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Þiðreks saga

Þiðreks saga af Bern ('the saga of Þiðrekr of Bern', sometimes Thidrekssaga or Thidreks saga in English) is an Old Norse saga that collects almost all Germanic heroic legends known from Germany into a single narrative. At the center of this narrative is the biography of the hero Dietrich von Bern (Old Norse: Þiðrekr af Bern).

Thidrekssaga, Holm perg 4 fol, bl. 11v.

Most scholars believe that the saga was probably composed in Bergen, Norway, at the court of king Haakon IV, sometime around 1250. Scholars are divided between those that believe that the composer translated a lost Low German original ("translation hypothesis") and those who believe that the sources were mostly oral and conveyed to Norway by merchants of the Hanseatic League, only being joined together in Norway ("compilation hypothesis"). The saga contains a number of otherwise unknown German legends. Controversy exists as to whether to consider the Þiðreks saga af Bern a courtly chivalric saga, like Haakon's other translation projects, or a legendary saga given that it contains Germanic heroic legends.

In addition to the Old Norse version, an adaptation into Old Swedish known as the Didriks Krönika was created in the mid 15th century. It is not a literal translation but an adaptation that would go on to influence further Scandinavian texts about Dietrich and the Nibelungen.

Summary edit

 
Fresco by Albertus Pictor of eight mostly biblical heroes, but including Dietrich von Bern fighting against Witege from the Old Swedish version of the Þiðreks saga, found on the vault of Floda church in Södermanland, Sweden, painted around 1479.[1] Dietrich is breathing fire and is found in the lower part of the image.

The Þiðreks saga is a compilation of legends about almost all known heroes from continental Germanic heroic legend into a single text; it also includes other narratives that were closely associated with such legends.[2] Some of the legends have no extant German counterpart.[3] It also contains material from fairy tales, folktales, and Spielmannsdichtung.[4] At the centre of Þiðreks saga is a complete life of Dietrich von Bern (Old Norse: Þiðrekr of Bern).[5]

It begins by telling of Þiðrekr's grandfather and father, and then tells of Þiðrekr's youth at his father's court, where Hildebrand tutors him and he accomplishes his first heroic deeds.[6] After his father's death, Þiðrekr leads several military campaigns: then he is exiled from his kingdom by his uncle Ermenrik, fleeing to Attila's court. There is an unsuccessful attempt to return to his kingdom, during which Attila's sons and Þiðrekr's brother die. This is followed by Þiðrekr's entanglement in the downfall of the Niflings, after which Þiðrekr successfully returns to Verona and recovers his kingdom. Much later, after the death of both Hildebrand and his wife Herrad, Þiðrekr kills a dragon who had killed King Hernit of Bergara, marrying the widow and becoming king of Bergara. After Attila's death, Þiðrekr becomes king of the Huns as well. The final time he fights an opponent is to avenge the death of Heime (who had become a monk and then sworn loyalty to Þiðrekr once again). After this, he spends all his time hunting. One day, upon seeing a particularly magnificent deer, he jumped out of the bathtub and mounted a gigantic black horse – which is actually the devil in equine form. It rides away with him, and no one knows what happened to him after that, but the Germans believe that he received God and Mary's grace and was saved.

In addition to the life of Þiðrekr, various other heroes' lives are recounted as well in various parts of the story, including Attila, Wayland the Smith (in the section called Velents þáttr smiðs), Sigurd, the Nibelungen, and Walter of Aquitaine. The section recounting Þiðrekr's avenging of Hertnit seems to have resulted from a confusion between Þiðrekr and the similarly named Wolfdietrich.

Manuscripts edit

The manuscripts of the Þiðreks saga are:

  • Royal Library, Stockholm, Perg. fol. nr. 4 (Mb), Norway, on parchment, dating c. 1275-1300 and formerly in the possession of Arni Sigurdsson, bishop of Bergen.[7] The manuscript was written by five hands (Mb1-Mb5): the two main writers, Mb2 and Mb3, appear to have used two different source manuscripts, with Mb3 following a version closer to the later Icelandic paper manuscripts A and B.[8] The manuscript has major lacunae, mostly at the beginning and end.[9]
  • Copenhagen, Arnamagnæan Institute, AM 178 fol. (A), Iceland, on paper, 17th century.[10] Based on a lost parchment manuscript.[11]
  • Copenhagen, Arnamagnæan Institute, AM 177 fol. (B), Iceland, on paper, dated 1690-1691.[10] Based on a lost parchment manuscript.[11]
  • Royal Library, Stockholm, Papp. nr. 100 fol. (C), Iceland, on paper, 17th century.[11] This manuscript is a copy of A and Mb, and shares the same lacunae as Mb.[12]

Of these, the manuscripts Mb, A, and B are the most important.[13] The Swedish version (Sv) is preserved in two manuscripts:

  • Skokloster Castle Library, E 9013 (formerly Codex Skokloster 115, 116 4°) , Sweden, end of 15th or early 16th century[14]
  • Royal Library, Stockholm, Papp. K 45 4°, Sweden, on paper, first half of 16th century[14]

The Swedish version is useful for reconstructing the text where the other versions disagree.[13]

Redactions edit

There are at least two redactions of the Old Norse Þiðreks saga, with the two main scribes of the oldest manuscript, Mb, each following a different redaction.[15] Scribe Mb3 has followed a manuscript with a redaction similar to that found in the later Icelandic manuscripts A and B, whereas Mb2 has followed a manuscript source representing a different redaction of the material.[8] One of main differences between the redactions is the placement of the section called "Vilkina saga": in Mb2 “Vilkina saga” is placed early in the text, whereas Mb3 has placed it later, in a section largely concerning other marriages of heroes (as a result, "Vilkina saga" appears twice in Mb).[3][16] Mb3 has inserted two sections, Sigurd's youth and a long description of the various heroes after Thidrek's feast, into the sequence of chapters written by Mb2.[17] It is possible that Mb2 had forgotten this material or else chosen to omit it.[15] The two redactions also contain differences in the names, number (3 vs. 4 brothers), and origins of the Burgundian kings.[18]

Composition and sources edit

Sources of the compilation edit

There is no doubt that the sources of the Þiðreks saga were mostly Middle High German or Middle Low German.[19] It is thus the only extant example of a translation from (Low) German to Old Norse.[20] Given its dating to around 1250, it is roughly contemporary with the parallel German heroic epics, with only the Nibelungenlied predating it.[21] Some scholars have argued that the Nibelungenlied itself was a source of the saga, while others have argued that a conjectured earlier Nibelungen epic was a source, and that this hypothesized epic was also the source for the second half of the Nibelungenlied.[22] Because of the saga's localization of Attila's court at Soest, it is taken to indicate a local tradition that placed the fall of the Burgundians at that Hanseatic city.[23] The prologue of the saga states that it was composed based on the tales of German men, but its language is somewhat obscure and scholars debate what precisely this means. The prologue also mentions tales told across Scandinavia and Iceland as sources on Sigurd, the Nibelungs, and Wayland the smith.[24] Some material may be original to the compiler, having been put together using various motifs found in other heroic tales.[25]

