This article tackles the question of a possible Irish origin for the Old Norse literary figure Guðmundr á Glasisvǫllum. The images of Guðmundr, his realm Glasisvellir, and the sometimes associated territory of Ódáinsakr fluctuate in various ways in the different saga narratives in which they occur. The variability of the Guðmundr á Glasisvǫllum narrative has caused scholars to debate its possible origin for over a century. The more widely supported notion is that a mythological compound around Guðmundr must have originated in Irish mythology and folklore rather than being an indigenous, Nordic construct. The present article aims to follow up on this discussion, comparing the original Old Norse source material and that found in Gesta Danorum...
This thesis compares the representations of the Swedes and the Norwegians in Adam of Bremen’s Histor...
In the course of the nineteenth century, traditional Christian conceptions of Europe's pre-Christian...
George Mackay Brown (1921–1996), an Orcadian poet, author and dramatist, was undoubtedly one of the ...
This thesis aims to continue the scholarly debate on the potential Irish influence on the Guðmundr á...
The medieval Icelandic sagas known as fornaldarsögur usually take place in Norway and Denmark. Some ...
Medieval Icelandic literature recounts stories of both pagans and Christians settling in Iceland. Mo...
Gísla saga súrssonar (thirteenth century) is famous for the tragic destiny of its main character, th...
While medieval Irish literature does not preserve any pre-Christian sources on eschatology, other In...
This thesis addresses the incorporation of mythological patterns, characters, and motifs in selected...
ABSTRACT: The article presents a case study within the recent renaissance of folkloristic approaches...
In the Middle Ages mariners from both Ireland and Scandinavia sailed the North Atlantic, but in diff...
ABSTRACT: The article carries out a comparative exercise focusing on the Norse myth about Þórr slaug...
The Old Norse origin myth known as Frá Fornjóti ok hans ættmönnum, which claims that Norway was foun...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityThe latter half of the nineteenth century saw the beginnings in Ire...
The text that is called Cáth Áenaig Macha tells us a story of the battle between mythological Ulaid’...
This thesis compares the representations of the Swedes and the Norwegians in Adam of Bremen’s Histor...
In the course of the nineteenth century, traditional Christian conceptions of Europe's pre-Christian...
George Mackay Brown (1921–1996), an Orcadian poet, author and dramatist, was undoubtedly one of the ...
This thesis aims to continue the scholarly debate on the potential Irish influence on the Guðmundr á...
The medieval Icelandic sagas known as fornaldarsögur usually take place in Norway and Denmark. Some ...
Medieval Icelandic literature recounts stories of both pagans and Christians settling in Iceland. Mo...
Gísla saga súrssonar (thirteenth century) is famous for the tragic destiny of its main character, th...
While medieval Irish literature does not preserve any pre-Christian sources on eschatology, other In...
This thesis addresses the incorporation of mythological patterns, characters, and motifs in selected...
ABSTRACT: The article presents a case study within the recent renaissance of folkloristic approaches...
In the Middle Ages mariners from both Ireland and Scandinavia sailed the North Atlantic, but in diff...
ABSTRACT: The article carries out a comparative exercise focusing on the Norse myth about Þórr slaug...
The Old Norse origin myth known as Frá Fornjóti ok hans ættmönnum, which claims that Norway was foun...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityThe latter half of the nineteenth century saw the beginnings in Ire...
The text that is called Cáth Áenaig Macha tells us a story of the battle between mythological Ulaid’...
This thesis compares the representations of the Swedes and the Norwegians in Adam of Bremen’s Histor...
In the course of the nineteenth century, traditional Christian conceptions of Europe's pre-Christian...
George Mackay Brown (1921–1996), an Orcadian poet, author and dramatist, was undoubtedly one of the ...