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Skald

A skald, or skáld (Old Norse: [ˈskald], later [ˈskɒːld]; Icelandic: [ˈskault], meaning "poet") is one of the often named poets who composed skaldic poetry, one of the two kinds of Old Norse poetry, the other being Eddic poetry. Skaldic poems were traditionally composed to honor kings, but were sometimes extempore. They include both extended works and single verses (lausavísur). They are characteristically more ornate in form and diction than eddic poems, employing many kennings, which require some knowledge of Norse mythology, and heiti, which are formal nouns used in place of more prosaic synonyms. Dróttkvætt metre is a type of skaldic verse form that most often use internal rhyme and alliteration.

Bersi Skáldtorfuson, in chains, composing poetry after he was captured by King Óláfr Haraldsson (illustration by Christian Krohg for an 1899 edition of Heimskringla)

More than 5,500 skaldic verses have survived, preserved in more than 700 manuscripts, including in several sagas and in Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda, a handbook of skaldic composition that led to a revival of the art. Many of these verses are fragments of originally longer works, and the authorship of many is unknown. The earliest known skald from whom verses survive is Bragi Boddason, known as Bragi the Old, a Norwegian skald of the first half of the 9th century. Most skalds of whom we know were attached to the courts of Norwegian kings during the Viking Age, and increasingly were Icelanders. The subject matter of their extended poems was sometimes mythical before the conversion to Christianity, thereafter usually historical and encomiastic, detailing the deeds of the skald's patron. The tradition continued into the Late Middle Ages.

The standard edition of the skaldic poetic corpus, Den norsk-islandske skjaldedigtning, was edited by Finnur Jónsson and published in 1908–1915. A new edition was prepared online by the Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages project and began publication in 2007.

Etymology edit

The word skald (which internal rhymes show to have had a short vowel until the 14th century) is perhaps ultimately related to Proto-Germanic: *skalliz, lit.'sound, voice, shout' (Old High German: skal, lit.'sound'). Old High German has skalsang, 'song of praise, psalm', and skellan, 'ring, clang, resound'. The Old High German variant stem skeltan, etymologically identical to the skald- stem (Proto-Germanic: *skeldan), means "to scold, blame, accuse, insult". The person doing the insulting is a skelto or skeltāri. The West Germanic counterpart of the skald is the scop. Like scop, which is related to Modern English scoff, the word skald is probably cognate with English scold, reflecting the importance of mocking taunts in the poetry of the skalds.[1][2]

Skaldic poetry edit

 
A minstrel sings of famous deeds by J. R. Skelton, c. 1910

Skaldic poetry and Eddic poetry stem from the same tradition of alliterative verse, and in Old Norse as well as Icelandic, the word skald simply means "poet" or "composer". Skaldic verse is distinguished from Eddic by characteristically being more complex in style and by using dróttkvætt ("court metre"), which requires internal rhyme as well as alliteration,[3] rather than the simpler and older fornyrðislag ("way of ancient words"), ljóðaháttr ("song form"), and málaháttr ("speech form") metres of the Eddic poems. Skaldic poetry is also characteristically more ornate in its diction, using more interlacing of elements of meaning within the verse and many more kennings and heiti. This both assisted in meeting the greater technical demands of the metre and allowed the poets to display their skill in wordplay. The resulting complexity can appear somewhat hermetic to modern readers, as well as creating ambiguity in interpretation;[4][5] but the original audiences would have been familiar with the conventions of the syntactic interweaving as well as the vocabulary of the kennings.

Eddic poems are characterized by their mythological, ethical, and heroic content,[6] while skaldic verse has a wider range of subject matter. One of the main topics was mighty kings and the deeds of courtly patrons. [7] Eddic poetry typically includes a large amount of dialogue and rarely recounts battles; skaldic poetry, the reverse.[8] Skalds also composed spontaneous verses reacting to events, insult verses (níðvísur) such as Þorleifr jarlsskáld's curse on his former patron Jarl Hákon Sigurðarson[9] and the níð that provoked the missionary Þangbrandr into killing Vetrliði Sumarliðason,[10] and occasionally love poems and erotic verse called mansöngr. Hallfreðr Óttarsson and especially Kormákr Ögmundarson are known for their love poetry.[11]

A large amount of Eddic poetry has been preserved in the Codex Regius manuscript. Skaldic verses are preserved in a large number of manuscripts, including many sagas, and some skaldic poetry, including prophetic, dream, and memorial poems, uses the simpler metres. Medieval Scandinavians appear to have distinguished between older and more modern poetry rather than considering skaldic verse as a distinct genre.[12]

Compositions done without preparation were especially valued, to judge by the sagas.[13] Egill Skallagrímsson is supposed to have composed his Höfuðlausn in one night to ransom his head.[14] King Harald Hardrada is said to have set his skald, Þjóðólfr Arnórsson, as he was walking down the street, to compose two stanzas casting a quarreling smith and tanner through the choice of kennings as specific figures first from mythology and then from heroic legend.[15][16] It is not common though that skaldic verse are a spur of the moment thing.