Time and place of composition edit

Most scholars believe that the saga was probably composed in Bergen, Norway, at the court of king Haakon IV, sometime around 1250.[26] Haakon had important Danish-Saxon dynastic connections, as his son Magnus VI was married to Ingeborg, a Danish-Saxon princess,[27] and his chancery also included a number of clerics of German origin, who could have acted as intermediaries for material from the continent.[28] Additionally, Bergen was an import trading center for the North German Hanseatic League, who had merchants that resided there and could have brought German stories to Norway.[29] The composition of a saga based on German materials fits into the larger project of importing courtly literature under Haakon, which also resulted in the adaptation of the chivalric sagas from mostly French sources.[30] However, there is no direct evidence that Haakon commissioned the Þiðreks saga.[4] The saga matches the milieu of Haakon's court and adaptations in its frequent use of courtly and chivalric vocabulary.[31] Likewise, the name of Þiðrekr's sister is Isolde, and her son is Tristram (Tristan), which points to courtly influence, and the influence of Arthurian literature is also found in the saga; however, Claudia Bornholdt cautions that such influence could have taken place in either Germany or Norway.[32]

The composer of the Þiðreks saga in Old Norse is unknown; scholars debate whether he was an Icelander or a Norwegian.[33] The composer appears to have been educated, meaning he was probably a cleric, as was the only named author of a chivalric saga, Brother Robert.[34]

Translation or compilation? edit

Scholars are divided between those that believe that the composer of the saga translated a lost Low German original ("translation hypothesis") and those who believe that the sources were mostly oral and conveyed to Norway by merchants of the Hanseatic League, only being joined together in Norway ("compilation hypothesis").[35] There is little evidence outside of the text itself that would point either way.[36] Most scholars adhering to the "translation hypothesis" have been German, while most adhering to the "compilation hypothesis" have been Norwegian.[37]

The most recent main proponent of the "translation hypothesis" is Theodore Andersson, who regards the text as more German than Norwegian.[38] Andersson argued that the saga was originally composed in Northern Germany around 1200, arguing that the compositional principals and his proposed sources for various episodes indicated familiarity with early courtly literature such as Spielmannsepik and the Kaiserchronik (c. 1150), as well as conjectured predecessor epics for the Nibelungenlied and Dietrich epics.[39]

The main proponent of the saga having been composed in Norway today is Susanne Kramarz-Bein.[40] She has argued that parallels in structure and content to the Karlamagnús saga and other chivalric sagas show that the saga must have been composed with its current structure at Haakon's court in Norway.[41][42] One of the main arguments in favor of the saga's composition in Norway is that no large scale epic or prose work in Low German has survived that would show that such compilations existed in Northern Germany. On the other hand, there are many Norse examples.[43] Arguments for an oral tradition as the source of the saga are mostly based on the prologue's mention of "tales of German men" as sources.[44] As opposed to the traditional "translation theory" on the basis of purely oral sources, Kramarz-Bein has argued for a "composition theory:" that the compiler of the saga relied on various written sources as well as oral sources.[45]

Genre and interpretation edit

Long-standing controversy exists as to what genre the Þiðreks saga belongs to, chivalric saga or legendary saga.[46] On the one hand, it contains legendary stories; on the other, it does not take place vaguely in a legendary past but after the death of Constantine the Great, involves concrete, European geography, and includes King Arthur and Apollonius of Tyre among its characters.[30] The dominant scholarly theory is that the Þiðreks saga was written in the same context as the chivalric sagas, namely, as a translation of courtly material from the continent; however, its manuscript transmission in Iceland is in the same contexts as the legendary sagas.[47] Scandinavian scholars have generally been more comfortable discussing the Þiðreks saga as a chivalric saga.[48]

Susanne Kramarz-Bein and Heinrich Beck have both argued that the saga shows pro-Scandinavian leanings, exemplified in the way in which it treats the heroes Viðga, Þétleifr Danskr (Middle High German: Dietleib von Stîre) and Heimir: Heimir, portrayed as Swabian, is a mostly negative figure, whereas the heroes Viðga and Þétleifr, both portrayed as Danes, are given many positive traits that put them above Thidrek's other heroes.[49][50] The same scholars have also argued that the localization of the Huns in the North-German Duchy of Saxony could be related to these northern political, potentially pro-Welf leanings.[51][27]

Structure and organization edit

The Þiðreks saga is divided into books, which are also referred to as sagas.[52] Various proposals have been made about the original arrangement of the material. The scribes Mb2 and Mb3 of the oldest manuscript Mb follow different arrangements of the books and chapters.[53] The manuscripts A, B, and the Swedish version likewise all have different arrangements of the sub-sagas.[54] Germanist Thomas Klein argued for a three-part structure of the saga, in which part one shows the youth and bringing together of the heroes, part two focuses on marriage, and part three shows death and old age.[55] This basic structure is also supported by Susanne Kramarz-Bein.[56]

Swedish adaptation edit

The Þiðreks saga also exists in a late medieval Old Swedish adaptation, known as the Didriks Krönika (also: Didrikskrönikan) or, less frequently, Didriks saga.[57][a] Most scholars agree that the Didriks Krönika used the oldest extant manuscript of the Þiðreks saga (Mb) as its main source.[59] It is possible that German and Danish sources were used as well, as various names show forms closer to their German or Low German counterparts,[60][61] and the text shows some Danish linguistic forms. However, there is no consensus as to whether these sources were written or oral.[62] The vocabulary of the text shows many connections to contemporary courtly culture in Germany.[63]

Most scholars agree that the adaptation was likely composed in the mid 15th century,[59] possibly in the 1450s or 1460s.[64] There is a disagreement whether the saga was composed in a Franciscan monastery or at Vadstena Abbey in Sweden.[59] It has been suggested that the saga may have been adapted under the patronage of Swedish King Charles VII.[64] Interest in adapting the Þiðreks saga may have been sparked by the saga's portrayal of Swedish control of a large Baltic empire called "Vilcinaland",[65] which included Swedish rule over its rival Denmark.[66]

The Didriks Krönika is not a literal translation of the Þiðreks saga but an adaptation for a contemporary Swedish public.[67] The adapter has abbreviated the saga greatly.[68] Episodes not connected to the main plot have been removed and others reduced to only what is essential for the main plot. The adapter has also made additions to the text in some places and sought to remove contradictions from his Norwegian source.[67]

