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Gautreks saga

Gautreks saga (Gautrek's Saga) is a Scandinavian legendary saga put to text towards the end of the 13th century which survives only in much later manuscripts. It seems to have been intended as a compilation of traditional stories, often humorous, about a legendary King Gautrek of West Geatland, to serve as a kind of prequel to the already existing Hrólfs saga Gautrekssonar (Saga of Hrólf son of Gautrek). See also king of the Geats.

Starkad kills king Vikar, by Louis Moe.

Summary edit

As it stands, the saga seems incomplete, for a promise is made that the tale will return to King Gautrek of Götaland and his sons, to "the same story as told in Sweden", and that promise is not kept. Indeed, other than the reference to Hrólfs saga Gautrekssonar, no sons are mentioned. But it seems that Gautrek was noted in many tales for his generosity and bravery, but not for deep thinking, according to a passage near the end. It is probable there were more amusing anecdotes to that effect that the author planned to include.

There are actually two main versions of Gautreks saga: a shorter, apparently older, version; and a longer, apparently more recent, one.[1]

Shorter version edit

The shorter version begins by relating how Gautrekr's father-to-be, King Gauti of West Götaland, becomes lost while hunting, and spends the night in an isolated homestead of strange, arguably insane, backwoods bumpkins: a stingy farmer named Skafnörtungr ('Skinflint'), his equally stingy wife Tötra ('Tatters'), and their three sons and three daughters. That night Gauti fathers Gautrekr on Snotra, the eldest of the farmer's daughters and supposedly the most intelligent of the family. The account bristles with grisly humor as it relates how one by one the members of the family go on to kill themselves over the most trivial losses, believing that they will go to Óðinn in Valhöll, until at last only Snotra and her child Gautrekr remain. At that point Snotra takes Gautrekr to Gauti's court; years later, on his deathbed, King Gauti makes Gautrekr his heir. This section is sometimes referred to as Dalafífla þáttr ("The Tale of the Fools in the Valley").

The saga then shifts to a folk-tale-like account of how Refr, the lazy son of a farmer, forces his father's stupendous ox as gift upon the stingy but extraordinarily intelligent Jarl Neri and requests only Neri's advice in return. Jarl Neri normally never accepts gifts because he is too stingy to repay them. But he takes the ox and gives Ref a whetstone in return, telling him how to employ it as a gift to King Gautrekr to get greater wealth. The saga has mentioned Gautrek's marriage to Álfhildr, daughter of King Haraldr of Wendland, and Álfhildr's subsequent death by illness years later, which has driven the grieving Gautrekr somewhat out of his mind: ignoring all matters of state, Gautrekr spends all his time on Álfhildr's burial mound, flying his hawk. On Neri's advice, Refr gives the whetstone to Gautrekr at the moment that the king needs something to throw at his hawk; Gautrekr promptly gives Refr a gold ring. Refr goes on to visit king after king, in each case giving part or all of that which he received from the previous king, and getting in return a greater gift, since none of the kings want to be outdone by Gautrekr, who "gives gold in exchange for pebbles." At last, through Neri's advice and trickery, Refr gains the hand of Gautrekr's daughter Helga and an earldom that Neri held from King Gautrekr. This is often known as Gjafa-Refs þáttr ('the story of Gift-Refr').

The shorter version of the saga ends with an account of King Gautrekr's remarriage to the fair Ingibjörg, daughter of a powerful hersir in the Sogn region of Norway. Ingibjörg chooses Gautrekr for his fame and generosity, despite his age, over the young prince Óláfr who has also asked for her hand. Gautrekr fights off an attack by the rejected and disappointed Óláfr, marries Ingibjörg, and fathers two sons named Keti'l and Hrólfr with her.