Although there is no evidence that the skalds employed musical instruments, some speculate that they may have accompanied their verses with the harp or lyre.[17]

Forms edit

A large number of the preserved skaldic verses are individual stanzas, called lausavísur ("loose verses"), often said to have been improvised. Long forms include the drápa, a praise poem consisting of a series of stanzas with a refrain (stef) at intervals, and the flokkr (similar to drápa, without a refrain), vísur ‘verses, stanzas’, or dræplingr ‘little drápa’, a shorter series of verses without refrain.[18][19] There are also some shield poems, which supposedly describe mythological scenes on a shield presented to the poet by a patron.[20][21]

 
Illustration from the 18th-century Icelandic manuscript NKS 1867 of Thor's fight with the World Serpent, the subject of early skaldic verses by Bragi Boddason and Úlfr Uggason

Poems edit

Most of the longer skaldic poems were composed by court poets to honor kings and jarls. They typically have historical content, relating battles and other deeds from the king's career. Examples include:

A few surviving skaldic poems have mythological content:

To these could be added two poems relating the death of a king and his reception in Valhalla:

Some extended works were composed as circumstance pieces, such as the following by Egill Skallagrímsson:

History edit

The origin story for poetry comes from a myth by Snorri Sturlson. The story depicts poetry as a liquid that takes various forms. The point of this is to show that poetry has gone through and will continue to go through change. The dróttkvætt metre appears to have been an innovation associated with a new fashion in formally more elaborate poetry associated with named poets. The metre has been compared to Irish and Latin poetic forms, which may have influenced its development. [22][23][24] Origins in magic have also been suggested, because of the existence of skaldic curses (such as Egill Skallagrímsson's on King Eric Bloodaxe)[25] and because there are 10th-century magical inscriptions on runestones in the metre.[26] Since the first example of skaldic poetry of which we know is Bragi Boddason's Ragnarsdrápa from the early 9th century, some have argued that he and his associates invented it,[27] but his work is already highly accomplished, suggesting that this style of poetry had been developing for some time.[28] Bragi (whom many scholars consider was deified as the god Bragi)[29] was a Norwegian, and skaldic poetry is thought to have originated in either Norway or the Scandinavian Baltic.[30]

Most of the skalds of whom we know spent all or part of their careers as court poets,[5] either those of kings, particularly the kings of Norway, or those of jarls, particularly the Hlaðir jarls, a dynasty based in what is now Trøndelag some of whose members ruled all or part of Norway as heathens in alternation with the Christian converters King Olaf Tryggvason and King Olaf Haraldsson (Saint Olaf). They produced praise poetry telling of their patrons' deeds, which became an orally transmitted record and was subsequently cited in history sagas.[31] One example of this is the Helmskringla by Snorri Sturlson. A third of the book focuses on Olaf II Haraldsson. Their accuracy has been the subject of debate,[5] but the verse form guards against corruption and the skalds traditionally criticized as well as advised their patrons.[32][33] Skalds at the court at Hlaðir have been credited with developing the Valhalla complex and the cult of Odin as an aristocratic, educated form of heathenism influenced by Christian eschatology.[34][35] Poetic ability was highly valued; the art was practised by the Norwegian kings themselves,[36] and several skalds, such as Egill Skallagrímsson, are the subject of their own biographical sagas.[37][31]

 
Snorri Sturluson, illustration by Christian Krohg (1899)

Icelandic skalds came to dominate at Norwegian courts; the last prominent Norwegian skald was Eyvindr skáldaspillir,[38][39] and from the second half of the 10th century, all known court skalds were from Iceland or the Orkney Islands. [5] By the end of the 10th century, skaldic poetry had become increasingly internally complex, and in the 11th century Christian skalds reacted against this complexity by using far fewer kennings, especially avoiding those referencing heathen deities.[40] In the 12th century, a century after the conversion of Iceland, some skalds reintroduced heathen kennings as literary formulae,[41] interest in ancient tradition was revived, and drápur were produced on historical figures, such as Einarr Skúlason's Geisli on Olaf Tryggvason, composed 150 years after his death.[42][43] Skalds experimented with new metres, notably hrynhent, which uses longer lines than dróttkvætt[40] and was probably influenced by Latin metres. This metre arose in the 10th century and was popularized in the 11th by Arnórr jarlaskáld, whose Hrynhenda (c. 1045} is about King Magnus the Good; in the 12th century it was the dominant metre of religious skaldic poetry.[44]

Despite these adaptations, the skaldic tradition itself was endangered by the popularity of newer and simpler forms of poetry and loss of knowledge of the kenning tradition.[45] Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda, a handbook produced around 1220 that includes a guide to the metres, an explanation of kennings and their mythological and heroic bases grounded in contemporary learning, and numerous examples that preserve many skaldic verses, enabled skaldic poetry to continue in Iceland after the tradition of court poetry ended in the 13th century.[46]

Christian religious poetry became an increasingly important part of the skaldic tradition beginning in the 12th century. Eysteinn Ásgrímsson's Lilja was particularly influential: it uses the hrynhent metre and almost no kennings, and was much imitated.[47] Christian skaldic poetry died out in Iceland only with the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century, although that produced after 1400 is rarely studied as part of the skaldic corpus.[48]

