia’, in Adams, Jonathan and Holman, Katherine (eds.), Scandinavia and Europe 800–1350: Contact, Conflict, and Coexistence (Turnhout: Brepols, 2004), pp. 333–44.Google Scholar
Einarsson, Stefán, A History of Icelandic Literature (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins Press, 1957).Google Scholar
Karlsson, Stefán, ‘Alfræði Sturlu Þórðarsonar’, in Grímsdóttir, Guðrún Ása and Kristjánsson, Jónas (eds.), Sturlustefna: Ráðstefna haldin á sjö alda ártíð Sturlu Þórðarsonar sagnaritara 1984 (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1988), pp. 3760.Google Scholar
Karlsson, StefánThe development of Latin script II: In Iceland’, in Bandle, Oskar et al. (eds.), The Nordic Languages: An International Handbook of the History of the North Germanic Languages, 2 vols. (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2002–5), vol. I, pp. 832–40.Google Scholar
Karlsson, StefánFrom the margins of medieval Europe: Icelandic vernacular scribal culture’, in Merisalo, Outi and Pahta, Päivi (eds.), Frontiers in the Middle Ages: Proceedings of the Third European Congress of Medieval Studies (Jyväskylä, 10–14 June 2003) (Louvain-la-Neuve: Fédération internationale des instituts d’études médiévales, 2006), pp. 483–92.Google Scholar
Karlsson, StefánGömul hljóðdvöl í ungum rímum’, Íslenzk tunga, 5 (1964), 729.Google Scholar
Karlsson, StefánGuðmundar sögur biskups: Authorial viewpoints and methods’, in Karlsson, Stefán, Stafkrókar: Ritgerðir eftir Stefán Karlsson gefnar út í tilefni af sjötugsafmæli hans, 2. Desember 1998, ed. Már Gunnlaugsson, Guðvarður (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 2000), pp. 153–71.Google Scholar
Karlsson, StefánIcelandic lives of Thomas à Becket: Questions of authorship’, in Karlsson, Stefán, Stafkrókar: Ritgerðir eftir Stefán Karlsson gefnar út í tilefni af sjötugsafmæli hans, 2. Desember 1998, ed. Már Gunnlaugsson, Guðvarður (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 2000), pp. 135–52.Google Scholar
Karlsson, StefánIslandsk bogeksport til Norge i middelalderen’, Maal og minne, 12 (1979), 117, reprinted in Stefán Karlsson, Stafkrókar: Ritgerðir eftir Stefán Karlsson gefnar út í tilefni af sjötugsafmæli hans, 2. Desember 1998, ed. Guðvarður Már Gunnlaugsson (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 2000), pp. 188–205.Google Scholar
Karlsson, StefánKvennahandrit í karlahöndum’, in Karlsson, Stefán, Stafkrókar: Ritgerðir eftir Stefán Karlsson gefnar út í tilefni af sjötugsafmæli hans, 2. Desember 1998, ed. Gunnlaugsson, Guðvarður Már (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 2000), pp. 378–82.Google Scholar
Karlsson, StefánThe localisation and dating of medieval Icelandic manuscripts’, Saga-Book, 25 (1998–2001), 138–58.Google Scholar
Stefanova, Ana, ‘Humour theories and the archetype of the trickster in folklore: An analytical psychology point of view’, Folklore, 50 (2012), 6386.Google Scholar
Stegmann, Beeke, ‘Árni Magnússon’s rearrangement of fornaldarsaga manuscripts’, in Driscoll, Matthew J. et al. (eds.), The Legendary Legacy: Transmission and Reception of the Fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2018), pp. 161–86.Google Scholar
Stegmann, BeekeCollaborative manuscript production and the case of Reykjabók: Palaeographical and multispectral analysis’, in Lethbridge, Emily and Óskarsdóttir, Svanhildur (eds.), New Studies in the Manuscript Tradition of Njáls saga: The historia mutila of Njála (Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Institute Publications, 2018), pp. 2954.Google Scholar
