Víga-Glúms saga
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''Víga-Glúms saga'' () is one of the
Sagas of Icelanders The sagas of Icelanders ( is, Íslendingasögur, ), also known as family sagas, are one genre of Icelandic sagas. They are prose narratives mostly based on historical events that mostly took place in Iceland in the ninth, tenth, and early el ...
. It takes place mostly in and around
Eyjafjörður Eyjafjörður (, ''Island Fjord'') is one of the longest fjords in Iceland. It is located in the central north of the country. Situated by the fjord is the country's fourth most populous municipality, Akureyri. Physical geography The fjord is ...
in North Iceland, and recounts the life and fall of Glúmr Eyjólfsson, a powerful man whose nickname, ''Víga'', refers to his propensity for killing people. It is believed to have been written in the first half of the 13th century and one passage may allude to a political scandal of that time.


Plot

Glúm's grandfather, Ingjald, was a son of (the Lean), the settler of Eyjafjörður, and farmer at Þverá (later the site of Munkaþverá monastery). Glúmr is the youngest son of his son Eyjólfr, and initially unpromising. After Eyjólfr's death, his second son also dies and soon after that his infant grandson, and the son's wife inherits half the farm; her father, (the Tall), and his son Sigmundr take the half where the house is and start to encroach on the half where Glúmr and his widowed mother Astrid live. Glúmr goes to Norway to visit his maternal grandfather, the chieftain Vigfúss, who warms to him after he defeats a marauding berserker, and presents him with three family heirlooms, a black cloak, a gold-inlaid spear and a sword, saying that he will prosper as long as he keeps them. Meanwhile, Sigmundr has been pressuring Astrid to leave her land, the boundary fence has been moved, and Þorkell and Sigmund have accused two reliable farmhands of Astrid's of slaughtering two of their cattle, and in settlement of a court case about this, deprived her of her right to farm a famously ever-fertile field, Vitazgjafi, which the two halves of the family had been working in alternate years. (The two carcasses are later found trapped under a snowdrift.) When Glúmr returns, he speaks the first of several skaldic verses about the injustice, beats cattle belonging to Þorkell and Sigmund that are loose on his and his mother's land, and laughs uncontrollably, which we are told he was in the habit of doing when the killing mood came on him. He then goes out to Vitazgjafi when Sigmund is mowing hay there, has Sigmund's wife sew him a replacement fastening for his cloak, then kills Sigmund with the spear. That winter, Glúmr sees in a dream Vigfúss' personal spirit,The word
hamingja The hamingja was a type of female guardian spirit in Norse mythology. It was believed that she accompanied a person and decided their luck and happiness. Consequently, the name was also used to indicate happiness, and that is what it means in mode ...
is here used for what is usually called a
fylgja In Norse mythology, a fylgja (Old Norse: , plural ) is a supernatural being or spirit which accompanies a person in connection to their fate or fortune. Description The word means "to accompany" similar to that of the Fetch in Irish folklore. ...
- ''Viga-Glums Saga: With the Tales of Ögmund Bash and Thorvald Chatterbox'', tr. John McKinnell, The New Saga Library / UNESCO Collection of Representative Works, Icelandic Series, Edinburgh: Canongate/UNESCO, 1987, , p. 69, note 1.
a giant woman, walking towards Þverá; she is so large that her shoulders brush the mountains on each side of the valley. Þórarinn of Espihóll, another powerful chieftain in the area, is both Sigmund's father-in-law and another descendant of Helgi the Lean; he reluctantly brings a case against Glúmr at the next
Althing The Alþingi (''general meeting'' in Icelandic, , anglicised as ' or ') is the supreme national parliament of Iceland. It is one of the oldest surviving parliaments in the world. The Althing was founded in 930 at (" thing fields" or "assemb ...
, but Glúmr's arguments and supporters prevail and Þorkell is forced to sell his half of the farm to Glúmr for less than half its value and to leave after six months. Before he goes he offers an ox to
