The history of the Far North is tinged by dark fantasies. A remote location, harsh climate, a boundless and often mountainous wasteland, complex ethnic composition, and strange ways of life: all contributed to how the edge of Europe was misunderstood by outsiders. Since ancient times, the North has been considered as a place that exuded evil: it was the end of the world, the abode of monsters and supernatural beings, of magicians and sorcerers. It was Europe's last bastion of recalcitrant paganism. Many weird tales of the North even came from within the region itself, and when newly literate Scandinavians began to re-work their oral traditions into written form after 1100 AD, these myths of their past underlay newer legends and stories serving to support the development to Christian national monarchies. The essays in this volume engage closely with these stories, questioning how and why such traditions developed, and exploring their meaning. Through this approach, the volume also examines how historiographical traditions were shaped by authors pursuing agendas of nation-building and Christianization, at the same time that myths surrounding and originating among the multi-ethnic populations of the Far North continued to dominate the perception of the region and its people, and to define their place in Norwegian medieval history.
Author(s): Stefan Figenschow, Richard Holt, Miriam Tveit
Series: ACTA Scandinavica, 10
Publisher: Brepols
Year: 2021
Language: English
Pages: 280
City: Turnhout
Front Matter
Stefan Figenschow, Richard Holt,
Miriam Tveit. Introduction: Myths and Magic in the Medieval Far North
Miriam Tveit. Bearded Women and Sea Monsters: European Representations of the Far North in the Early and High Middle Ages
Lars Ivar Hansen. On the View of ‘the Other’ — Abroad and At Home: The Geography and Peoples of the Far North, According to Historia Norwegie
Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough. The Ice Giant Cometh: The Far North in the Old Norse-Icelandic Sagas
Petter Snekkestad. Fishermen in Trouble — Grímnismál and Elf Islands in Northern Norway
Marte Spangen. Sámi Myths and Medieval Heritage
Rune Blix Hagen. ‘I Hurl the Spirits of Gandul’. Pleasure, Jealousy, and Magic: The Witchcraft Trial of Ragnhild Tregagaas in 1325
Karoline Kjesrud. The Meaning of Ale: Understanding Political Conflicts in the North in Light of Cultural Practice
Yassin Nyang Karoliussen. The Origins of Political Organization in the High North: A Study of the Historical and Material Remains of Finnmǫrk, Hálogaland, and the Mythical Ǫmð
Ben Allport. Norwegian or Northern: The Construction and Mythography of Háleygr Identity, c. 800–1050
Richard Holt. The Formation of a Norwegian Kingdom: A Northern Counter-Narrative?
Stefan Figenschow. Approaches to Mythologized ‘Others’ in Norwegian Expansion to the North
Back Matter