Steinsland, Gro, Det hellige bryllup og norrøn kongeideologi: En analyse av hierogami-myten i Skírnismál, Ynglingatal, Háleygjatal og Hyndluljóð (Oslo: Solum, 1991).Google Scholar
Kristjánsdóttir, Steinunn, Leitin að klaustrunum: Klausturhald á Íslandi í fimm aldir (Reykjavík: Sögufélag, 2017).Google Scholar
Kristjánsdóttir, SteinunnMedieval monasticism in Iceland and Norse Greenland’, Religions, 12 (2021), 12 pp.Google Scholar
Stirling, Lindsey and Milek, Karen, ‘Woven cultures: New insights into Pictish and Viking culture contact using the implements of textile production’, Medieval Archaeology, 59:1 (2015), 4772.Google Scholar
Støa, Heidi, ‘The lover and the statue: Idolatrous love in Tristrams saga ok Ísöndar’, SS, 87:1 (2015), 129–46.Google Scholar
Storm, Gustav, Snorre Sturlassöns Historieskrivning: En kritisk undersögelse (Copenhagen: Luno, 1873).Google Scholar
Strawbridge, J. A., ‘Icelandic insular romance: Replication, reflection, and networks of narrative and meaning’, unpublished DPhil dissertation, University of Oxford (2020).Google Scholar
Ström, Folke, Níð, Ergi and Old Norse Moral Attitudes, The Dorothea Coke Memorial Lecture in Northern Studies 1973 (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 1974).Google Scholar
Ström, FolkePoetry as an instrument of propaganda: Jarl Hákon and his poets’, in Dronke, Ursula et al. (eds.), Speculum Norroenum: Norse Studies in Memory of Gabriel Turville-Petre (Odense: Odense University Press, 1981), pp. 440–58.Google Scholar
Suzuki, Seiichi, The Meters of Old Norse Eddic Poetry: Common Germanic Inheritance and North Germanic Innovation (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2014).Google Scholar
Óskarsdóttir, Svanhildur, ‘Expanding horizons: Recent trends in Old Norse-Icelandic manuscript studies’, New Medieval Literatures, 14 (2012), 203–33.Google Scholar
Óskarsdóttir, SvanhildurManuscripts on the brain: Árni Magnússon, collector’, in Driscoll, Matthew James and Óskarsdóttir, Svanhildur (eds.), 66 Manuscripts from the Arnamagnæan Collection (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2015), pp. 937.Google Scholar
Óskarsdóttir, SvanhildurSaints and sinners: Aspects of the production and use of manuscripts in Iceland in the period 1300–1600’, in Heslop, Kate and Glauser, Jürg (eds.), RE:writing: Medial Perspectives on Textual Culture in the Icelandic Middle Ages (Zürich: Chronos, 2018), pp. 181–94.Google Scholar
Óskarsdóttir, Svanhildur and Rastonis, Vasarė, ‘Fragments united: The codicology of GKS 1812 4to’, in Harðarson, Gunnar et al. (eds.), A World in Fragments: Studies on the Encyclopedic Manuscript GKS 1812 4to (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar í íslenskum fræðum, 2021), pp. 3962.Google Scholar
Óskarsdóttir, Svanhildur, Rastonis, Vasarė and Vnouček, Jiří, ‘The conservation of Flateyjarbók’, Care and Conservation of Manuscripts, 18 (2023), 34970.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, Sverrir, ‘Codex Reseniani: Sturla Þórðarson as an encyclopaedic writer’, in Sigurðsson, Jón Viðar and Jakobsson, Sverrir (eds.), Sturla Þórðarson: Skald, Chieftain and Lawman (Leiden: Brill, 2017), pp. 212–22.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, SverrirFrom reciprocity to manorialism: On the peasant mode of production in medieval Iceland’, Scandinavian Journal of History, 38:3 (2013), 273–95.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, SverrirNarrating history in Iceland: The works of Ari Þorgilsson’, ANF, 132 (2017), 7599.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, SverrirThe process of state-formation in medieval Iceland’, Viator, 40:2 (2009), 151–70.Google Scholar