Longer version edit

The younger and much better known version of the saga includes these two lighthearted tales, but inserts between them an account of the ancestry, birth, and earliest exploits of Starkaðr, who is perhaps the grimmest and strangest of Scandinavian legendary heroes. This account, sometimes known as Víkars þáttr ("The Tale of Víkar"), was probably extracted or retold from a lost saga about Starkaðr; it contains extensive poetry, ostensibly by Starkaðr himself, and it ends tragically. A high point of this section is the evocative episode where Starkaðr's foster-father Grani Horsehair awakens his foster-son Starkaðr at about midnight, takes him to an island where eleven men are at council, and, sitting in a twelfth chair reveals himself as the god Óðinn. In a long dialogue between the gods Þór and Óðinn, the two alternately bestow curses and blessings upon Starkaðr. When this is done, Óðinn requires Starkaðr to sacrifice King Víkar, his sworn lord, friend, and benefactor. Starkaðr persuades Víkar to put his neck in a noose of stretchy calf intestines and be stabbed with a fragile reed, thus undergoing a mock sacrifice. Unfortunately, the sacrifice turns real when the noose becomes rope and the reed turns into a spear, leaving Vikar stabbed and hanged, and bringing down grief and disgrace on Starkaðr for killing his lord.

This middle section is so stylistically unlike the happier stories that "bookend" it that some have questioned whether it should have been included at all. The only obvious link is because King Vikar, who appears prominently in it, is father of Jarl Neri who plays a very important role in the material following and also because Eirík king of Sweden, who appears in it, was prominent in Hrólfs saga Gautrekssonar. Nonetheless, there are themes that connect all three sections of this saga; for example, both Starkaðr and Refr are unpromising youths, and both Neri and Skafnortung are misers. The entire saga seems to be a meditation on generosity: sacrifice to the gods is useless, and stinginess is not admirable—but giving and receiving gifts, participating in networks of reciprocal exchange, is the way to good fortune.[2]

The longer version does not include the story of Gautrekr's remarriage, but essentially the same account appears at the beginning of Hrólfs saga Gautrekssonar.

Analogues edit

Snorri Sturluson introduces Gauti and Gautrek in his Ynglinga saga where Gauti "after whom Gautland (Götaland) is named" is mentioned as the father of Gautrek the Generous the father of King Algaut the father of Gauthild who married Ingjald the son of King Önund of Sweden. This should make Gautrek live in the early 7th century, approximately contemporary with Önund's father Yngvar or possibly Yngvar's father Eystein in whose days, according to Snorri, the Danish king Hrólf Kraki died. And indeed Hrólf Kraki is one of the kings whom Ref visits in the saga. Another king visited by Ref is Ælle of England and the historical King Ælle of Deira could well be contemporary to the legendary Hrólf Kraki of Denmark. However in the section concerning Starkad, the kings of Sweden are the brothers Alrek and Eirík which, if one trusts the order of kings in the Ynglinga saga, would put Gautrek generations earlier.

However in Bósa saga ok Herrauds (The saga of Herraud and Bósi), Gautrek's supposed half-brother Hring is a contemporary of King Harald Wartooth.

Gjafa-Refs þáttr has a close parallel in Saxo Grammaticus's Gesta Danorum. The parallels are summarised by Michael Chesnutt as follows:[3]

Gesta Danorum (8.16:1-4) Gjafa-Refs þáttr
Two Icelanders, Refo and Bero, visit King Goto of Norway. A Norwegian, Refr, brings an ox to Earl Neri of Gautland.
The courtiers mock him.
Refo claims that King Gotricus is the greatest giver of gifts. The earl predicts that King Gautrekr will make Refr a gift.
Refo travels to King Gotricus. Refur travels to King Gautrekr.
Some of the courtiers laugh.
The king, sitting on a chair, gives him two gold rings. The king, sitting on a mound, gives him a gold ring.
[More visits to generous kings.]
Refo kills the evil Ulvo. Refr defeats the evil Refnefr.
He abducts the King of Norway's daughter. He marries the King of Gautland's daughter.
Later, Refo serves Gotricus, but he is murdered in Sweden. Refr is appointed Gautrekr's earl, but it is said that he died young.

In popular culture edit

Translated into Swedish in 1664, the saga's depiction of the Ættarstapi gave rise to a fashion in early-modern Sweden for labelling inland cliffs with the Swedish equivalent of that name, Ättestupa.[4][5]

The saga is one of the key inspirations for Bjarni Bjarnason's 2011 novel Mannorð.[6]

Bibliography and external links edit

Bibliography edit

  • Entry in Stories for All Time: The Icelandic Fornaldarsögur 2018-06-12 at the Wayback Machine

English translations edit

  • Ancestry: Gautrek's saga
  • "King Gautrek" in Seven Viking Romances. Trans. Pálsson, Hermann and Edwards, Paul (1985). Harmondsworth, England: Penguin. ISBN 0-14-044474-2.
  • "King Gautrek" in Gautrek's Saga and Other Medieval Tales. Trans. Pálsson, Hermann and Edwards, Paul (1968). London: University of London Press. ISBN 0-340-09396-X.
  • Gautrek's Saga. Trans. Fox, Denton and Pálsson, Hermann (1974). Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-1925-0.
  • Waggoner, Ben (2014). Six Sagas of Adventure. New Haven, Conn.: The Troth. pp. 1–33. ISBN 978-1941136041.