Influence edit

The Þiðreks saga was an important influence on the chivalric sagas written after it, including Erex saga, Mágus saga jarls, Kirialax saga, Blómstrvallasaga, and Samsons saga fagra.[69][70] The author of the Völsunga saga appears to have known the Þiðreks saga as well.[71] This includes a description of Sigurd's armor that is adopted directly from the Þiðreks saga.[72] Old Norse scholar Klaus von See argued that the Völsunga saga was written in response to the Þiðreks saga as a "re-Scandinavianisation" of the material.[73] The Þiðreks saga was also influential on Swedish literature even before the writing of the Didriks Krönika, with Dietrich being mentioned in Herr Ivan lejonriddare (1303) - one of the translated romances known as the Eufemiavisorna - and the Eric Chronicle (c. 1320-1335).[74] Additionally, several late medieval ballads were based on material found in the Þiðreks saga.[75]

The Swedish Didriks Krönika inspired at least two pictorial depictions. Around 1480, artist Albertus Pictor included the scene of Didrik's fight with Wideke and the latter's flight into the sea was included, along with the battles of several other biblical and legendary heroes, on the roof of Floda church in Södermanland, Sweden.[76][77] An illumination in a law codex from Uppland from the mid 15th century also shows a scene from the saga: it shows the knight Sistram, identified by text, half-swallowed in the jaws of a dragon.[78]

The Swedish Didriks Krönika also influenced other texts produced on Dietrich von Bern and the Nibelungen in Scandinavia. In particular, Jonas Venusinus produced the Hvenske Krønike in Latin sometime after 1550, which transports the fall of Burgundians as told in the Didriks Krönika to his home island of Ven in the Øresund; the Hvenske Krønike was translated into Danish in 1603 by Anders Sørensen Vedel.[79] The Didriks Krönika also had considerable influence on Swedish historiography as the saga identified the country of Vilkinaland with Sweden and so its line of kings was added to the Swedish line of kings.[80] In spite of the fact that the early scholar Olaus Petri was critical, these kings were considered to have been historic Swedish kings until fairly recent times.[80] The historicity of the kings of Vilkinaland was further boosted in 1634 when Johannes Bureus discovered the Norwegian parchment that had arrived in Sweden in the 15th century.[80][clarification needed] The earliest edition of the Norwegian Þiðreks saga, together with a Latin translation, was published by Swedish antiquitarian Johan Peringskiöld in the early 18th century as the Vilkina saga due to Peringskiöld's interest in Gothicism.[14]

Richard Wagner used it as a source for his operatic tetralogy Der Ring des Nibelungen.[citation needed]

Editions and translations of the Norwegian text edit

 
Cover of Saga Điðriks konungs af Bern (1853), edited by Carl Richard Unger.

Editions edit

  • Unger, Henrik, ed. (1853). Saga Điðriks konungs af Bern: Fortælling om Kong Thidrik af Bern og hans kæmper, i norsk bearbeidelse fra det trettende aarhundrede efter tydske kilder. Christiania: Feilberg & Landmark.
  • Bertelsen, Henrik, ed. (1905–1911). . Samfund til udgivelse af gammel nordisk litteratur, 34. Vol. 1. Copenhagen: Møller. Archived from the original on 6 August 2022. Retrieved 6 August 2022.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  • Jónsson, Guðni, ed. (1951). Þiðreks saga af Bern. Reykjavík.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) (normalised version of Bertelsen's edition)

Translations edit

English
  • The Saga of Thidrek of Bern. Translated by Haymes, Edward R. Garland. 1988. ISBN 0-8240-8489-6.
Other
  • Die Geschichte Thidreks von Bern (in German). Translated by Erichsen, Fine. Jena: Diederichs. 1924.
  • Die Thidrekssaga oder Dietrich von Bern und die Niflungen (in German). Translated by von der Hagen, Friedrich Heinrich. St. Goar: Der Leuchter, Otto Reichl Verlag. 1989.
  • Saga de Teodorico de Verona (in Spanish). Translated by González Campo, Mariano. Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros. 2010. ISBN 978-84-9321-036-6.
  • Saga de Théodoric de Vérone (Þiðrikssaga af Bern) - Légendes heroiques d'Outre-Rhin (in French). Translated by Lecouteux, Claude. Paris: Honoré Champion. 2001. ISBN 2-7453-0373-2.
  • Folkvisan om konung Didrik och hans kämpar (in Swedish). Translated by Klockhoff, Oskar. 1900.

Editions and translations of the Swedish text edit

Editions edit

  • Hyltén-Cavallius, Gunnar Olof, ed. (1850–1854). Sagan om Didrik af Bern. Stockholm: Norstedt. (Old Swedish text)
  • Peringskiöld, Johan, ed. (1715). Wilkina saga, eller Historien om konung Thiderich af Bern och hans kämpar; samt Niflunga sagan; innehållandes några göthiska konungars och hieltars forna bedrifter i Ryszland, Polen, Ungern, Italien, Burgundien och Spanien &c. Sive Historia Wilkinensium, Theoderici Veronensis, ac niflungorum; continens regum atq; heroum quorundam gothicorum res gestas, per Russiam, Poloniam, Hungariam, Italiam, Burgundiam, atque Hispaniam, &c. Ex. mss. codicibus lingvæ veteris scandicæ. Stockholm. (in Swedish and Latin)
  • "Sagan om Didrik av Bern". Lunds universitet, Humanistiska och teologiska fakulteterna. Retrieved 21 August 2023. (Diplomatic transcription of the manuscripts)

Translations edit

  • Die Didriks-Chronik oder die Svava: das Leben König Didriks von Bern und die Niflungen (in German). Translated by Ritter-Schaumburg, Heinz. St. Goar: Der Leuchter. 1989. ISBN 3-87667-102-7.
  • The Saga of Didrik of Bern, with The Dwarf King Laurin. Translated by Cumpstey, Ian. Skadi Press. 2017. ISBN 978-0-9576-1203-7. (in English)

Notes edit

  1. ^ Non-academic researcher Heinz Ritter-Schaumburg refers to the Didriks Krönika as the "Svava," a name without any basis in the text.[58]