Jakobsson, Sverrir Við og veröldin: Heimsmynd Íslendinga 1100–1400 (Reykjavík: Háskólaútgáfan, 2005).Google Scholar
Tómasson, Sverrir, Formálar íslenskra sagnaritara á miðöldum: Rannsókn bókmenntahefðar (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1988).Google Scholar
Tómasson, SverrirMírmanns saga: The first Old Norse-Icelandic hagiographical romance?’, in Wolf, Kirsten and Denzin, Johanna (eds.), Romance and Love in Late Medieval and Early Modern Iceland: Essays in Honor of Marianne Kalinke (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2008), pp. 319–35.Google Scholar
Tómasson, SverrirThe history of Old Nordic manuscripts I: Old Icelandic’, in Bandle, Oskar et al. (eds.), The Nordic Languages: An International Handbook of the History of the North Germanic Languages, 2 vols. (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2002–5), vol. I, pp. 793801.Google Scholar
Taylor, Marvin, ‘On Gizurr Þorvaldsson’s speaking style’, Saga-Book, 24 (1994–7), 311–28.Google Scholar
Teasdale, M. D., et al., ‘Paging through history: Parchment as a reservoir of ancient DNA for next generation sequencing’, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series B, Biological Sciences 370:1660 (2015), 20130379.Google Scholar
Thurber, B. A., ‘The myth of skating history: Building elitism into a sport’, Leisure Sciences, 43:6 (2021), 562–74.Google Scholar
Tirosh, Yoav, ‘Feel the burn: Lönguhlíðarbrenna as literary type-scene’, Średniowiecze Polskie i Powszechne, 9 (2017), 3044.Google Scholar
Tomassini, Laura, ‘Attempts at biblical exegesis in Old Norse: Some examples from Maríu saga’, Opuscula, 10 (1996), 129–35.Google Scholar
Tulinius, Torfi H., ‘Deconstructing Snorri: Narrative structure and heroism in Eyrbyggja saga’, in Millet, Victor and Sahm, Heike (eds.), Narration and Hero: Recounting the Deeds of Heroes in Literature and Art from the Early Medieval Period (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2014), pp. 195208.Google Scholar
Tulinius, Torfi H. The Enigma of Egill: The Saga, the Viking Poet, and Snorri Sturluson (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Library, 2014).Google Scholar
Tulinius, Torfi H.Framliðnir feður: Um forneskju og frásagnarlist í Eyrbyggju, Eglu og Grettlu’, in Bessason, Haraldur and Hafstað, Baldur (eds.), Heiðin minni: Greinar um fornar bókmenntir (Reykjavík: Heimskringla, 1999), pp. 283316, translated as ‘Returning fathers: Sagas, novels, and the uncanny’, Scandinavian-Canadian Studies, 21 (2013), 18–39.Google Scholar
Tulinius, Torfi H.Hvers manns gagn: Hrafn Sveinbjarnarson and the social role of Icelandic chieftains around 1200’, Saga-Book, 40 (2016), 91104.Google Scholar
Tulinius, Torfi H.Kynjasögur úr fortíð og framandi löndum: Riddarasögur og fornaldarsögur’, in Guðmundsson, Böðvar et al. (eds.), Íslensk bókmenntasaga (Reykjavík: Mál og Menning, 1993), vol. II, pp. 167245.Google Scholar
Tulinius, Torfi H. The Matter of the North: The Rise of Literary Fiction in Thirteenth-Century Iceland (Odense: Odense University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Tulinius, Torfi H.The prosimetrum form 2: Verses as an influence in saga composition and interpretation’, in Poole, Russell (ed.), Skaldsagas: Text, Vocation, and Desire in the Icelandic Sagas of Poets (Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2001), pp. 191217.Google Scholar
