From Myth to Fiction: The Saga of Hadingus

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In this work the distinguished religious historian Georges Dumézil considers how the early mythology of a people can be creatively transposed into the epic of their origin or the "history" of their kings, or the source of their fiction. The Saga of Hadingus, written by a twelfth-century Danish "historian," Saxo-Grammaticus, provides an extraordinarily interesting instance of this kind of transposition. By comparing this work to a myth as it was handed down to Saxo, Professor Dumézil demonstrates how the saga can be seen as a literary structure derived from the religious structure of the myth.

As Professor Dumézil and others have shown, some Indo-European peoples, after their conversion to Christianity, have reordered an earlier mythology to constitute the epic of their origins. For instance, Celtic mythology became history in one case and a source of fiction in another; and from the two texts, Welsh and Irish, by comparison one can reconstruct the original myth.

The Scandinavian nations provide a unique case, for here the pre-Christian texts are still read and have preserved much of the area's mythology in its original form. In addition, we have the work of Saxo and other known writers who composed and signed human transpositions of this mythology purporting to be history. This permits Professor Dumézil to make observations of a rare kind, for knowing something of the author's personality facilitates an understanding of the process of transposition itself.

Professor Dumézil shows how Saxo began by wanting only to tell the story of Denmark and its rulers as nobly as he could—and then later on to extend that narrative back in time. This led him to the only extant Scandinavian literature—that centered on Iceland—that he reordered and reinterpreted to the greater glory of Denmark.

In order to provide a content for the reign of the third king of the Danish Skoldunger dynasty, Hadingus, Saxo simply reworked a Scandinavian account of the career of the god Njördr. In this light Professor Dumézil reads The Saga of Hadingus as a fascinating substitution of a psychological and completely personal narrative for a story of purely social value.

This book contains six appendixes including two that consider the relationship between myth and folklore. They complement Professor Dumézil's careful exegeses and imaginative scholarship to make this the most important, specialized work on Scandinavian mythology available in English.





Author(s): Georges Dumézil; Derek Coltman
Edition: Hardcover
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Year: 1973

Language: English
Pages: 261

Preface vii
The Saga of Hadingus 1
Introduction 3
1. Hadingus Is Not Hasting the Viking 9
2. Hadingus and the God Njörðr (1843-1941) 19
3. The Two Lives of Hadingus: 2) Hadingus with the One-Eyed Old Man: the Odinic Hero, the Winds and the Sea 39
4. The Two Lives of Hadingus (continued): 1) Hadingus with Harthgrepa (a) Legitimate Incest among the Vanes 50
5. The Two Lives of Hadingus (concluded): 1) Hadingus and Harthgrepa (b) The "Bad Magic" of the Vanes 62
6. The First Mythological Digression: Giants, Ase Gods, and Vane Gods 77
7. The Second Mythological Digression: The War between the Ases and the Vanes 93
8. The Haddinjar 106
9. Conclusion 122
Appendixes 127
1. Hanging and Drowning 127
2. Gram 155
3. Balderus and Hotherus 171
4. Horwendillus 193
5. The "Gestatio" of Frotho III and the Folklore of the Frodebjerg 203
6. Njörðr, Nerthus, and the Scandinavian Folklore of Sea Spirits 213
7. Saxonis, "Gesta Danorum", I, v-viii 231
Index 251