Original text edit

  • Gothrici & Rolfi Westrogothiae Regum Historia, Lingua Antiqua Gothica Conscripta, ed. and trans. by Olaus Verelius (Uppsala, 1664)
  • Gautreks saga in Old Norse from heimskringla.no
  • Snerpa: Netúgáfan: Fornrit: Gautreks saga

References edit

  1. ^ Ranisch, Wilhelm (1900). Die Gautrekssaga in Zwei Fassungen. Berlin: Mayer and Müller. Retrieved 13 November 2014.
  2. ^ Cronan, Dennis (2007). "The Thematic Unity of the Younger Gautreks Saga". Journal of English and Germanic Philology. 106 (1): 81–123. JSTOR 27712637.
  3. ^ Michael Chesnutt. 2009. ‘The Content and Meaning of Gjafa-Refs saga’ in Fornaldarsagaerne. Myter og virkilighed. Studier i de oldislandske fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda. Eds. Agneta Ney, Ármann Jakobsson and Annette Lassen. 2009, 93-106 (p. 101).
  4. ^ Odén, Birgitta (1996). "Ättestupan - myt eller verklighet?". Scandia: Tidskrift för Historisk Forskning (in Swedish). 62 (2): 221–234. ISSN 0036-5483. Retrieved 2011-12-25.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ Jonathan York Heng Hui, 'The Matter of Gautland' (unpublished doctoral thesis, University of Cambridge, 2018), pp. 119-29; https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.3036.
  6. '^ Alaric Hall, 'Fornaldarsögur and Financial Crisis: Bjarni Bjarnason’s Mannorð', in The Legendary Legacy: Transmission and Reception of the 'Fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda, ed. by Matthew Driscoll, Silvia Hufnagel, Philip Lavender and Beeke Stegmann, The Viking Collection, 24 (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2018), pp. 351-75.

