Glymdrápa

Glymdrápa

"Glymdrápa" ("Drápa" of din [Anthony Faulkes gives the following meanings for "glymr" : "resounding noise", "roaring", "din". The word is frequently used in "kennings" for battle (see [http://www.hi.is/~eybjorn/ugm/kennings/g2voca.html Jörmungrund] ).] ") is a skaldic poem composed by Þorbjörn hornklofi toward the end of the 9th century. It recounts several battles waged by Haraldr hárfagri ("Fairhair"), mostly as he was subduing Norway.

Composed in "dróttkvætt", only seven stanzas and two half-stanzas of it are preserved, chiefly in the "Heimskringla" ("Haralds saga hárfagra"). "Glymdrápa" is the oldest praise poem to a king ("konungsdrápa") which has come down to us. [Boyer 1990:195.]

The poem has few clear geographical or historical points of reference, and the two sagas which quote it, "Heimskringla" and "Fagrskinna" interpret it differently. In "Heimskringla", the poem is said to recount Haraldr's fight against the people of Orkdal at Oppdal forest ("Uppdalsskógr"), the two battles of Solskjel, the first against king of Møre Húnþjófr, his son Sölvi and his father-in-law Nökkvi, king of Romsdal, the second against Sölvi and his allies Arnviðr, king of Sunnmøre, and Auðbjörn, who ruled over the Fjords, [I.e. the districts of Nordfjord and Sunnfjord.] his battles against the Gotlanders and finally his expedition westwards to fight vikings, which led him to the Isle of Man. According to "Fagrskinna's" account, part of the poem relates events of the battle of Hafrsfjord, the decisive battle in Haraldr's unification of Norway.

Notes

References

* Boyer, Régis. 1990. "La Poésie scaldique". Paris: Éd. du Porte-glaive. ISBN 2-906468-13-4.
* Faulkes, Anthony (ed.). 1998. "Snorri Sturluson: Edda. Skáldskaparmál". Vol. 2, "Glossary and Index of Names". London: Viking Society for Northern Research. ISBN 0-903521-38-5.

External links

* [http://www.hi.is/~eybjorn/ugm/skindex/gldr.html Two editions of "Glymdrápa".]


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