Heiðarvíga saga (Icelanders' sagas. It is badly preserved; 12 leaves of the only surviving manuscript were destroyed along with their only copy in the fire of Copenhagen in 1728. The content of the destroyed portion is only known through a summary written from memory by Icelandic scholar Jón Grunnvíkingur (1705–1779). This is the only form in which the saga's contents survive today. The saga has been taken by some scholars as possibly among the oldest Icelanders' sagas.
) or The Story of the Heath-Slayings is one of theThe saga tells of the descendants of Egil Skallagrímsson and the long-standing disputes and conflicts which culminated in the battle and subsequent slayings on the heath, the eponymous Heath-Slayings (Heiðarvíg).[1]
References
edit- ^ "Heiðarvíga Saga". snerpa.is. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
Related reading
edit- Joanne Shortt Butler (2020) "Considering Otherness on the Page: How Do Lacunae Affect the Way We Interact with Saga Narrative?" in Merkelbach, Rebecca; Knight, Gwendolyne (eds.), Margins, Monsters, Deviants, Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols Publishers, pp. 129–156
- Jesse Byock (1993) Feud in the Icelandic Saga (University of California Press) ISBN 978-0520082595
- Viðar Hreinsson (1997) The complete sagas of Icelanders, including 49 tales (Leifur Eiríksson Pub) ISBN 978-9979929307
- Alexander Wilson (2022) "Dissonant Voices in the Prosimetrum of Heiðarvíga saga." In: Anna Katharina Heiniger, Rebecca Merkelbach, and Alexander Wilson (eds.). Þáttasyrpa — Studien zu Literatur, Kultur und Sprache in Nordeuropa. Tübingen: Narr Francke Attempto, 179–87.
External links
edit- [1] Full text and English translation (The Saga of the Heath Slayings) at the Icelandic Saga Database
- Heiðarvíga Saga The saga with standardized Modern Icelandic spelling
- Two Borgfirðinga sögur: the oldest or the youngest Íslendingasögur? Alison Finlay, University of London
- Proverbs and proverbial materials in Heiðarvíga saga[permanent dead link]