Notable skalds edit

More than 300 skalds are known from the period between 800 and 1200 AD. Many are listed in the Skáldatal, a list of court skalds by the ruler they served that runs from the legendary Ragnar Lodbrok to the late 13th century and includes some poets from whom no verses are preserved.[39][49][50] Notable names include:

Many lausavísur attributed in sagas to women have traditionally been regarded as inauthentic,[51] and few female skalds are known by name.[52] They include:

Editions edit

The first comprehensive edition of skaldic poetry, by Finnur Jónsson, was Den norsk-islandske skjaldedigtning, published in 4 volumes in Copenhagen in 1908–15 (2 volumes each diplomatic and corrected text; with Danish translations).[53] Later editions include Ernst A. Kock [sv]'s Den norsk-isländska Skaldedigtningen, published in 2 volumes in Lund in 1946–50, and Magnus Olsen's Edda- og Skaldekvad: forarbeider til kommentar, published in 7 volumes in Oslo in 1960–64 (analysis in Norwegian).[54] In the early 21st century, the Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages project has prepared a new edition with associated database online;[55] 5 of a projected 9 volumes had been published as of 2018.[56] This edition groups the poems according to the type of prose source in which they are preserved.[57]

In popular culture edit

  • Polish rock group Skaldowie (literally The Skalds), which debuted in 1965, takes its name form the skalds.
  • Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages released in 2007.
  • Norwegian folk group Wardruna released in 2018 an album titled Skald, which included a track by the same name.
  • French neofolk group Skáld borrowed its name from the skalds.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "scold". etymonline.com. Retrieved June 1, 2019.
  2. ^ Margaret Clunies Ross (2011) [2005]. A History of Old Norse Poetry and Poetics. Cambridge: Brewer. p. 13, note 12. ISBN 9781843842798.
  3. ^ Kari Ellen Gade (26 May 2009). "Dróttkvætt". Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages. 2. Retrieved March 5, 2021.
  4. ^ Lee M. Hollander (1947) [1945]. The Skalds: A Selection of Their Poems, With Introductions and Notes. Princeton: The American-Scandinavian Foundation, Princeton University Press. pp. 1–2. OCLC 602867700.
  5. ^ a b c d Hallvard Magerøy (August 15, 2020). "Skaldediktning". Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Retrieved March 11, 2021.
  6. ^ Hollander, Lee M. The Poetic Edda. University of Texas Press (Austin), 1962. ISBN 0-292-73061-6, p. xv
  7. ^ Clunies Ross, p. 22.
  8. ^ Stefán Einarsson (1957). A History of Icelandic Literature. New York: The American-Scandinavian Foundation, The Johns Hopkins Press. pp. 45–46.
  9. ^ Einarsson, p. 61.
  10. ^ Bo Almqvist (1974). Norrön niddiktning: traditionshistoriska studier i versmagi (Nordiska texter och undersökningar 23) (in Swedish). Vol. 2 Nid mot missionärer, Senmedeltida nidtraditioner. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell. p. 60. OCLC 492984504.
  11. ^ Einarsson, p. 60.
  12. ^ Clunies Ross, pp. 13–16.
  13. ^ Angus A. Somerville; Russell Andrew McDonald (2013). The Vikings and Their Age. Companions to Medieval Studies. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 127. ISBN 9781442605220.
  14. ^ Hollander, p. 67.
  15. ^ Turville-Petre, pp. 100–01.
  16. ^ Hollander, pp. 189–91.
  17. ^ Knut Helle (2003). The Cambridge History of Scandinavia. Cambridge University Press. pp. 551–. ISBN 978-0-521-47299-9.
  18. ^ E. O. G. Turville-Petre (1976). Scaldic Poetry. Oxford: Clarendon Press, Oxford University. p. 39. ISBN 9780198125174.
  19. ^ Hallberg, Peter. Translated by Paul Schach and Sonja Lindgrenson. Old Icelandic Poetry. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln (1975) ISBN 0-8032-0855-3, p. 107
  20. ^ Einarsson, p. 46.
  21. ^ Hollander, pp. 26–27.
  22. ^ Ross, 22
  23. ^ Gade, The Structure of Old Norse Dróttkvætt Poetry, pp. 8–11, 250–51, cited in Clunies Ross.
  24. ^ Turville-Petre, pp. xxvi–xxviii.
  25. ^ Hollander, pp. 58–50.
  26. ^ Einarsson, pp. 44–45.
  27. ^ Turville-Petre, pp. xxi–xxiv.
  28. ^ Hollander, pp. 4, 25–26.
  29. ^ Clunies Ross, p. 105.
  30. ^ Einarsson, p. 44.
  31. ^ a b Christina von Nolcken (October 2000). "Egil Skallagrimsson and the Viking Ideal". University of Chicago. Retrieved March 11, 2021.
  32. ^ Hollander, p. 6.
  33. ^ Turville-Petre, p. lxxiv.
  34. ^ Helmut de Boor (1964) [1930]. "Die religiöse Sprache der Vǫluspá und verwandter Denkmäler". In Roswitha Wisniewski; Herbert Kolb (eds.). Kleine Schriften (in German). Vol. 1: Mittelhochdeutsche Literatur. Berlin: De Gruyter. pp. 209–83.
  35. ^ Folke Ström (1981). "Poetry as an instrument of propaganda. Jarl Hákon and his poets". In Ursula Dronke; et al. (eds.). Speculum Norroenum: Norse Studies in Memory of Gabriel Turville-Petre. Odense: Odense University Press. pp. 440–58.
  36. ^ Hollander, p. 197.
  37. ^ Hollander, pp. 6–7.
  38. ^ Turville-Petre, p. 42.
  39. ^ a b Ólason, p. 28.
  40. ^ a b Einarsson, pp. pp. 56–57.
  41. ^ Jan de Vries (1964) [1941]. Altnordische Literaturgeschichte. Grundriß der germanischen Philologie 15 (in German). Vol. 1: Vorbemerkungen, Die heidnische Zeit, Die Zeit nach der Bekehrung bis zur Mitte des zwölften Jahrhunderts (2nd ed.). Berlin: De Gruyter. pp. 228–29. OCLC 1856216.
  42. ^ Einarsson, p. 67.
  43. ^ Ólason, p. 44.
  44. ^ Clunies Ross, pp. 128–29.
  45. ^ Sverrir Tómasson (2006). "Old Icelandic Prose". In Daisy Neijmann (ed.). A History of Icelandic Literature. Histories of Scandinavian Literature. Vol. 5. Lincoln, Nebraska / London: The American-Scandinavian Foundation, University of Nebraska. p. 153. ISBN 9780803233461.
  46. ^ Einarsson, pp. 66–67.
  47. ^ Einarsson, pp. 73–76.
  48. ^ Clunies Ross, p. 5.
  49. ^ Clunies-Ross, pp. 30–31.
  50. ^ Rudolf Simek; Hermann Pálsson (1987). "Skáldatal". Lexikon der altnordischen Literatur. Kröners Taschenausgabe 490 (in German). Stuttgart: Kröner. p. 317. ISBN 3520490013.
  51. ^ Clunies Ross, p. 60, note 15.
  52. ^ Zoe Borovsky (Winter 1999). "Never in Public: Women and Performance in Old Norse Literature". The Journal of American Folklore. 112 (443): 6–39. doi:10.2307/541400. JSTOR 541400. S2CID 54582601.
  53. ^ Clunies Ross, pp. 15–16.
  54. ^ Turville-Petre, "Select Bibliography", pp. lxxix–lxxx.
  55. ^ Tarrin Wills (July 27, 2017). . Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages. Archived from the original on December 17, 2019.
  56. ^ "Published volumes". Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages. 19 July 2017. Retrieved March 8, 2021.
  57. ^ Clunies Ross, pp. 16–17.