Freyr Freyr (Old Norse: 'Lord'), sometimes anglicized as Frey, is a widely attested god in Norse mythology, associated with kingship, fertility, peace, and weather. Freyr, sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, was especially associated with Sweden an ...
at his temple nearby, which the god accepts. For forty years Glúmr is a powerful man in the district. He marries Halldora and has two sons and a daughter. He arranges the marriages between his cousin Arnórr and Þórgrímr Þórrisson and daughters of the chieftain
Gizurr the White Gissur Teitsson ( Modern Icelandic: ) or Gissur the White was a chieftain or ''goði'' in Iceland at the turn of the 10th and 11th centuries. He played a preeminent role in the Christianisation of Iceland Iceland was Christianized in the ...
. (They were rivals for the same woman; their sons grow up as friends but later become enemies and one kills the other. An itinerant wise woman predicts their enmity.) He punishes his foreman, Ingólfr, for neglect of his duties by framing him for a murder, then clears his name by confessing to it himself, and arranges Ingólfr's marriage to the woman he wanted. However, after Víga-Skúta marries his daughter and then deserts her, Glúmr and he are each able to evade the other by trickery but Glúmr does not achieve revenge; and Glúmr's son Vigfúss' quarrel with Bárðr, which ends with Bárðr being killed by two Norwegian associates of Vigfúss', leads to an irreparable breach between Glúmr and the people of Espihóll. Vigfúss is sentenced to the lesser outlawry, but refuses to leave Iceland within the time specified, and his father shelters him; because the location is sacred to him, this is also an offence against Freyr. In a battle between Glúmr and his allies (including the fugitive Vigfúss, whom his father hails by another name to conceal his presence) and the men of Espihóll and their allies touched off by Þórgrímr's son killing Arnórr's son, Glúmr himself kills Þórarinn's brother Þorvaldr krókr (Hook); however, he persuades Guðbrandr, the twelve-year-old son of Þorvarðr Ǫrnólfsson, who has stirred up matters between the two families, to claim the death. This is the killing that the other side then decide to prosecute; Glúmr succeeds in evading conviction at the regional assembly and at the Althing the case is settled providing he swears an oath in three temples in Eyjafjörður that he did not do it. Glúmr swears an ambiguous oath on the temple ring, first in the local temple of Freyr.The
Old Norse Old Norse, Old Nordic, or Old Scandinavian, is a stage of development of North Germanic dialects before their final divergence into separate Nordic languages. Old Norse was spoken by inhabitants of Scandinavia and their overseas settlemen ...
"at ek vark at þar, ok vák at þar, ok rauðk at þar odd ok egg" means "that I was at that place, and I struck at that place, and at that place I reddened point and edge" but sounds identical to a poetic usage, "at ek varkat þar, ok vákat þar, ok rauðkat þar odd ok egg", which means "that I was not there, and did not strike there, and there I did not redden point and edge" - McKinnell, pp. 119–20 and note 3.
Glúmr has now given away the cloak and spear given to him by his grandfather Vigfúss, and in a dream he sees his dead kin seeking to intercede for him with Freyr, who however remembers Þorkell's ox and is implacable. He is again prosecuted for the killing of Þorvaldr, and under the settlement reached, is required to give half the Þverá farm to Þorvaldr's son in compensation and to sell the other half and leave once the winter is over. He fails in his attempts to trick the new owner's men, and is finally forced to leave after the new owner's mother informs him that she has carried fire around the land, which constitutes formally claiming it. He farms at Möðruvellir in
Hörgárdalur Hörgárdalur () is a valley in north Iceland, the valley of the river Hörgá. It is long and extends southwest from Eyjafjörður, which it meets inland. It is now part of the municipality of Hörgársveit. The valley is wide and fertile at ...
, then in Myrkárdalur, where a landslide destroys part of the farm buildings, and finally at Þverbrekka in Öxnadalur. He is humiliated and thwarted in his attempts to act in a dispute which starts over where a whale carcass should be taken for butchering, and becomes blind in his old age. Three years before his death, he is baptised a Christian. His son Már builds a church at Fornhagi in Hörgárdalur, where he and Glúmr are both buried.