References edit

  1. ^ Lienert 2008, p. 266.
  2. ^ Millet 2008, pp. 270–271.
  3. ^ a b Georgieva Eriksen & Johansson 2012, p. 24.
  4. ^ a b Bornholdt 2005, p. 86.
  5. ^ Heinzle 1999, p. 38.
  6. ^ Þs. Ch. 14–17, Unger (1853), pp. 19–26; 1988 [Ch. 25a (14)–29(17), Bertelsen (1905–1911), 1: 31–38]
  7. ^ Georgieva Eriksen & Johansson 2012, pp. 42–43.
  8. ^ a b Kramarz-Bein 2002, p. 21.
  9. ^ Millet 2008, pp. 268–269.
  10. ^ a b Georgieva Eriksen & Johansson 2012, p. 44.
  11. ^ a b c Kramarz-Bein 2002, p. 19.
  12. ^ Georgieva Eriksen & Johansson 2012, p. 45.
  13. ^ a b Haymes 1988, p. xxi.
  14. ^ a b c Georgieva Eriksen & Johansson 2012, p. 48.
  15. ^ a b Millet 2008, p. 269.
  16. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2002, pp. 59–60.
  17. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2002, p. 41.
  18. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2002, pp. 44–47.
  19. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2012, p. 262.
  20. ^ Georgieva Eriksen & Johansson 2012, p. 9.
  21. ^ Haymes 1988, pp. xix–xx.
  22. ^ Andersson 1994, p. 3.
  23. ^ Millet 2008, pp. 272–273.
  24. ^ Georgieva Eriksen & Johansson 2012, pp. 11–13.
  25. ^ Haymes & Samples 1996, p. 70.
  26. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2010, p. 931-932.
  27. ^ a b Kramarz-Bein 2012, p. 263.
  28. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2012, p. 258.
  29. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2002, p. 1-2.
  30. ^ a b Millet 2008, p. 260.
  31. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2002, pp. 12–13.
  32. ^ Bornholdt 2005, pp. 108–109.
  33. ^ Haymes 1988, p. xix.
  34. ^ Haymes & Samples 1996, pp. 70–71.
  35. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2010, p. 934-935.
  36. ^ Haymes & Samples 1996, p. 71.
  37. ^ Georgieva Eriksen & Johansson 2012, p. 23.
  38. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2002, p. 10.
  39. ^ Andersson 1994, pp. 20–22.
  40. ^ Bornholdt 2005, p. 88.
  41. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2002, pp. 102–162.
  42. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2012, pp. 257–259.
  43. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2002, p. 343.
  44. ^ Georgieva Eriksen & Johansson 2012, p. 25.
  45. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2012, pp. 260–261.
  46. ^ Georgieva Eriksen & Johansson 2012, p. 34.
  47. ^ Georgieva Eriksen & Johansson 2012, pp. 34–35.
  48. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2012, pp. 253–254.
  49. ^ Millet 2008, pp. 276–277.
  50. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2002, pp. 35–36.
  51. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2002, p. 30.
  52. ^ Haymes & Samples 1996, p. 68.
  53. ^ Haymes 1988, pp. xxi–xxiii.
  54. ^ Haymes 1988, pp. xxiii–xxiv.
  55. ^ Bornholdt 2005, p. 92.
  56. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2002, pp. 26–29.
  57. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2006, p. 106-107.
  58. ^ Hofmann 1990, p. 95.
  59. ^ a b c Georgieva Eriksen & Johansson 2012, p. 43.
  60. ^ Bornholdt 2005, p. 137.
  61. ^ Hofmann 1990, p. 104.
  62. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2006, p. 106.
  63. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2006, pp. 112–113.
  64. ^ a b Georgieva Eriksen & Johansson 2012, p. 35.
  65. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2006, pp. 108–109.
  66. ^ Tuulse 1975, pp. 67–68.
  67. ^ a b Kramarz-Bein 2006, p. 109.
  68. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2002, pp. 19–20.
  69. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2002, pp. 288–317.
  70. ^ Kalinke 2017, pp. 36, 128, 130–131, 144, 152–153.
  71. ^ Millet 2008, p. 313.
  72. ^ Larrington 2012, p. 256.
  73. ^ Larrington 2012, p. 252.
  74. ^ Jørgensen 2012, pp. 296–298.
  75. ^ Jørgensen 2012, pp. 300–302.
  76. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2006, p. 116.
  77. ^ Tuulse 1975, p. 68.
  78. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2006, pp. 116–117.
  79. ^ Kramarz-Bein 2006, p. 114.
  80. ^ a b c The article Didrikssagan in Nordisk familjebok (1907).

Works cited edit

  • Andersson, Theodore M. (1994). "Composition and Literary Culture in Þiðreks saga". In Uecker, Heiko (ed.). Studien zum Altgermanischen: Festschrift für Heinrich Beck. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 1–23.
  • Bornholdt, Claudia (2005). Engaging moments: the origins of medieval bridal-quest narrative. de Gruyter.
  • Georgieva Eriksen, Stefka; Johansson, Karl G. (2012). "Francia et Germania – Translations and the Europeanisation of Old Norse Narratives". In Johansson, Karl G.; Flaten, Rune (eds.). Francia et Germania: Studies in Strengleikar and Þiðreks saga af Bern. Novus Forlag. pp. 9–52.
  • Haymes, Edward R. (1988). "Introduction". The Saga of Thidrek of Bern. Translated by Haymes, Edward R. Garland. pp. xix–xxxii. ISBN 0-8240-8489-6.
  • Haymes, Edward R.; Samples, Susan T. (1996). Heroic legends of the North: an introduction to the Nibelung and Dietrich cycles. New York: Garland. ISBN 0815300336.
  • Heinzle, Joachim (1999). Einführung in die mittelhochdeutsche Dietrichepik (in German). Berlin, New York: De Gruyter. ISBN 3-11-015094-8.
  • Jørgensen, Jon Gunnar (2012). "Didrik til hest - til øst fra vest". In Johansson, Karl G.; Flaten, Rune (eds.). Francia et Germania: Studies in Strengleikar and Þiðreks saga af Bern (in Norwegian). Novus Forlag. pp. 289–307.
  • Hofmann, Dietrich (1990). "Das Verhältnis der altschwedischen Didriks-Chronik zur Þiðreks saga – und zur historischen Wirklichkeit". Skandinavistik (in German). 20 (1): 95–110.
  • Kalinke, Marianne E. (2017). Stories Set Forth with Fair Words: The Evolution of Medieval Romance in Iceland. University of Wales Press. ISBN 978-1-78683-067-8.
  • Kramarz-Bein, Susanne (2002). Die Þiðreks saga im Kontext der altnorwegischen Literatur (in German). A. Francke Verlag.
  • Kramarz-Bein, Susanne (2006). "Zur altostnordischen Karls- und Dietrichdichtung". Amsterdamer Beiträge zur älteren Germanistik (in German). 62: 99–121. doi:10.1163/18756719-062001006.
  • Kramarz-Bein, Susanne (2010) [2008]. "Þiðreks saga af Bern". Germanische Altertumskunde Online (in German). de Gruyter.
  • Kramarz-Bein, Susanne (2012). "Þiðreks saga in the Context of Old Norwegian Literature". In Johansson, Karl G.; Flaten, Rune (eds.). Francia et Germania: Studies in Strengleikar and Þiðreks saga af Bern. Novus Forlag. pp. 251–264.
  • Larrington, Carolyne (2012). "Völsunga Saga, Ragnars Saga and Romance in Old Norse: Revisiting Relationships". In Lassen, Annette; Ney, Agneta; Jakobsson, Árman (eds.). The Legendary Sagas: Origins and Development. University of Iceland Press. pp. 250–270.
  • Lienert, Elisabeth (2008). Dietrich-Testimonien des 6. bis 16. Jahrhunderts (in German). Tübingen: Niemeyer. ISBN 978-3-484-64504-2.
  • Millet, Victor (2008). Germanische Heldendichtung im Mittelalter (in German). Berlin, New York: de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-020102-4.
  • Tuulse, Armin (1975). "Didrik av Bern och Norden". Konsthistorisk Tidskrift (in Swedish). 44 (3–4): 67–69. doi:10.1080/00233607508603860.