https://www.britannica.com/art/skaldic-poetry

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mansöngr

http://www.germanicmythology.com/works/CODEXREGIUS.html#:~:text=Codex%20Regius%20is%20a%20copy,1300%20or%20a%20little%20later.

https://www.asncvikingage.com/skaldic-poetry

https://www.medievalists.net/2014/03/kings-men-icelandic-skalds-scandinavian-court/


Further reading edit

  • Margaret Clunies Ross (2007) Eddic, Skaldic, and Beyond: Poetic Variety in Medieval Iceland and Norway (Fordham University Press, 2014) ISBN 9780823257836

External links edit

  • Finnur Jónsson, ed. Den norsk-islandske skjaldedigtning, at heimskringla.no.
  • Finnur Jónsson, ed. pdfs of Den norsk-islandske skjaldedigtning photographic reprints, Copenhagen: Rosenkilde og Bagger, 1967, at Septentrionalia.net
  • Index of Old Norse/Icelandic Skaldic Poetry at the Jörmungrund database
  • Sveinbjörn Egilsson and Finnur Jónsson, eds. at Septentrionalia.net. Also in partial form at the Jörmungrund database
  • Gudbrand Vigfusson and F. York Powell, ed. and tr. Corpus poeticum boreale. Volume 2: Court Poetry, 1883 at the Internet Archive: Skaldic poems with literal English translations