Tulinius, Torfi H.Seeking death in Njáls saga’, in Turco, Jeffrey (ed.), New Norse Studies: Essays on the Literature and Culture of Medieval Scandinavia (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2015), pp. 99116.Google Scholar
Tulinius, Torfi H.Time and space’, in Bampi, Massimiliano, Larrington, Carolyne and Rikhardsdottir, Sif (eds.), A Critical Companion to Old Norse Literary Genre (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2020), pp. 145–59.Google Scholar
Tranter, Stephen Norman, Sturlunga Saga: The Rôle of the Creative Compiler (Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 1987).Google Scholar
Tucker, John, ‘Plácítus drápa’, in Pulsiano, Phillip and Wolf, Kirsten (eds.), Medieval Scandinavia: An Encyclopedia (New York and London: Garland, 1993), pp. 504–5.Google Scholar
Turner, Victor, ‘An anthropological approach to the Icelandic saga’, in Beidelman, T. O. (ed.), The Translation of Culture: Essays to E. E. Evans-Pritchard (London: Tavistock Publications, 1971), pp. 349–74.Google Scholar
Turville-Petre, Gabriel, Nine Norse Studies (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 1972).Google Scholar
Turville-Petre, Gabriel Origins of Icelandic Literature (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1953).Google Scholar
Bragason, Úlfar, Ætt og saga: Um frásagnarfræði Sturlungu eða Íslendingarsögu hinnar miklu (Reykjavík: Háskólaútgáfan, 2010).Google Scholar
Bragason, ÚlfarArons saga: Minningar, mýtur og sagnaminni’, Ritið, 1 (2013), 124–45.Google Scholar
Bragason, ÚlfarFlugumýrarbrenna: Í skrifstofu Sturlu Þórðarsonar’, Skírnir, 183 (2009), 194210.Google Scholar
Bragason, ÚlfarFrásagnarmynstur í Þorgils sögu Skarða’, Skírnir, 155 (1981), 161–70.Google Scholar
Bragason, Úlfar Reykholt Revisited: Representing Snorri in Sturla Þórðarsson’s Íslendinga saga (Reykjavík: Háskólaútgáfan, 2021).Google Scholar
Bragason, ÚlfarSagas of contemporary history (Sturlunga saga): Texts and research’, in McTurk, Rory (ed.), A Companion to Old Norse-Icelandic Literature and Culture (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005), pp. 427–46.Google Scholar
Bragason, ÚlfarThe structure and meaning of Hrafns saga Sveinbjarnarsonar’, SS, 60:2 (1988), 267–92.Google Scholar
Bragason, ÚlfarSturlunga saga: Atburðir og frásögn’, Skáldskaparmál, 1 (1990), 7388.Google Scholar
Bragason, ÚlfarSturlunga saga: Textar og rannsóknir’, Skáldskaparmál, 2 (1992), 176206.Google Scholar
Bragason, ÚlfarSturlunga’s text of Prestssaga Guðmundar góða’, in Simek, Rudolf and Meurer, Judith (eds.), Scandinavia and Christian Europe in the Middle Ages: Papers of the 12th International Saga Conference, Bonn, Germany, 28th July2nd August 2003 (Bonn: Universität Bonn, 2003), pp. 483–90.Google Scholar
Brynjólfsdóttir, Valgerður, ‘A valiant king or a coward? The changing image of King Hrólfr kraki from the oldest sources to Hrólfs saga kraka’, in Jakobsson, Ármann, Lassen, Annette and Ney, Agneta (eds.), Fornaldarsagornas struktur och ideologi: Handlingar från ett symposium i Uppsala 31.8–2.9 2001 (Uppsala: Uppsala Universitet, 2003), pp. 141–56.Google Scholar
Van Deusen, Natalie M., ‘Stitches in the margins: The embroidery pattern in AM 235 fol.’, Maal og Minne, 2 (2011), 2642.Google Scholar