Further reading edit

  • Krappe, Alexander Haggerty (1923). "A Folktale-motif in the Þiðreks saga". Scandinavian Studies and Notes 7 (9), pp. 265–69. JSTOR 40915133.
  • Sandbach, F. E. (1906) The Heroic Saga-Cycle of Dietrich of Bern. London: David Nutt

Þiðreks, saga, bern, saga, Þiðrekr, bern, sometimes, thidrekssaga, thidreks, saga, english, norse, saga, that, collects, almost, germanic, heroic, legends, known, from, germany, into, single, narrative, center, this, narrative, biography, hero, dietrich, bern,. THidreks saga af Bern the saga of THidrekr of Bern sometimes Thidrekssaga or Thidreks saga in English is an Old Norse saga that collects almost all Germanic heroic legends known from Germany into a single narrative At the center of this narrative is the biography of the hero Dietrich von Bern Old Norse THidrekr af Bern Thidrekssaga Holm perg 4 fol bl 11v Most scholars believe that the saga was probably composed in Bergen Norway at the court of king Haakon IV sometime around 1250 Scholars are divided between those that believe that the composer translated a lost Low German original translation hypothesis and those who believe that the sources were mostly oral and conveyed to Norway by merchants of the Hanseatic League only being joined together in Norway compilation hypothesis The saga contains a number of otherwise unknown German legends Controversy exists as to whether to consider the THidreks saga af Bern a courtly chivalric saga like Haakon s other translation projects or a legendary saga given that it contains Germanic heroic legends In addition to the Old Norse version an adaptation into Old Swedish known as the Didriks Kronika was created in the mid 15th century It is not a literal translation but an adaptation that would go on to influence further Scandinavian texts about Dietrich and the Nibelungen Contents 1 Summary 2 Manuscripts 2 1 Redactions 3 Composition and sources 3 1 Sources of the compilation 3 2 Time and place of composition 3 3 Translation or compilation 4 Genre and interpretation 5 Structure and organization 6 Swedish adaptation 7 Influence 8 Editions and translations of the Norwegian text 8 1 Editions 8 2 Translations 9 Editions and translations of the Swedish text 9 1 Editions 9 2 Translations 10 Notes 11 References 12 Works cited 13 Further readingSummary edit nbsp Fresco by Albertus Pictor of eight mostly biblical heroes but including Dietrich von Bern fighting against Witege from the Old Swedish version of the THidreks saga found on the vault of Floda church in Sodermanland Sweden painted around 1479 1 Dietrich is breathing fire and is found in the lower part of the image The THidreks saga is a compilation of legends about almost all known heroes from continental Germanic heroic legend into a single text it also includes other narratives that were closely associated with such legends 2 Some of the legends have no extant German counterpart 3 It also contains material from fairy tales folktales and Spielmannsdichtung 4 At the centre of THidreks saga is a complete life of Dietrich von Bern Old Norse THidrekr of Bern 5 It begins by telling of THidrekr s grandfather and father and then tells of THidrekr s youth at his father s court where Hildebrand tutors him and he accomplishes his first heroic deeds 6 After his father s death THidrekr leads several military campaigns then he is exiled from his kingdom by his uncle Ermenrik fleeing to Attila s court There is an unsuccessful attempt to return to his kingdom during which Attila s sons and THidrekr s brother die This is followed by THidrekr s entanglement in the downfall of the Niflings after which THidrekr successfully returns to Verona and recovers his kingdom Much later after the death of both Hildebrand and his wife Herrad THidrekr kills a dragon who had killed King Hernit of Bergara marrying the widow and becoming king of Bergara After Attila s death THidrekr becomes king of the Huns as well The final time he fights an opponent is to avenge the death of Heime who had become a monk and then sworn loyalty to THidrekr once again After this he spends all his time hunting One day upon seeing a particularly magnificent deer he jumped out of the bathtub and mounted a gigantic black horse which is actually the devil in equine form It rides away with him and no one knows what happened to him after that but the Germans believe that he received God and Mary s grace and was saved In addition to the life of THidrekr various other heroes lives are recounted as well in various parts of the story including Attila Wayland the Smith in the section called Velents thattr smids Sigurd the Nibelungen and Walter of Aquitaine The section recounting THidrekr s avenging of Hertnit seems to have resulted from a confusion between THidrekr and the similarly named Wolfdietrich Manuscripts editThe manuscripts of the THidreks saga are Royal Library Stockholm Perg fol nr 4 Mb Norway on parchment dating c 1275 1300 and formerly in the possession of Arni Sigurdsson bishop of Bergen 7 The manuscript was written by five hands Mb1 Mb5 the two main writers Mb2 and Mb3 appear to have used two different source manuscripts with Mb3 following a version closer to the later Icelandic paper manuscripts A and B 8 The manuscript has major lacunae mostly at the beginning and end 9 Copenhagen Arnamagnaean Institute AM 178 fol A Iceland on paper 17th century 10 Based on a lost parchment manuscript 11 Copenhagen Arnamagnaean Institute AM 177 fol B Iceland on paper dated 1690 1691 10 Based on a lost parchment manuscript 11 Royal Library Stockholm Papp nr 100 fol C Iceland on paper 17th century 11 This manuscript is a copy of A and Mb and shares the same lacunae as Mb 12 Of these the manuscripts Mb A and B are the most important 13 The Swedish version Sv is preserved in two manuscripts Skokloster Castle Library E 9013 formerly Codex Skokloster 115 116 4 Sweden end of 15th or early 16th century 14 Royal Library Stockholm Papp K 45 4 Sweden on paper first half of 16th century 14 The Swedish version is useful for reconstructing the text where the other versions disagree 13 Redactions edit There are at least two redactions of the Old Norse THidreks saga with the two main scribes of the oldest manuscript Mb each following a different redaction 15 Scribe Mb3 has followed a manuscript with a redaction similar to that found in the later Icelandic manuscripts A and B whereas Mb2 has followed a manuscript source representing a different redaction of the material 8 One of main differences between the redactions is the placement of the section called Vilkina saga in Mb2 Vilkina saga is placed early in the text whereas Mb3 has placed it later in a