skald, this, article, about, early, norse, poets, other, uses, scald, skald, skáld, norse, ˈskald, later, ˈskɒːld, icelandic, ˈskault, meaning, poet, often, named, poets, composed, skaldic, poetry, kinds, norse, poetry, other, being, eddic, poetry, poems, were. This article is about early Norse poets For other uses see Scald A skald or skald Old Norse ˈskald later ˈskɒːld Icelandic ˈskault meaning poet is one of the often named poets who composed skaldic poetry one of the two kinds of Old Norse poetry the other being Eddic poetry Skaldic poems were traditionally composed to honor kings but were sometimes extempore They include both extended works and single verses lausavisur They are characteristically more ornate in form and diction than eddic poems employing many kennings which require some knowledge of Norse mythology and heiti which are formal nouns used in place of more prosaic synonyms Drottkvaett metre is a type of skaldic verse form that most often use internal rhyme and alliteration Bersi Skaldtorfuson in chains composing poetry after he was captured by King olafr Haraldsson illustration by Christian Krohg for an 1899 edition of Heimskringla More than 5 500 skaldic verses have survived preserved in more than 700 manuscripts including in several sagas and in Snorri Sturluson s Prose Edda a handbook of skaldic composition that led to a revival of the art Many of these verses are fragments of originally longer works and the authorship of many is unknown The earliest known skald from whom verses survive is Bragi Boddason known as Bragi the Old a Norwegian skald of the first half of the 9th century Most skalds of whom we know were attached to the courts of Norwegian kings during the Viking Age and increasingly were Icelanders The subject matter of their extended poems was sometimes mythical before the conversion to Christianity thereafter usually historical and encomiastic detailing the deeds of the skald s patron The tradition continued into the Late Middle Ages The standard edition of the skaldic poetic corpus Den norsk islandske skjaldedigtning was edited by Finnur Jonsson and published in 1908 1915 A new edition was prepared online by the Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages project and began publication in 2007 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Skaldic poetry 2 1 Forms 2 2 Poems 3 History 3 1 Notable skalds 4 Editions 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEtymology editThe word skald which internal rhymes show to have had a short vowel until the 14th century is perhaps ultimately related to Proto Germanic skalliz lit sound voice shout Old High German skal lit sound Old High German has skalsang song of praise psalm and skellan ring clang resound The Old High German variant stem skeltan etymologically identical to the skald stem Proto Germanic skeldan means to scold blame accuse insult The person doing the insulting is a skelto or skeltari The West Germanic counterpart of the skald is the scop Like scop which is related to Modern English scoff the word skald is probably cognate with English scold reflecting the importance of mocking taunts in the poetry of the skalds 1 2 Skaldic poetry edit nbsp A minstrel sings of famous deeds by J R Skelton c 1910Skaldic poetry and Eddic poetry stem from the same tradition of alliterative verse and in Old Norse as well as Icelandic the word skald simply means poet or composer Skaldic verse is distinguished from Eddic by characteristically being more complex in style and by using drottkvaett court metre which requires internal rhyme as well as alliteration 3 rather than the simpler and older fornyrdislag way of ancient words ljodahattr song form and malahattr speech form metres of the Eddic poems Skaldic poetry is also characteristically more ornate in its diction using more interlacing of elements of meaning within the verse and many more kennings and heiti This both assisted in meeting the greater technical demands of the metre and allowed the poets to display their skill in wordplay The resulting complexity can appear somewhat hermetic to modern readers as well as creating ambiguity in interpretation 4 5 but the original audiences would have been familiar with the conventions of the syntactic interweaving as well as the vocabulary of the kennings Eddic poems are characterized by their mythological ethical and heroic content 6 while skaldic verse has a wider range of subject matter One of the main topics was mighty kings and the deeds of courtly patrons 7 Eddic poetry typically includes a large amount of dialogue and rarely recounts battles skaldic poetry the reverse 8 Skalds also composed spontaneous verses reacting to events insult verses nidvisur such as THorleifr jarlsskald s curse on his former patron Jarl Hakon Sigurdarson 9 and the nid that provoked the missionary THangbrandr into killing Vetrlidi Sumarlidason 10 and occasionally love poems and erotic verse called mansongr Hallfredr ottarsson and especially Kormakr Ogmundarson are known for their love poetry 11 A large amount of Eddic poetry has been preserved in the Codex Regius manuscript Skaldic verses are preserved in a large number of manuscripts including many sagas and some skaldic poetry including prophetic dream and memorial poems uses the simpler metres Medieval Scandinavians appear to have distinguished between older and more modern poetry rather than considering skaldic verse as a distinct genre 12 Compositions done without preparation were especially valued to judge by the sagas 13 Egill Skallagrimsson is supposed