gautreks, saga, gautrek, saga, scandinavian, legendary, saga, text, towards, 13th, century, which, survives, only, much, later, manuscripts, seems, have, been, intended, compilation, traditional, stories, often, humorous, about, legendary, king, gautrek, west,. Gautreks saga Gautrek s Saga is a Scandinavian legendary saga put to text towards the end of the 13th century which survives only in much later manuscripts It seems to have been intended as a compilation of traditional stories often humorous about a legendary King Gautrek of West Geatland to serve as a kind of prequel to the already existing Hrolfs saga Gautrekssonar Saga of Hrolf son of Gautrek See also king of the Geats Starkad kills king Vikar by Louis Moe Contents 1 Summary 1 1 Shorter version 1 2 Longer version 2 Analogues 3 In popular culture 4 Bibliography and external links 4 1 Bibliography 4 2 English translations 4 3 Original text 5 ReferencesSummary editAs it stands the saga seems incomplete for a promise is made that the tale will return to King Gautrek of Gotaland and his sons to the same story as told in Sweden and that promise is not kept Indeed other than the reference to Hrolfs saga Gautrekssonar no sons are mentioned But it seems that Gautrek was noted in many tales for his generosity and bravery but not for deep thinking according to a passage near the end It is probable there were more amusing anecdotes to that effect that the author planned to include There are actually two main versions of Gautreks saga a shorter apparently older version and a longer apparently more recent one 1 Shorter version edit The shorter version begins by relating how Gautrekr s father to be King Gauti of West Gotaland becomes lost while hunting and spends the night in an isolated homestead of strange arguably insane backwoods bumpkins a stingy farmer named Skafnortungr Skinflint his equally stingy wife Totra Tatters and their three sons and three daughters That night Gauti fathers Gautrekr on Snotra the eldest of the farmer s daughters and supposedly the most intelligent of the family The account bristles with grisly humor as it relates how one by one the members of the family go on to kill themselves over the most trivial losses believing that they will go to odinn in Valholl until at last only Snotra and her child Gautrekr remain At that point Snotra takes Gautrekr to Gauti s court years later on his deathbed King Gauti makes Gautrekr his heir This section is sometimes referred to as Dalafifla thattr The Tale of the Fools in the Valley The saga then shifts to a folk tale like account of how Refr the lazy son of a farmer forces his father s stupendous ox as gift upon the stingy but extraordinarily intelligent Jarl Neri and requests only Neri s advice in return Jarl Neri normally never accepts gifts because he is too stingy to repay them But he takes the ox and gives Ref a whetstone in return telling him how to employ it as a gift to King Gautrekr to get greater wealth The saga has mentioned Gautrek s marriage to Alfhildr daughter of King Haraldr of Wendland and Alfhildr s subsequent death by illness years later which has driven the grieving Gautrekr somewhat out of his mind ignoring all matters of state Gautrekr spends all his time on Alfhildr s burial mound flying his hawk On Neri s advice Refr gives the whetstone to Gautrekr at the moment that the king needs something to throw at his hawk Gautrekr promptly gives Refr a gold ring Refr goes on to visit king after king in each case giving part or all of that which he received from the previous king and getting in return a greater gift since none of the kings want to be outdone by Gautrekr who gives gold in exchange for pebbles At last through Neri s advice and trickery Refr gains the hand of Gautrekr s daughter Helga and an earldom that Neri held from King Gautrekr This is often known as Gjafa Refs thattr the story of Gift Refr The shorter version of the saga ends with an account of King Gautrekr s remarriage to the fair Ingibjorg daughter of a powerful hersir in the Sogn region of Norway Ingibjorg chooses Gautrekr for his fame and generosity despite his age over the young prince olafr who has also asked for her hand Gautrekr fights off an attack by the rejected and disappointed olafr marries Ingibjorg and fathers two sons named Keti l and Hrolfr with her Longer version edit The younger and much better known version of the saga includes these two lighthearted tales but inserts between them an account of the ancestry birth and earliest exploits of Starkadr who is perhaps the grimmest and strangest of Scandinavian legendary heroes This account sometimes known as Vikars thattr The Tale of Vikar was probably extracted or retold from a lost saga about Starkadr it contains extensive poetry ostensibly by Starkadr himself and it ends tragically A high point of this section is the evocative episode where Starkadr s foster father Grani Horsehair awakens his foster son Starkadr at about midnight takes him to an island where eleven men are at council and sitting in a twelfth chair reveals himself as the god odinn In a long dialogue between the gods THor and odinn the two alternately bestow curses and blessings upon Starkadr When this is done odinn requires Starkadr to sacrifice King Vikar his sworn lord friend and benefactor Starkadr persuades Vikar to put his neck in a noose of stretchy calf intestines and be stabbed with a fragile reed thus undergoing a mock sacrifice Unfortunately the sacrifice turns real when the noose becomes rope and the reed turns into a spear leaving Vikar stabbed and