section largely concerning other marriages of heroes as a result Vilkina saga appears twice in Mb 3 16 Mb3 has inserted two sections Sigurd s youth and a long description of the various heroes after Thidrek s feast into the sequence of chapters written by Mb2 17 It is possible that Mb2 had forgotten this material or else chosen to omit it 15 The two redactions also contain differences in the names number 3 vs 4 brothers and origins of the Burgundian kings 18 Composition and sources editSources of the compilation edit There is no doubt that the sources of the THidreks saga were mostly Middle High German or Middle Low German 19 It is thus the only extant example of a translation from Low German to Old Norse 20 Given its dating to around 1250 it is roughly contemporary with the parallel German heroic epics with only the Nibelungenlied predating it 21 Some scholars have argued that the Nibelungenlied itself was a source of the saga while others have argued that a conjectured earlier Nibelungen epic was a source and that this hypothesized epic was also the source for the second half of the Nibelungenlied 22 Because of the saga s localization of Attila s court at Soest it is taken to indicate a local tradition that placed the fall of the Burgundians at that Hanseatic city 23 The prologue of the saga states that it was composed based on the tales of German men but its language is somewhat obscure and scholars debate what precisely this means The prologue also mentions tales told across Scandinavia and Iceland as sources on Sigurd the Nibelungs and Wayland the smith 24 Some material may be original to the compiler having been put together using various motifs found in other heroic tales 25 Time and place of composition edit Most scholars believe that the saga was probably composed in Bergen Norway at the court of king Haakon IV sometime around 1250 26 Haakon had important Danish Saxon dynastic connections as his son Magnus VI was married to Ingeborg a Danish Saxon princess 27 and his chancery also included a number of clerics of German origin who could have acted as intermediaries for material from the continent 28 Additionally Bergen was an import trading center for the North German Hanseatic League who had merchants that resided there and could have brought German stories to Norway 29 The composition of a saga based on German materials fits into the larger project of importing courtly literature under Haakon which also resulted in the adaptation of the chivalric sagas from mostly French sources 30 However there is no direct evidence that Haakon commissioned the THidreks saga 4 The saga matches the milieu of Haakon s court and adaptations in its frequent use of courtly and chivalric vocabulary 31 Likewise the name of THidrekr s sister is Isolde and her son is Tristram Tristan which points to courtly influence and the influence of Arthurian literature is also found in the saga however Claudia Bornholdt cautions that such influence could have taken place in either Germany or Norway 32 The composer of the THidreks saga in Old Norse is unknown scholars debate whether he was an Icelander or a Norwegian 33 The composer appears to have been educated meaning he was probably a cleric as was the only named author of a chivalric saga Brother Robert 34 Translation or compilation edit Scholars are divided between those that believe that the composer of the saga translated a lost Low German original translation hypothesis and those who believe that the sources were mostly oral and conveyed to Norway by merchants of the Hanseatic League only being joined together in Norway compilation hypothesis 35 There is little evidence outside of the text itself that would point either way 36 Most scholars adhering to the translation hypothesis have been German while most adhering to the compilation hypothesis have been Norwegian 37 The most recent main proponent of the translation hypothesis is Theodore Andersson who regards the text as more German than Norwegian 38 Andersson argued that the saga was originally composed in Northern Germany around 1200 arguing that the compositional principals and his proposed sources for various episodes indicated familiarity with early courtly literature such as Spielmannsepik and the Kaiserchronik c 1150 as well as conjectured predecessor epics for the Nibelungenlied and Dietrich epics 39 The main proponent of the saga having been composed in Norway today is Susanne Kramarz Bein 40 She has argued that parallels in structure and content to the Karlamagnus saga and other chivalric sagas show that the saga must have been composed with its current structure at Haakon s court in Norway 41 42 One of the main arguments in favor of the saga s composition in Norway is that no large scale epic or prose work in Low German has survived that would show that such compilations existed in Northern Germany On the other hand there are many Norse examples 43 Arguments for an oral tradition as the source of the saga are mostly based on the prologue s mention of tales of German men as sources 44 As opposed to the traditional translation theory on the basis of purely oral sources Kramarz Bein has argued for a composition theory that the compiler of the saga relied on various written sources as well as oral sources 45 Genre and interpretation editLong standing controversy exists as to what genre the THidreks saga belongs to chivalric saga or legendary saga 46 On the one hand it contains legendary stories on the other it does not take place vaguely in a legendary past but after the death of Constantine the Great involves concrete European geography and includes King Arthur and Apollonius of Tyre among its characters 30 The dominant scholarly theory is that the THidreks saga was written in the same context as the chivalric sagas namely as a translation of courtly material from the continent however its manuscript transmission in Iceland is in the same contexts as the legendary sagas 47 Scandinavian scholars have generally been more comfortable discussing the THidreks saga as a chivalric saga 48 Susanne Kramarz Bein and Heinrich Beck have both argued that the saga shows pro Scandinavian leanings exemplified in the way in which it treats the heroes Vidga THetleifr Danskr Middle High German Dietleib von Stire and Heimir Heimir portrayed as Swabian is a mostly negative figure whereas the heroes Vidga and THetleifr both portrayed as Danes are given many positive traits that put them above Thidrek s other heroes 49 50 The same scholars have also argued that the localization of the Huns in the North German Duchy of Saxony could be related to these northern political potentially pro Welf leanings 