to have composed his Hofudlausn in one night to ransom his head 14 King Harald Hardrada is said to have set his skald THjodolfr Arnorsson as he was walking down the street to compose two stanzas casting a quarreling smith and tanner through the choice of kennings as specific figures first from mythology and then from heroic legend 15 16 It is not common though that skaldic verse are a spur of the moment thing Although there is no evidence that the skalds employed musical instruments some speculate that they may have accompanied their verses with the harp or lyre 17 Forms edit A large number of the preserved skaldic verses are individual stanzas called lausavisur loose verses often said to have been improvised Long forms include the drapa a praise poem consisting of a series of stanzas with a refrain stef at intervals and the flokkr similar to drapa without a refrain visur verses stanzas or draeplingr little drapa a shorter series of verses without refrain 18 19 There are also some shield poems which supposedly describe mythological scenes on a shield presented to the poet by a patron 20 21 nbsp Illustration from the 18th century Icelandic manuscript NKS 1867 of Thor s fight with the World Serpent the subject of early skaldic verses by Bragi Boddason and Ulfr UggasonPoems edit Most of the longer skaldic poems were composed by court poets to honor kings and jarls They typically have historical content relating battles and other deeds from the king s career Examples include Glymdrapa the deeds of King Harald Fairhair by THorbjorn Hornklofi partially preserved Vellekla the deeds of Jarl Hakon Sigurdarson by Einarr skalaglamm partially preserved Bandadrapa the deeds of Jarl Eirikr Hakonarson by Eyjolfr dadaskald partially preserved Knutsdrapa the deeds of King Cnut the Great three poems by Sigvatr THordarson ottarr svarti and ottarr svarti partially preserved Geisli the deeds of King Olaf Haraldsson Saint Olaf a Christian drapa by Einarr Skulason Hrafnsmal by THorbjorn Hornklofi describing life and martial deeds of Harald FairhairA few surviving skaldic poems have mythological content Ragnarsdrapa a shield poem by Bragi Boddason partially preserved originally consisted of sections on two mythological scenes and two from the deeds of his patron Ragnarr Haustlong a shield poem by THjodolfr of Hvinir partially preserved Husdrapa by Ulfr Uggason describing mythological scenes depicted on the walls of Olaf the Peacock s feast hall in Iceland partially preserved THorsdrapa deeds of the god Thor two partially preserved poems by Eilifr Godrunarson and Eysteinn Valdason Ynglingatal on the mythological and legendary history of the Ynglings presented as ancestors of the Norwegian kings by THjodolfr of Hvinir Haleygjatal a similar work on the Hladir dynasty by Eyvindr skaldaspillirTo these could be added two poems relating the death of a king and his reception in Valhalla Eiriksmal on the death of King Eric Bloodaxe by an unknown skald Hakonarmal on the death of King Hakon the Good by Eyvindr skaldaspillirSome extended works were composed as circumstance pieces such as the following by Egill Skallagrimsson Sonatorrek a lament on the deaths of his sons Hofudlausn in praise of Eric Bloodaxe his enemy to ransom his head Arinbjarnarkvida in praise of his friend ArinbjornHistory editThe origin story for poetry comes from a myth by Snorri Sturlson The story depicts poetry as a liquid that takes various forms The point of this is to show that poetry has gone through and will continue to go through change The drottkvaett metre appears to have been an innovation associated with a new fashion in formally more elaborate poetry associated with named poets The metre has been compared to Irish and Latin poetic forms which may have influenced its development 22 23 24 Origins in magic have also been suggested because of the existence of skaldic curses such as Egill Skallagrimsson s on King Eric Bloodaxe 25 and because there are 10th century magical inscriptions on runestones in the metre 26 Since the first example of skaldic poetry of which we know is Bragi Boddason s Ragnarsdrapa from the early 9th century some have argued that he and his associates invented it 27 but his work is already highly accomplished suggesting that this style of poetry had been developing for some time 28 Bragi whom many scholars consider was deified as the god Bragi 29 was a Norwegian and skaldic poetry is thought to have originated in either Norway or the Scandinavian Baltic 30 Most of the skalds of whom we know spent all or part of their careers as court poets 5 either those of kings particularly the kings of Norway or those of jarls particularly the Hladir jarls a dynasty based in what is now Trondelag some of whose members ruled all or part of Norway as heathens in alternation with the Christian converters King Olaf Tryggvason and King Olaf Haraldsson Saint Olaf They produced praise poetry telling of their patrons deeds which became an orally transmitted record and was subsequently cited in history sagas 31 One example of this is the Helmskringla by Snorri Sturlson A third of the book focuses on Olaf II Haraldsson Their accuracy has been the subject of debate 5 but the verse form guards against corruption and the skalds traditionally criticized as well as advised their patrons 32 33 Skalds at the court at Hladir have been credited with developing the Valhalla complex and the cult of Odin as an aristocratic educated form of heathenism influenced by Christian eschatology 34 35 Poetic ability was highly valued the art was practised