Ólason, Vésteinn, ‘The Codex Regius – a book and its history’, in Gunnlaugsson, Guðvarður Már, Bernharðsson, Haraldur and Ólason, Vésteinn (eds.), The Codex Regius of the Poetic Edda: Konungsbók Eddukvæða GKS 2365 4to (Reykjavík: Mál og Menning, 2019), pp. 217–56.Google Scholar
Ólason, Vésteinn Dialogues with the Viking Age: Narration and Representation in the Sagas of the Icelanders, trans. Andrew Wawn (Reykjavík: Heimskringla, 1998).Google Scholar
Ólason, VésteinnKristileg trúarkvæði til loka 13. aldar’, in Nordal, Guðrún, Tómasson, Sverrir and Ólason, Vésteinn (eds.), Íslensk bókmenntasaga, vol. I (Reykjavík: Mál og Menning, 1992), pp. 481516.Google Scholar
Ólason, VésteinnKveðskapur frá síðmiðöldum’, in Guðmundsson, Böðvar et al. (eds.), Íslensk bókmenntasaga, vol. II (Reykjavík: Mál og Menning, 1993), pp. 285378.Google Scholar
Ólason, Vésteinn The Traditional Ballads of Iceland: Historical Studies (Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 1982).Google Scholar
Óskarsson, Veturliði, ‘The Icelandic language at the time of the Reformation: Some reflections on translations, language and foreign influences’, Nordlit, 43 (2019), 102–14.Google Scholar
Pálsson, Viðar, ‘Forming bonds with followers in medieval Iceland: The cases of Thordr kakali and Thorgils skarði’, in Esmark, Kim, Hermanson, Lars and Orning, Hans Jacob (eds.), Nordic Elites in Transformation, c. 1050–1250 (New York: Routledge, 2020), vol. II, pp. 237–51.Google Scholar
Wærdahl, Randi Bjørshol, The Incorporation and Integration of the King’s Tributary Lands into the Norwegian Realm c. 1195–1397 (Leiden: Brill, 2011).Google Scholar
Walker, Jenny, ‘In the hall’, in Carver, Martin, Sanmark, Alex and Semple, Sarah (eds.), Signals of Belief in Early England: Anglo-Saxon Paganism Revisited (Oxford: Oxbow, 2010), pp. 8497.Google Scholar
Wanner, Kevin J., ‘At smyrja konung til veldis: Royal legitimation in Snorri Sturluson’s Magnúss saga Erlingssonar’, Saga-Book, 30 (2006), 538.Google Scholar
Wanner, Kevin J.Háttatal stanza 12 and the divine legitimation of kings’, in Chase, Martin (ed.), Eddic, Skaldic, and Beyond: Poetic Variety in Medieval Iceland and Norway (New York: Fordham University Press, 2014), pp. 7586.Google Scholar
Wanner, Kevin J. Snorri Sturluson and the Edda: The Conversion of Cultural Capital in Medieval Scandinavia (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Ward, Benedicta, Miracles and the Medieval Mind: Theory, Record, and Event 1000–1215 (London: Scolar Press, 1982).Google Scholar
Ward, Benedicta Signs and Wonders: Saints, Miracles, and Prayers from the 4th Century to the 14th (Aldershot: Variorum, 1992).Google Scholar
Warmind, Morten Lund, ‘Ibn Fadlan in the context of his age’, in Crumlin-Pedersen, Ole and Thye, Birgitte Munch (eds.), The Ship as Symbol in Prehistoric and Medieval Scandinavia (Copenhagen: National Museum of Denmark, 1995), pp. 131–7.Google Scholar
Wawn, Andrew, The Vikings and the Victorians: Inventing the Old North in Nineteenth-Century Britain (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2000).Google Scholar
Weber, Gerd Wolfgang, ‘Edda, Jüngere’, in Beck, Heinrich et al. (eds.), Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde (Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter, 1986), vol. VI, pp. 394412.Google Scholar
Weber, Gerd WolfgangThe decadence of feudal myth: Towards a theory of riddarasaga and romance’, in Lindow, John, Lönnroth, Lars and Weber, Gerd Wolfgang (eds.), Structure and Meaning in Old Norse Literature: New Approaches to Textual Analysis and Literary Criticism (Odense: Odense University Press, 1986), pp. 415–54.Google Scholar
