Huldar saga
Huldar saga is the name of a lost Icelandic saga said to have been told by Sturla Þórðarson in 1263. Though the saga is no longer extant, the account of its telling has attracted extensive commentary as a rare account of medieval Icelandic saga-performance.
Huldar saga is also one of the names of at least one post-medieval Icelandic saga in the same genre.
Sturla Þórðarson's Huldar saga[]
This medieval Huldar saga is mentioned in Sturlu þáttr, a short tale about Sturla Þórðarson that survives only in the version of Sturlunga saga attested in the manuscript , indicating that it does not belong to the written archetype of the saga. It depicts Sturla winning the favour of King Magnus VI of Norway through his storytelling; in this, it is similar to many of the Íslendingaþættir. It is assumed that the saga was akin to the fornaldarsögur, but there is debate as to whether Sturla knew it only orally or whether it was ever written (before his time or after). It has been suggested that the eponymous Huld is identical to a character in Ynglinga saga, but this is not certain.[1]: 77–78 The passage is noted as a rare account of medieval Icelandic saga-performance, composed only about thirty-five years after the event is claimed to have taken place. It also seems to witness the existence of a lost *Huldar saga.[2]: 98–102
The context for the passage is that King Hákon IV of Norway is on campaign in Scotland. Learning that Hákon's son Magnús is now ruling in Norway, an impoverished Sturla decides he needs to ingratiate himself with the new king. He sails to Bergen, but is not received warmly by Magnús, who merely promises not to kill him. Magnús then has Sturla accompany him and the court on a voyage southwards.
En er menn lögðust til svefns, þá spurði stafnbúi konungs, hverr skemmta skyldi. Flestir létu hljótt yfir því. |
But when people lay down to sleep, the King's helmsman asked who would provide entertainment. Most were silent on that. |
The eighteenth-century Sagan af Huld hinni miklu[]
The name Huldar saga is also borne by a saga first witnessed in eighteenth-century manuscripts and known as Sagan af Huld hinni miklu. Modern scholars do not believe it is related to Sturla's tale;[2]: 102 fn 26 Matthew Driscoll has indeed characterised it as 'an 18th-century reconstruction' of Sturla's tale.[4] At least twenty-one manuscripts of the saga are known.[5] The saga was edited as Sagan af Huld hinni miklu og fjölkunnugu trölldrottningu ('the saga of Huld the Great and the magical troll-queen') and published in Akureyri in 1911.
References[]
- ^ Úlfar Bragason, '[https://timarit.is/issue/381167?iabr=on Um hvað fjallaði Huldar saga?', Tímarit Máls og menningar, 51.4 (1990), 76-81.
- ^ a b Stephen A. Mitchell, Heroic Sagas and Ballads (Ithaca, NY: Cornell UP, 1991).
- ^ https://skaldic.abdn.ac.uk/m.php?p=verse&i=27114. Cf. Úlfar Bragason, '[https://timarit.is/issue/381167?iabr=on Um hvað fjallaði Huldar saga?', Tímarit Máls og menningar (1990), issue 4, 76-81 (pp. 76-77).
- ^ M. J. Driscoll, 'The Long and Winding Road: Manuscript Culture in Late Pre-Modern Iceland', White Field, Black Seeds: Nordic Literacy Practices in the Long Nineteenth Century, ed. by Anna Kuismin and M. J. Driscollin, Studia Fennica Litteraria, 7 (Helsinki: Finnish Literature Society, 2013), 50-63 (p. 57). ISBN 978-952-222-444-6; DOI|10.21435/sflit.7.
- ^ "Huldar saga hinnar miklu". Handrit.is.
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Further reading[]
- Konrad Maurer, Die Huldar Saga, Abhandlungen der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Philosophisch-Philologische und Historische Klasse, 20 (Munich: Franz, 1894)
- Legendary sagas