Manuscripts and dating

''Víga-Glúms saga'' is preserved complete only in the mid-14th-century
Möðruvallabók __NOTOC__ Möðruvallabók () or AM 132 fol is an Icelandic manuscript from the mid-14th century, inscribed on vellum. It contains the following Icelandic sagas in this order: *''Njáls saga'' *''Egils saga'' *''Finnboga saga ramma'' *''Bandamanna ...
and in paper copies deriving from it, most of which are from the 17th and 18th centuries. Two other manuscripts each contain a fragment of the saga: AM 564a (late 14th century) and AM 445c (early 15th century), both parts of the Pseudo-Vatnshyrna. The fragments appear to represent an older, more detailed version of the saga. In the view of
Gabriel Turville-Petre Edward Oswald Gabriel Turville-Petre (25 March 1908 – 17 February 1978) was an English philologist who specialized in Old Norse studies. Born at Bosworth Hall, Leicestershire to a prominent Roman Catholic family, Turville-Petre was edu ...
, the saga was probably originally written at about the same time as ''
Egils saga ''Egill's Saga'' or ''Egil's saga'' ( non, Egils saga ; ) is an Icelandic saga (family saga) on the lives of the clan of Egill Skallagrímsson (Anglicised as Egill Skallagrimsson), an Icelandic farmer, viking and skald. The saga spans the year ...
'', between 1230 and 1240, and the abbreviated version which has survived intact was probably not the work of the Möðruvallabók copyist himself and can be dated to the first half of the 14th century. However, if as has been suggested the Ingólfr episode is an allusion to a 13th-century event, since it draws on other parts of the saga the most likely date would be soon after 1232. Two sections of the saga appear to be interpolations. The episode featuring Víga-Skúta is also found in a different version in his own saga, ''
Reykdæla saga ok Víga-Skútu Reykdæla saga ok Víga-Skútu or Reykdæla saga og Víga-Skútu () is one of the sagas of Icelanders The sagas of Icelanders ( is, Íslendingasögur, ), also known as family sagas, are one genre of Icelandic sagas. They are prose narratives ...
''; in both sagas it differs stylistically from the rest of the text, so it is likely a
þáttr The ''þættir'' (Old Norse singular ''þáttr'', literally meaning a "strand" of rope or yarn)O'Donoghue (2004:226). are short stories written mostly in Iceland during the 13th and 14th centuries. The majority of ''þættir'' occur in two compend ...
that has been incorporated into them. It is also the only place in this saga where Glúmr is called 'Víga-Glúmr'.McKinnell, p. 10. The Ingólfr episode which precedes it, with Ingólfr being compelled to test friendship by claiming to have committed murder when in fact he has only killed an animal for whom the person is named (Kálfr: a calf), is reminiscent of a parable found in the early-12th-century '' Disciplina Clericalis'' by
Petrus Alphonsi Petrus Alphonsi (died after 1116) was a Jewish Spanish physician, writer, astronomer and polemicist who converted to Christianity in 1106. He is also known just as Alphonsi, and as Peter Alfonsi or Peter Alphonso, and was born Moses Sephardi. ...
; it has also been suggested that it modified this story to allude to an early-13th-century event, the killing of a man called Hafr (which means goat) and the suspicion that it was committed by
Sighvatr Sturluson Sighvatr Sturluson (Old Norse: ; given name also ''Sigvatr'' ; Modern Icelandic: ''Sighvatur Sturluson'' ; c. 1170 – 1238) was a skaldic poet, '' goði'' and member of the Icelandic Sturlungar clan. His parents were Sturla Þórðarson of ...
. One of the fragments of the longer version of the saga also contains the story of Ǫgmundr dytt (Bash), which is also told in a different form in the '' Great Saga of Ólafr Tryggvason''; presumably this was also originally an independent þáttr.Peter A. Jorgensen
"''Viga-Glums Saga, with the Tales of Ögmund Bash and Thorvald Chatterbox''. Translated by John McKinnell"
Reviews, ''
The Journal of English and Germanic Philology The ''Journal of English and Germanic Philology'' is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal of medieval studies that was established in 1897 and is now published by University of Illinois Press. Its focus is on the cultures of English, German ...
'' 88.2 (April 1989) 272–74.