Wellendorf, Jonas, ‘The attraction of the earliest Old Norse vernacular hagiography’, in Antonsson, Haki and Garipzanov, Ildar H. (eds.), Saints and Their Lives on the Periphery: Veneration of Saints in Scandinavia and Eastern Europe (c. 1000–1200) (Turnhout: Brepols, 2010), pp. 241–58.Google Scholar
Wellendorf, JonasLærdomslitteratur’, in Haugen, Odd Einar (ed.), Handbok i norrøn filologi (Bergen: Fagbokforlaget, 2013), pp. 302–55.Google Scholar
Wellendorf, JonasWhetting the appetite for a vernacular literature: The Icelandic Hungrvaka’, in Garipzanov, Ildar H. (ed.), Historical Narratives and Christian Identity on a European Periphery: Early History Writing in Northern, East-Central, and Eastern Europe (c. 1070–1200) (Turnhout: Brepols, 2011), pp. 123–42.Google Scholar
Whaley, Diana, ‘The “conversion verses” in Hallfreðar saga: Authentic voice of a reluctant Christian?’, in Ross, Margaret Clunies (ed.), Old Norse Myths, Literature and Society (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2003), pp. 234–57.Google Scholar
Whaley, DianaThe fury of the Northmen and the poetics of violence’, in Millet, Victor and Sahm, Heike (eds.), Narration and Hero: Recounting the Deeds of Heroes in Literature and Art from the Early Medieval Period (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2014), pp. 7194.Google Scholar
Whaley, Diana Heimskringla: An Introduction (London: Viking Society for Northern Research, 1991).Google Scholar
Whaley, DianaSkalds and situational verses in Heimskringla’, in Wolf, Alois (ed.), Snorri Sturluson: Kolloquium anläßlich der 750. Wiederkehr seines Todestages (Tübingen: Gunter Narr, 1993), pp. 245–66.Google Scholar
White, Paul A., Non-Native Sources for the Scandinavian Kings’ Sagas (New York and London: Routledge, 2005).Google Scholar
Widding, Ole, ‘Norrøne Marialegender på europæisk baggrund’, Opuscula, 10 (1996), 2128.Google Scholar
Williams, Gareth and Ager, Barry, The Vale of York Hoard (London: British Museum Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Wills, Tarrin, ‘The thirteenth-century runic revival in Denmark and Iceland’, NOWELE, 69:2 (2016), 114–29.Google Scholar
Winroth, Anders, The Conversion of Scandinavia: Vikings, Merchants, and Missionaries in the Remaking of Northern Europe (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Wolf, Alois, ‘Zur Rolle der vísur in der altnordischen Prosa’, in Menghin, Osmund and Ölberg, Hermann M. (eds.), Festschrift Leonhard C. Franz zum 70. Geburstag (Innsbruck: Sprachwissenschaftliche Institut der Leopold-Franzens-Universität, 1965), pp. 459–84.Google Scholar
Wolf, Kirsten, ‘The color grey in Old Norse-Icelandic literature’, JEGP, 108:2 (2009), 222–38.Google Scholar
Wolf, KirstenGregory’s influence on Old Norse-Icelandic religious literature’, in Bremmer, Rolf H. Jr, Kees Dekker and Johnson, David F. (eds.), Rome and the North: The Early Reception of Gregory the Great in Germanic Europe (Paris: Peeters, 2001), pp. 255–74.Google Scholar
Wolf, Kirsten The Legends of the Saints in Old-Norse Icelandic Prose (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Wolf, Kirsten and Van Deusen, Natalie M., The Saints in Old Norse and Early Modern Icelandic Poetry (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Würth, Stefanie, Der ‘Antikenroman’ in der isländischen Literatur des Mittelalters: Eine Untersuchung zur Übersetzung und Rezeption lateinischer Literatur im Norden (Basle: Helbing & Lichtenhahn, 1998).Google Scholar