51 27 Structure and organization editThe THidreks saga is divided into books which are also referred to as sagas 52 Various proposals have been made about the original arrangement of the material The scribes Mb2 and Mb3 of the oldest manuscript Mb follow different arrangements of the books and chapters 53 The manuscripts A B and the Swedish version likewise all have different arrangements of the sub sagas 54 Germanist Thomas Klein argued for a three part structure of the saga in which part one shows the youth and bringing together of the heroes part two focuses on marriage and part three shows death and old age 55 This basic structure is also supported by Susanne Kramarz Bein 56 Swedish adaptation editThe THidreks saga also exists in a late medieval Old Swedish adaptation known as the Didriks Kronika also Didrikskronikan or less frequently Didriks saga 57 a Most scholars agree that the Didriks Kronika used the oldest extant manuscript of the THidreks saga Mb as its main source 59 It is possible that German and Danish sources were used as well as various names show forms closer to their German or Low German counterparts 60 61 and the text shows some Danish linguistic forms However there is no consensus as to whether these sources were written or oral 62 The vocabulary of the text shows many connections to contemporary courtly culture in Germany 63 Most scholars agree that the adaptation was likely composed in the mid 15th century 59 possibly in the 1450s or 1460s 64 There is a disagreement whether the saga was composed in a Franciscan monastery or at Vadstena Abbey in Sweden 59 It has been suggested that the saga may have been adapted under the patronage of Swedish King Charles VII 64 Interest in adapting the THidreks saga may have been sparked by the saga s portrayal of Swedish control of a large Baltic empire called Vilcinaland 65 which included Swedish rule over its rival Denmark 66 The Didriks Kronika is not a literal translation of the THidreks saga but an adaptation for a contemporary Swedish public 67 The adapter has abbreviated the saga greatly 68 Episodes not connected to the main plot have been removed and others reduced to only what is essential for the main plot The adapter has also made additions to the text in some places and sought to remove contradictions from his Norwegian source 67 Influence editThe THidreks saga was an important influence on the chivalric sagas written after it including Erex saga Magus saga jarls Kirialax saga Blomstrvallasaga and Samsons saga fagra 69 70 The author of the Volsunga saga appears to have known the THidreks saga as well 71 This includes a description of Sigurd s armor that is adopted directly from the THidreks saga 72 Old Norse scholar Klaus von See argued that the Volsunga saga was written in response to the THidreks saga as a re Scandinavianisation of the material 73 The THidreks saga was also influential on Swedish literature even before the writing of the Didriks Kronika with Dietrich being mentioned in Herr Ivan lejonriddare 1303 one of the translated romances known as the Eufemiavisorna and the Eric Chronicle c 1320 1335 74 Additionally several late medieval ballads were based on material found in the THidreks saga 75 The Swedish Didriks Kronika inspired at least two pictorial depictions Around 1480 artist Albertus Pictor included the scene of Didrik s fight with Wideke and the latter s flight into the sea was included along with the battles of several other biblical and legendary heroes on the roof of Floda church in Sodermanland Sweden 76 77 An illumination in a law codex from Uppland from the mid 15th century also shows a scene from the saga it shows the knight Sistram identified by text half swallowed in the jaws of a dragon 78 The Swedish Didriks Kronika also influenced other texts produced on Dietrich von Bern and the Nibelungen in Scandinavia In particular Jonas Venusinus produced the Hvenske Kronike in Latin sometime after 1550 which transports the fall of Burgundians as told in the Didriks Kronika to his home island of Ven in the Oresund the Hvenske Kronike was translated into Danish in 1603 by Anders Sorensen Vedel 79 The Didriks Kronika also had considerable influence on Swedish historiography as the saga identified the country of Vilkinaland with Sweden and so its line of kings was added to the Swedish line of kings 80 In spite of the fact that the early scholar Olaus Petri was critical these kings were considered to have been historic Swedish kings until fairly recent times 80 The historicity of the kings of Vilkinaland was further boosted in 1634 when Johannes Bureus discovered the Norwegian parchment that had arrived in Sweden in the 15th century 80 clarification needed The earliest edition of the Norwegian THidreks saga together with a Latin translation was published by Swedish antiquitarian Johan Peringskiold in the early 18th century as the Vilkina saga due to Peringskiold s interest in Gothicism 14 Richard Wagner used it as a source for his operatic tetralogy Der Ring des Nibelungen citation needed Editions and translations of the Norwegian text edit nbsp Cover of Saga Đidriks konungs af Bern 1853 edited by Carl Richard Unger Editions edit Unger Henrik ed 1853 Saga Đidriks konungs af Bern Fortaelling om Kong Thidrik af Bern og hans kaemper i norsk bearbeidelse fra det trettende aarhundrede efter tydske kilder Christiania Feilberg amp Landmark Bertelsen Henrik ed 1905 1911 THidriks saga af Bern Samfund til udgivelse af gammel nordisk litteratur 34 Vol 1 Copenhagen Moller Archived from the original on 6 August 2022 Retrieved 6 August 2022 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Jonsson Gudni ed 1951 THidreks saga af Bern Reykjavik a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link normalised version of Bertelsen s edition Translations edit EnglishThe Saga of Thidrek of Bern Translated by Haymes Edward R Garland 1988 ISBN 0 8240 8489 6 OtherDie Geschichte Thidreks von Bern in German Translated by Erichsen Fine Jena Diederichs 1924 Die Thidrekssaga oder Dietrich von Bern und die Niflungen in German Translated by von der Hagen Friedrich Heinrich St Goar Der Leuchter Otto Reichl Verlag 1989 Saga de Teodorico de Verona in Spanish Translated by Gonzalez Campo Mariano Madrid La Esfera de los Libros 2010 ISBN 978 84 9321 036 6 Saga de Theodoric de Verone THidrikssaga af Bern Legendes heroiques d Outre Rhin in French Translated by Lecouteux Claude Paris Honore Champion 2001 ISBN 2 7453 0373 2 Folkvisan om konung Didrik och hans kampar in Swedish Translated by Klockhoff Oskar 1900 Editions and translations of the Swedish text editEditions edit Hylten Cavallius Gunnar Olof ed 1850 