by the Norwegian kings themselves 36 and several skalds such as Egill Skallagrimsson are the subject of their own biographical sagas 37 31 nbsp Snorri Sturluson illustration by Christian Krohg 1899 Icelandic skalds came to dominate at Norwegian courts the last prominent Norwegian skald was Eyvindr skaldaspillir 38 39 and from the second half of the 10th century all known court skalds were from Iceland or the Orkney Islands 5 By the end of the 10th century skaldic poetry had become increasingly internally complex and in the 11th century Christian skalds reacted against this complexity by using far fewer kennings especially avoiding those referencing heathen deities 40 In the 12th century a century after the conversion of Iceland some skalds reintroduced heathen kennings as literary formulae 41 interest in ancient tradition was revived and drapur were produced on historical figures such as Einarr Skulason s Geisli on Olaf Tryggvason composed 150 years after his death 42 43 Skalds experimented with new metres notably hrynhent which uses longer lines than drottkvaett 40 and was probably influenced by Latin metres This metre arose in the 10th century and was popularized in the 11th by Arnorr jarlaskald whose Hrynhenda c 1045 is about King Magnus the Good in the 12th century it was the dominant metre of religious skaldic poetry 44 Despite these adaptations the skaldic tradition itself was endangered by the popularity of newer and simpler forms of poetry and loss of knowledge of the kenning tradition 45 Snorri Sturluson s Prose Edda a handbook produced around 1220 that includes a guide to the metres an explanation of kennings and their mythological and heroic bases grounded in contemporary learning and numerous examples that preserve many skaldic verses enabled skaldic poetry to continue in Iceland after the tradition of court poetry ended in the 13th century 46 Christian religious poetry became an increasingly important part of the skaldic tradition beginning in the 12th century Eysteinn Asgrimsson s Lilja was particularly influential it uses the hrynhent metre and almost no kennings and was much imitated 47 Christian skaldic poetry died out in Iceland only with the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century although that produced after 1400 is rarely studied as part of the skaldic corpus 48 Notable skalds edit Main article List of skalds More than 300 skalds are known from the period between 800 and 1200 AD Many are listed in the Skaldatal a list of court skalds by the ruler they served that runs from the legendary Ragnar Lodbrok to the late 13th century and includes some poets from whom no verses are preserved 39 49 50 Notable names include Bragi Boddason the Old early 9th century THorbjorn Hornklofi 9th century court poet of King Harald Fairhair THjodolfr of Hvinir active c 900 Eyvindr skaldaspillir 10th century Egill Skallagrimsson first half of the 10th century protagonist of Egils saga Kormakr Ogmundarson mid 10th century protagonist of Kormaks saga Eilifr Godrunarson late 10th century THorvaldr Hjaltason 10th century a skald of King Eric the Victorious Hallfredr vandraedaskald late 10th century court poet of King Olaf Tryggvason Einarr Helgason skalaglamm late 10th century Ulfr Uggason late 10th century Tindr Hallkelsson active c 1000 one of Jarl Hakon Sigurdarson s court poets Gunnlaugr Ormstunga 10th 11th century nicknamed Wormtongue on account of his propensity for satire and invective Sigvatr THordarson first half of the 11th century court poet to King Olaf Haraldsson Saint Olaf THorarinn loftunga first half of the 11th century a court poet to Sveinn Knutsson ottarr svarti first half of the 11th century a skald at the court of King Olof Skotkonung and King Olaf Haraldsson Valgardr a Velli mid 11th century court poet to King Harald Hardrada THjodolfr Arnorsson mid 11th century court poet to King Magnus the Good and King Harald Hardrada Arnorr jarlaskald mid 11th century court poet to the Jarls of Orkney and several Norwegian kings Einarr Skulason 12th century Eysteinn Asgrimsson mid 14th century monk who adapted skaldic tradition to high medieval ChristianityMany lausavisur attributed in sagas to women have traditionally been regarded as inauthentic 51 and few female skalds are known by name 52 They include Hildr Hrolfsdottir 9th century Jorunn skaldmaer first half of the 10th century Steinunn Refsdottir late 10th century Steinvor Sighvatsdottir 13th centuryEditions editThe first comprehensive edition of skaldic poetry by Finnur Jonsson was Den norsk islandske skjaldedigtning published in 4 volumes in Copenhagen in 1908 15 2 volumes each diplomatic and corrected text with Danish translations 53 Later editions include Ernst A Kock sv s Den norsk islandska Skaldedigtningen published in 2 volumes in Lund in 1946 50 and Magnus Olsen s Edda og Skaldekvad forarbeider til kommentar published in 7 volumes in Oslo in 1960 64 analysis in Norwegian 54 In the early 21st century the Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages project has prepared a new edition with associated database online 55 5 of a projected 9 volumes had been published as of 2018 update 56 This edition groups the poems according to the type of prose source in which they are preserved 57 In popular culture editPolish rock group Skaldowie literally The Skalds which debuted in 1965 takes its name form the skalds Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages released in 2007 Norwegian folk group Wardruna released in 2018 an album titled Skald which included a track by the same name