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This chapter focuses on the heroic poems of the Poetic Edda. It begins by considering the date of the manuscript and the poems it contains, and goes on to offer a definition of the term ‘heroic’ in the context of eddic verse. There is an outline of the historical and legendary contexts of this poetry, and of the material in Völsunga saga, in which heroic poems are also preserved. Comparisons are made with heroic material in Das Nibelungenlied. The history of the Völsungs as narrated in the saga is recounted, and its relation to the individual heroic poems in the Edda explained. Hlöðskviða, or ‘The Battle of the Goths and Huns’, is also discussed, and the chapter moves on to more eddic-style poems set in Viking Age Scandinavia and preserved in fornaldarsögur, some as broadly whole poems, such as ‘The Waking of Angantyr’ or ‘The Riddles of Gestumblindi’, and others as sequences of verse dialogue dramatizing a particular moment in a hero’s life, such as the verses in Ketils saga hængs. The chapter ends with a discussion of summative poems which mark a hero’s end, pre-eminently ‘Hjálmarr’s Death Song’ in Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks.
From an international point of view Scandinavian literature of the Middle Ages is largely identified with the narrative literature of Iceland, particularly the myths of the Edda and the classical family sagas. When the Church brought the Latin alphabet and European learning to Scandinavia, the culture of the region was basically oral, although runes played a certain role. Traditional oral culture encompassed all aspects of life. In east Scandinavia, literary production was originally confined to very few centres of clerical learning. The first Scandinavians known to have studied at foreign centres of learning are Icelanders in the eleventh century. Both bishops of Skálholt, Ísleifr and Gizurr were educated in Germany and France. The Eddic style was used, in composing new poetry for fornaldarsögur, while some fragments of heroic poetry included in such sagas may be old and preserved in oral tradition into the fourteenth century. The chapter also discusses storytelling literature, Skaldic poetry, and king's sagas.
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