Würth, StefanieThe rhetoric of Völsunga saga’, in Jakobsson, Ármann, Lassen, Annette and Ney, Agneta (eds.), Fornaldarsagornas struktur och ideologi: Handlingar från ett symposium i Uppsala 31.8–2.9 2001 (Uppsala: Uppsala Universitet, 2003), pp. 101–11.Google Scholar
Würth, StefanieSkaldic poetry and performance’, in Quinn, Judy, Heslop, Kate and Wills, Tarrin (eds.), Learning and Understanding in the Old Norse World: Essays in Honour of Margaret Clunies Ross (Turnhout: Brepols, 2007), pp. 263–81.Google Scholar
Zernack, Julia, ‘A key work for the reception history of Norse mythology and poetry: Paul Henri Mallet’s History of the Danish People and its European impact’, in Clunies Ross, Margaret (ed.), The Pre-Christian Religions of the North: Research and Reception (Turnhout: Brepols, 2018), vol. I, pp. 281313.Google Scholar
Zernack, JuliaArtistic Reception’, in Jakobsson, Ármann and Jakobsson, Sverrir (eds.), The Routledge Research Companion to the Medieval Icelandic Sagas (London and New York: Routledge, 2017), pp. 327–43.Google Scholar
Zernack, JuliaThe “Nordic Renaissance” in Russia and Poland’, in Clunies Ross, Margaret (ed.), The Pre-Christian Religions of the North: Research and Reception (Turnhout: Brepols, 2018), vol. I, pp. 391403.Google Scholar
Zernack, JuliaOld Norse mythology and heroic legend in politics, ideology and propaganda’, in Clunies Ross, Margaret (ed.), The Pre-Christian Religions of the North: Research and Reception (Turnhout: Brepols, 2018), vol. II, pp. 465–83.Google Scholar
Zernack, JuliaOld Norse myths and the Poetic Edda as tools of political propaganda’, in Quinn, Judy and Cipolla, Adele (eds.), Studies in the Transmission and Reception of Old Norse Literature: The Hyperborean Muse in European Culture (Turnhout: Brepols, 2016), pp. 239–74.Google Scholar
Zernack, JuliaOn the concept of “Germanic” religion and myth’, in Clunies Ross, Margaret (ed.), The Pre-Christian Religions of the North: Research and Reception (Turnhout: Brepols, 2018), vol. II, p. 527–41.Google Scholar
Zori, Davide Marco, ‘The Norse in Iceland’, Oxford Handbooks Online (2016), https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199935413.013.7.Google Scholar
Whitehead, Þór, Íslandsævintýri Himmlers 1935–1937, 2nd ed. (Reykjavík: Vaka-Helgafell, 1998).Google Scholar
Sigurðsson, Þorgeir et al., ‘Ofan í sortann: Egils saga í Möðruvallabók’, Gripla, 24 (2013), 91120.Google Scholar
Snædal, Þórgunnur, ‘Rúnum ristir gripir frá Alþingisreitnum og Urriðarkoti’, Árbók Hins íslenzka fornleifafélags, 102 (2011), 167–85.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Heather O'Donoghue, University of Oxford, Eleanor Parker, University of Oxford
  • Book: The Cambridge History of Old Norse-Icelandic Literature
  • Online publication: 08 February 2024
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108762618.029
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Heather O'Donoghue, University of Oxford, Eleanor Parker, University of Oxford
  • Book: The Cambridge History of Old Norse-Icelandic Literature
  • Online publication: 08 February 2024
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108762618.029
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Heather O'Donoghue, University of Oxford, Eleanor Parker, University of Oxford
  • Book: The Cambridge History of Old Norse-Icelandic Literature
  • Online publication: 08 February 2024
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108762618.029
Available formats
×