French neofolk group Skald borrowed its name from the skalds See also editOld Norse Women s Poetry The Voices of Female Skalds Bard FiliReferences edit scold etymonline com Retrieved June 1 2019 Margaret Clunies Ross 2011 2005 A History of Old Norse Poetry and Poetics Cambridge Brewer p 13 note 12 ISBN 9781843842798 Kari Ellen Gade 26 May 2009 Drottkvaett Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 2 Retrieved March 5 2021 Lee M Hollander 1947 1945 The Skalds A Selection of Their Poems With Introductions and Notes Princeton The American Scandinavian Foundation Princeton University Press pp 1 2 OCLC 602867700 a b c d Hallvard Mageroy August 15 2020 Skaldediktning Store norske leksikon in Norwegian Retrieved March 11 2021 Hollander Lee M The Poetic Edda University of Texas Press Austin 1962 ISBN 0 292 73061 6 p xv Clunies Ross p 22 Stefan Einarsson 1957 A History of Icelandic Literature New York The American Scandinavian Foundation The Johns Hopkins Press pp 45 46 Einarsson p 61 Bo Almqvist 1974 Norron niddiktning traditionshistoriska studier i versmagi Nordiska texter och undersokningar 23 in Swedish Vol 2 Nid mot missionarer Senmedeltida nidtraditioner Stockholm Almqvist amp Wiksell p 60 OCLC 492984504 Einarsson p 60 Clunies Ross pp 13 16 Angus A Somerville Russell Andrew McDonald 2013 The Vikings and Their Age Companions to Medieval Studies Toronto University of Toronto Press p 127 ISBN 9781442605220 Hollander p 67 Turville Petre pp 100 01 Hollander pp 189 91 Knut Helle 2003 The Cambridge History of Scandinavia Cambridge University Press pp 551 ISBN 978 0 521 47299 9 E O G Turville Petre 1976 Scaldic Poetry Oxford Clarendon Press Oxford University p 39 ISBN 9780198125174 Hallberg Peter Translated by Paul Schach and Sonja Lindgrenson Old Icelandic Poetry University of Nebraska Press Lincoln 1975 ISBN 0 8032 0855 3 p 107 Einarsson p 46 Hollander pp 26 27 Ross 22 Gade The Structure of Old Norse Drottkvaett Poetry pp 8 11 250 51 cited in Clunies Ross Turville Petre pp xxvi xxviii Hollander pp 58 50 Einarsson pp 44 45 Turville Petre pp xxi xxiv Hollander pp 4 25 26 Clunies Ross p 105 Einarsson p 44 a b Christina von Nolcken October 2000 Egil Skallagrimsson and the Viking Ideal University of Chicago Retrieved March 11 2021 Hollander p 6 Turville Petre p lxxiv Helmut de Boor 1964 1930 Die religiose Sprache der Vǫluspa und verwandter Denkmaler In Roswitha Wisniewski Herbert Kolb eds Kleine Schriften in German Vol 1 Mittelhochdeutsche Literatur Berlin De Gruyter pp 209 83 Folke Strom 1981 Poetry as an instrument of propaganda Jarl Hakon and his poets In Ursula Dronke et al eds Speculum Norroenum Norse Studies in Memory of Gabriel Turville Petre Odense Odense University Press pp 440 58 Hollander p 197 Hollander pp 6 7 Turville Petre p 42 a b olason p 28 a b Einarsson pp pp 56 57 Jan de Vries 1964 1941 Altnordische Literaturgeschichte Grundriss der germanischen Philologie 15 in German Vol 1 Vorbemerkungen Die heidnische Zeit Die Zeit nach der Bekehrung bis zur Mitte des zwolften Jahrhunderts 2nd ed Berlin De Gruyter pp 228 29 OCLC 1856216 Einarsson p 67 olason p 44 Clunies Ross pp 128 29 Sverrir Tomasson 2006 Old Icelandic Prose In Daisy Neijmann ed A History of Icelandic Literature Histories of Scandinavian Literature Vol 5 Lincoln Nebraska London The American Scandinavian Foundation University of Nebraska p 153 ISBN 9780803233461 Einarsson pp 66 67 Einarsson pp 73 76 Clunies Ross p 5 Clunies Ross pp 30 31 Rudolf Simek Hermann Palsson 1987 Skaldatal Lexikon der altnordischen Literatur Kroners Taschenausgabe 490 in German Stuttgart Kroner p 317 ISBN 3520490013 Clunies Ross p 60 note 15 Zoe Borovsky Winter 1999 Never in Public Women and Performance in Old Norse Literature The Journal of American Folklore 112 443 6 39 doi 10 2307 541400 JSTOR 541400 S2CID 54582601 Clunies Ross pp 15 16 Turville Petre Select Bibliography pp lxxix lxxx Tarrin Wills July 27 2017 Skaldic Project Cross Platform Interface Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages Archived from the original on December 17 2019 Published volumes Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 19 July 2017 Retrieved March 8 2021 Clunies Ross pp 16 17 https www britannica com art skaldic poetryhttps en m wikipedia org wiki Mansongrhttp www germanicmythology com works CODEXREGIUS html text Codex 20Regius 20is 20a 20copy 1300 20or 20a 20little 20later https www asncvikingage com skaldic poetryhttps www medievalists net 2014 03 kings men icelandic skalds scandinavian court Further reading editMargaret Clunies Ross 2007 Eddic Skaldic and Beyond Poetic Variety in Medieval Iceland and Norway Fordham University Press 2014 ISBN 9780823257836External links editFinnur Jonsson ed Den norsk islandske skjaldedigtning at heimskringla no Finnur Jonsson ed pdfs of Den norsk islandske skjaldedigtning photographic reprints Copenhagen Rosenkilde og Bagger 1967 at Septentrionalia net Index of Old Norse Icelandic Skaldic Poetry at the Jormungrund database Sveinbjorn Egilsson and Finnur Jonsson eds Lexicon poeticum antiquae linguae septentriolanis ordbog over det norsk islandske skjaldesprog 2nd ed Copenhagen Det kongelige nordiske oldskriftselskab 1913 16 at Septentrionalia net Also in partial form at the Jormungrund database Gudbrand Vigfusson and F York Powell ed and tr Corpus poeticum boreale Volume 2 Court Poetry 1883 at the Internet Archive Skaldic poems with literal English translations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Skald amp oldid 1195396523, 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