hanged and bringing down grief and disgrace on Starkadr for killing his lord This middle section is so stylistically unlike the happier stories that bookend it that some have questioned whether it should have been included at all The only obvious link is because King Vikar who appears prominently in it is father of Jarl Neri who plays a very important role in the material following and also because Eirik king of Sweden who appears in it was prominent in Hrolfs saga Gautrekssonar Nonetheless there are themes that connect all three sections of this saga for example both Starkadr and Refr are unpromising youths and both Neri and Skafnortung are misers The entire saga seems to be a meditation on generosity sacrifice to the gods is useless and stinginess is not admirable but giving and receiving gifts participating in networks of reciprocal exchange is the way to good fortune 2 The longer version does not include the story of Gautrekr s remarriage but essentially the same account appears at the beginning of Hrolfs saga Gautrekssonar Analogues editSnorri Sturluson introduces Gauti and Gautrek in his Ynglinga saga where Gauti after whom Gautland Gotaland is named is mentioned as the father of Gautrek the Generous the father of King Algaut the father of Gauthild who married Ingjald the son of King Onund of Sweden This should make Gautrek live in the early 7th century approximately contemporary with Onund s father Yngvar or possibly Yngvar s father Eystein in whose days according to Snorri the Danish king Hrolf Kraki died And indeed Hrolf Kraki is one of the kings whom Ref visits in the saga Another king visited by Ref is AElle of England and the historical King AElle of Deira could well be contemporary to the legendary Hrolf Kraki of Denmark However in the section concerning Starkad the kings of Sweden are the brothers Alrek and Eirik which if one trusts the order of kings in the Ynglinga saga would put Gautrek generations earlier However in Bosa saga ok Herrauds The saga of Herraud and Bosi Gautrek s supposed half brother Hring is a contemporary of King Harald Wartooth Gjafa Refs thattr has a close parallel in Saxo Grammaticus s Gesta Danorum The parallels are summarised by Michael Chesnutt as follows 3 Gesta Danorum 8 16 1 4 Gjafa Refs thattr Two Icelanders Refo and Bero visit King Goto of Norway A Norwegian Refr brings an ox to Earl Neri of Gautland The courtiers mock him Refo claims that King Gotricus is the greatest giver of gifts The earl predicts that King Gautrekr will make Refr a gift Refo travels to King Gotricus Refur travels to King Gautrekr Some of the courtiers laugh The king sitting on a chair gives him two gold rings The king sitting on a mound gives him a gold ring More visits to generous kings Refo kills the evil Ulvo Refr defeats the evil Refnefr He abducts the King of Norway s daughter He marries the King of Gautland s daughter Later Refo serves Gotricus but he is murdered in Sweden Refr is appointed Gautrekr s earl but it is said that he died young In popular culture editTranslated into Swedish in 1664 the saga s depiction of the AEttarstapi gave rise to a fashion in early modern Sweden for labelling inland cliffs with the Swedish equivalent of that name Attestupa 4 5 The saga is one of the key inspirations for Bjarni Bjarnason s 2011 novel Mannord 6 Bibliography and external links editBibliography edit Entry in Stories for All Time The Icelandic Fornaldarsogur Archived 2018 06 12 at the Wayback Machine English translations edit Ancestry Gautrek s saga King Gautrek in Seven Viking Romances Trans Palsson Hermann and Edwards Paul 1985 Harmondsworth England Penguin ISBN 0 14 044474 2 King Gautrek in Gautrek s Saga and Other Medieval Tales Trans Palsson Hermann and Edwards Paul 1968 London University of London Press ISBN 0 340 09396 X Gautrek s Saga Trans Fox Denton and Palsson Hermann 1974 Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 1925 0 Waggoner Ben 2014 Six Sagas of Adventure New Haven Conn The Troth pp 1 33 ISBN 978 1941136041 Original text edit Gothrici amp Rolfi Westrogothiae Regum Historia Lingua Antiqua Gothica Conscripta ed and trans by Olaus Verelius Uppsala 1664 Gautreks saga in Old Norse from heimskringla no Snerpa Netugafan Fornrit Gautreks saga Handrit Gautreks sagaReferences edit Ranisch Wilhelm 1900 Die Gautrekssaga in Zwei Fassungen Berlin Mayer and Muller Retrieved 13 November 2014 Cronan Dennis 2007 The Thematic Unity of the Younger Gautreks Saga Journal of English and Germanic Philology 106 1 81 123 JSTOR 27712637 Michael Chesnutt 2009 The Content and Meaning of Gjafa Refs saga in Fornaldarsagaerne Myter og virkilighed Studier i de oldislandske fornaldarsogur Nordurlanda Eds Agneta Ney Armann Jakobsson and Annette Lassen 2009 93 106 p 101 Oden Birgitta 1996 Attestupan myt eller verklighet Scandia Tidskrift for Historisk Forskning in Swedish 62 2 221 234 ISSN 0036 5483 Retrieved 2011 12 25 permanent dead link Jonathan York Heng Hui The Matter of Gautland unpublished doctoral thesis University of Cambridge 2018 pp 119 29 https doi org 10 17863 CAM 3036 Alaric Hall Fornaldarsogurand Financial Crisis Bjarni Bjarnason sMannord inThe Legendary Legacy Transmission and Reception of the Fornaldarsogur Nordurlanda ed by Matthew Driscoll Silvia Hufnagel Philip Lavender and Beeke Stegmann The Viking Collection 24 Odense University Press of Southern Denmark 2018 pp 351 75 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gautreks saga amp oldid 1225073671, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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