Analysis of depicting saga fiction in the novel earthly powers by anthony burgess



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Earthly Powers

Legendary and historical fiction

Kings’ sagas


After Sæmundr Sigfússon, Icelandic and Norwegian authors continued to explore the history of Scandinavia in terms of rulers and royal families, some of them writing in Latin and others in the vernacular. Broadly speaking, the kings’ sagas fall into two distinct groups: contemporary (or near contemporary) biographies and histories of remoter periods. To the first group belonged a now-lost work, written circa 1170 by an Icelander called Eiríkr Oddsson, dealing with several 12th-century kings of Norway. Sverris saga describes the life of King Sverrir (reigned 1184–1202). The first part was written by Abbot Karl Jónsson under the supervision of the king himself, but it was completed (probably by the abbot) in Iceland after Sverrir’s death. Sturla Þórðarson wrote two royal biographies: Hákonar saga on King Haakon Haakonsson (c. 1204–63) and Magnús saga on his son and successor, Magnus VI Law-Mender (Lagabǫter; reigned 1263–80); of the latter only fragments survive. In writing these sagas, Sturla used written documents as source material and, like Abbot Karl before him, also relied on the accounts of eyewitnesses. Works on the history of the earlier kings of Norway include two Latin chronicles of Norwegian provenance, one of which was compiled circa 1180, and two vernacular histories, also written in Norway, the so-called Ágrip (c. 1190) and Fagrskinna (c. 1230). The Icelandic Morkinskinna (c. 1220) deals with the kings of Norway from 1047 to 1177; an outstanding feature of it is that it tells some brilliant stories of Icelandic poets and adventurers who visited the royal courts of Scandinavia.
The kings’ sagas reached their zenith in the Heimskringla, or Noregs konunga sǫgur (“History of the Kings of Norway”), of Snorri Sturluson, which describes the history of the royal house of Norway from legendary times down to 1177. Snorri, a leading 13th-century Icelandic poet, used as sources all the court poetry from the 9th century onward that was available to him. He also used many earlier histories of the kings of Norway and other written sources. Heimskringla is a supreme literary achievement that ranks Snorri Sturluson with the great writers of medieval Europe. He interpreted history in terms of personalities rather than politics, and many of his character portrayals are superbly drawn. Two of the early kings of Norway, Ólaf Tryggvason (reigned 995–1000) and Ólaf Haraldsson (Ólaf the Saint; reigned 1015–30), received special attention from Icelandic antiquarians and authors. Only fragments of a 12th-century Ólafs saga helga (“St. Ólaf’s Saga”) survive; a 13th-century biography of the same king by Styrmir Kárason is also largely lost. (Snorri Sturluson wrote a brilliant saga of St. Ólaf, rejecting some of the grosser hagiographical elements in his sources; this work forms the central part of his Heimskringla.) About 1190 a Benedictine monk, Oddr Snorrason, wrote a Latin life of Ólaf Tryggvason, of which an Icelandic version still survives. A brother in the same monastery, Gunnlaugur Leifsson, expanded this biography, and his work was incorporated into later versions of Ólafs saga Tryggvasonar. Closely related to the lives of the kings of Norway are Færeyinga saga, describing the resistance of Faeroese leaders to Norwegian interference during the first part of the 11th century, and Orkneyinga saga, dealing with the rulers of the earldom of Orkney from about 900 to the end of the 12th century. These two works were probably written about 1200. The history of the kings of Denmark from circa 940 to 1187 is told in Knýtlinga saga.

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