1854 Sagan om Didrik af Bern Stockholm Norstedt Old Swedish text Peringskiold Johan ed 1715 Wilkina saga eller Historien om konung Thiderich af Bern och hans kampar samt Niflunga sagan innehallandes nagra gothiska konungars och hieltars forna bedrifter i Ryszland Polen Ungern Italien Burgundien och Spanien amp c Sive Historia Wilkinensium Theoderici Veronensis ac niflungorum continens regum atq heroum quorundam gothicorum res gestas per Russiam Poloniam Hungariam Italiam Burgundiam atque Hispaniam amp c Ex mss codicibus lingvae veteris scandicae Stockholm in Swedish and Latin Sagan om Didrik av Bern Lunds universitet Humanistiska och teologiska fakulteterna Retrieved 21 August 2023 Diplomatic transcription of the manuscripts Translations edit Die Didriks Chronik oder die Svava das Leben Konig Didriks von Bern und die Niflungen in German Translated by Ritter Schaumburg Heinz St Goar Der Leuchter 1989 ISBN 3 87667 102 7 The Saga of Didrik of Bern with The Dwarf King Laurin Translated by Cumpstey Ian Skadi Press 2017 ISBN 978 0 9576 1203 7 in English Notes edit Non academic researcher Heinz Ritter Schaumburg refers to the Didriks Kronika as the Svava a name without any basis in the text 58 References edit Lienert 2008 p 266 Millet 2008 pp 270 271 a b Georgieva Eriksen amp Johansson 2012 p 24 a b Bornholdt 2005 p 86 Heinzle 1999 p 38 THs Ch 14 17 Unger 1853 pp 19 26 1988 Ch 25a 14 29 17 Bertelsen 1905 1911 1 31 38 Georgieva Eriksen amp Johansson 2012 pp 42 43 a b Kramarz Bein 2002 p 21 Millet 2008 pp 268 269 a b Georgieva Eriksen amp Johansson 2012 p 44 a b c Kramarz Bein 2002 p 19 Georgieva Eriksen amp Johansson 2012 p 45 a b Haymes 1988 p xxi a b c Georgieva Eriksen amp Johansson 2012 p 48 a b Millet 2008 p 269 Kramarz Bein 2002 pp 59 60 Kramarz Bein 2002 p 41 Kramarz Bein 2002 pp 44 47 Kramarz Bein 2012 p 262 Georgieva Eriksen amp Johansson 2012 p 9 Haymes 1988 pp xix xx Andersson 1994 p 3 Millet 2008 pp 272 273 Georgieva Eriksen amp Johansson 2012 pp 11 13 Haymes amp Samples 1996 p 70 Kramarz Bein 2010 p 931 932 a b Kramarz Bein 2012 p 263 Kramarz Bein 2012 p 258 Kramarz Bein 2002 p 1 2 a b Millet 2008 p 260 Kramarz Bein 2002 pp 12 13 Bornholdt 2005 pp 108 109 Haymes 1988 p xix Haymes amp Samples 1996 pp 70 71 Kramarz Bein 2010 p 934 935 Haymes amp Samples 1996 p 71 Georgieva Eriksen amp Johansson 2012 p 23 Kramarz Bein 2002 p 10 Andersson 1994 pp 20 22 Bornholdt 2005 p 88 Kramarz Bein 2002 pp 102 162 Kramarz Bein 2012 pp 257 259 Kramarz Bein 2002 p 343 Georgieva Eriksen amp Johansson 2012 p 25 Kramarz Bein 2012 pp 260 261 Georgieva Eriksen amp Johansson 2012 p 34 Georgieva Eriksen amp Johansson 2012 pp 34 35 Kramarz Bein 2012 pp 253 254 Millet 2008 pp 276 277 Kramarz Bein 2002 pp 35 36 Kramarz Bein 2002 p 30 Haymes amp Samples 1996 p 68 Haymes 1988 pp xxi xxiii Haymes 1988 pp xxiii xxiv Bornholdt 2005 p 92 Kramarz Bein 2002 pp 26 29 Kramarz Bein 2006 p 106 107 Hofmann 1990 p 95 a b c Georgieva Eriksen amp Johansson 2012 p 43 Bornholdt 2005 p 137 Hofmann 1990 p 104 Kramarz Bein 2006 p 106 Kramarz Bein 2006 pp 112 113 a b Georgieva Eriksen amp Johansson 2012 p 35 Kramarz Bein 2006 pp 108 109 Tuulse 1975 pp 67 68 a b Kramarz Bein 2006 p 109 Kramarz Bein 2002 pp 19 20 Kramarz Bein 2002 pp 288 317 Kalinke 2017 pp 36 128 130 131 144 152 153 Millet 2008 p 313 Larrington 2012 p 256 Larrington 2012 p 252 Jorgensen 2012 pp 296 298 Jorgensen 2012 pp 300 302 Kramarz Bein 2006 p 116 Tuulse 1975 p 68 Kramarz Bein 2006 pp 116 117 Kramarz Bein 2006 p 114 a b c The article Didrikssagan in Nordisk familjebok 1907 Works cited editAndersson Theodore M 1994 Composition and Literary Culture in THidreks saga In Uecker Heiko ed Studien zum Altgermanischen Festschrift fur Heinrich Beck Walter de Gruyter pp 1 23 Bornholdt Claudia 2005 Engaging moments the origins of medieval bridal quest narrative de Gruyter Georgieva Eriksen Stefka Johansson Karl G 2012 Francia et Germania Translations and the Europeanisation of Old Norse Narratives In Johansson Karl G Flaten Rune eds Francia et Germania Studies in Strengleikar and THidreks saga af Bern Novus Forlag pp 9 52 Haymes Edward R 1988 Introduction The Saga of Thidrek of Bern Translated by Haymes Edward R Garland pp xix xxxii ISBN 0 8240 8489 6 Haymes Edward R Samples Susan T 1996 Heroic legends of the North an introduction to the Nibelung and Dietrich cycles New York Garland ISBN 0815300336 Heinzle Joachim 1999 Einfuhrung in die mittelhochdeutsche Dietrichepik in German Berlin New York De Gruyter ISBN 3 11 015094 8 Jorgensen Jon Gunnar 2012 Didrik til hest til ost fra vest In Johansson Karl G Flaten Rune eds Francia et Germania Studies in Strengleikar and THidreks saga af Bern in Norwegian Novus Forlag pp 289 307 Hofmann Dietrich 1990 Das Verhaltnis der altschwedischen Didriks Chronik zur THidreks saga und zur historischen Wirklichkeit Skandinavistik in German 20 1 95 110 Kalinke Marianne E 2017 Stories Set Forth with Fair Words The Evolution of Medieval Romance in Iceland University of Wales Press ISBN 978 1 78683 067 8 Kramarz Bein Susanne 2002 Die THidreks saga im Kontext der altnorwegischen Literatur in German A Francke Verlag Kramarz Bein Susanne 2006 Zur altostnordischen Karls und Dietrichdichtung Amsterdamer Beitrage zur alteren Germanistik in German 62 99 121 doi 10 1163 18756719 062001006 Kramarz Bein Susanne 2010 2008 THidreks saga af Bern Germanische Altertumskunde Online in German de Gruyter Kramarz Bein Susanne 2012 THidreks saga in the Context of Old Norwegian Literature In Johansson Karl G Flaten Rune eds Francia et Germania Studies in Strengleikar and THidreks saga af Bern Novus Forlag pp 251 264 Larrington Carolyne 2012 Volsunga Saga Ragnars Saga and Romance in Old Norse Revisiting Relationships In Lassen Annette Ney Agneta Jakobsson Arman eds The Legendary Sagas Origins and Development University of Iceland Press pp 250 270 Lienert Elisabeth 2008 Dietrich Testimonien des 6 bis 16 Jahrhunderts in German Tubingen Niemeyer ISBN 978 3 484 64504 2 Millet Victor 2008 Germanische Heldendichtung im Mittelalter in German Berlin New York de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 020102 4 Tuulse Armin 1975 Didrik av Bern och Norden Konsthistorisk Tidskrift in Swedish 44 3 4 67 69 doi 10 1080 00233607508603860 Further reading editKrappe Alexander Haggerty 1923 A Folktale motif in the THidreks saga Scandinavian Studies and Notes 7 9 pp 265 69 JSTOR 40915133 Sandbach F E 1906 The Heroic Saga Cycle of Dietrich of Bern London David Nutt Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title THidreks saga amp oldid 1208780150, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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