Themes and reception

''Víga-Glúms saga'' has been relatively unpopular amongst the Sagas of Icelanders, partly because of Glúmr's unlikeability, partly because it and the other Eyjafjörður sagas are poorly preserved. Scholars have drawn on the saga for information on hereditary luck;
Jacqueline Simpson Jacqueline Simpson (born 1930) is a prolific, award-winning British researcher and author on folklore."''Viga-Glums Saga, with the Tales of Ögmund Bash and Thorvald Chatterbox''. Translated by John McKinnell"
Reviews, ''
Folklore Folklore is shared by a particular group of people; it encompasses the traditions common to that culture, subculture or group. This includes oral traditions such as tales, legends, proverbs and jokes. They include material culture, ranging ...
'' 100.2 (1989) 256.
G. N. Garmonsway
"''Víga-Glúms Saga''. Edited by G. Turville-Petre"
Reviews, ''
The Modern Language Review ''Modern Language Review'' is the journal of the Modern Humanities Research Association ( MHRA). It is one of the oldest journals in the field of modern languages. Founded in 1905, it has published more than 3,000 articles and 20,000 book reviews. ...
'' 36.3 (July 1941) 426.
in ''Fortælling og ære'' (1993), Preben Meulengracht Sørensen used it as a major example in his examination of honour in the sagas. In his 1940 edition, Turville-Petre pointed to an implied conflict between the cults of Freyr, with whom Glúmr's family had traditionally been associated in Iceland, and of
Óðinn Odin (; from non, Óðinn, ) is a widely revered god in Germanic paganism. Norse mythology, the source of most surviving information about him, associates him with wisdom, healing, death, royalty, the gallows, knowledge, war, battle, victory, ...
, with whom the spear and cloak given to him by his grandfather Vigfúss can be associated. He suggests that Glúmr can best be seen as an adherent of the philosophy of the Eddic poem "
Hávamál ''Hávamál'' ( ; Old Norse: ,Unnormalised spelling in the :Title: Final stanza: ../ref> classical pron. , Modern Icelandic pron. , ‘Words of he High One) is presented as a single poem in the Icelandic , a collection of Old Norse poems fr ...
", which he characterises as "
ore Ore is natural rock or sediment that contains one or more valuable minerals, typically containing metals, that can be mined, treated and sold at a profit.Encyclopædia Britannica. "Ore". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Retrieved 7 Apr ...
a mystical atheism than a faith"; for the saga author, Óðinn was not a personal force, while fate and luck were. In his 1964 book on
Scandinavian paganism Old Norse religion, also known as Norse paganism, is the most common name for a branch of Germanic religion which developed during the Proto-Norse period, when the North Germanic peoples separated into a distinct branch of the Germanic peop ...
he related the "Hávamál" philosophy to the conversion-era phenomenon of "godless men", who trusted more in luck and their own strength than in the gods. In ''Nordic Religions in the Viking Age'' (1999), Thomas DuBois also saw Glúmr as essentially a "godless man", but argued that the sagas are "not simply a Christian colouring of pagan history" but thoroughly Christian narratives which cannot be used to reconstruct Scandinavian paganism; ''Víga-Glúms saga'' is one of his three case studies.Richard L. Harris
"Víga-Glúms saga and the Ofsi of Godless Men"
Seventh annual Fiske Conference on Medieval Icelandic Studies, Norsestock 7, Ithaca, New York, May 31 – June 3, 2012.


Notes


References


Editions

* Þorgeir Guðmundsson and Þorsteinn Helgason, ed. ''Ljósvetnínga saga, Svarfdæla saga, Valla-Ljóts saga, Vemundar saga ok Vigaskútu, Vígaglúms saga''. Íslendinga Sögur 2. Copenhagen: Hið konunglega norræna fornfræðafélag, 1830. . * Guðmundur Þorláksson, ed. ''Glúma og Ljósvetninga saga''. Íslenzkar Fornsögur 1. Copenhagen: Icelandic Literary Society, Hið íslenzka bókmenntafélag, 1880. . * Valdimar Ásmundarson, ed. ''Víga-Glúms saga''. Íslendinga sögur 19. Reykjavík: Sigurður Kristjánsson, 1897. . * Guðbrandur Vigfússon and Frederick York Powell, F. York Powell, ed. and trans. "Víga-Glúms Saga". in ''Origines Islandicae: A Collection of the More Important Sagas and Other Native Writings Relating to the Settlement and Early History of Iceland''. Volume 2 Oxford: Oxford University / Clarendon, 1905. . pp. 431–66. * , ed. ''Víga-Glúms saga''. Íslendinga sögur 19. Reykjavík: Sigurður Kristjánsson, 1924. . * Gabriel Turville-Petre, G. Turville-Petre. ''Viga-Glúms Saga''. 1940. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University / Clarendon, 1960, repr. 1967. .


Translations

* Edmund Walker Head, Sir E. Head, tr. ''Viga Glum's Saga: The story of Viga-Glum''. London, 1877. . * Lee M. Hollander, tr. ''Víga-Glúm's Saga and the Story of Ögmund Dytt''. The Library of Scandinavian Literature 14. The American-Scandinavian Foundation. New York: Twayne, 1972. . * Alan Boucher, tr. ''The Saga of Viga Glum''. Iceland Review saga series. Reykjavík: Iceland Review, 1986. . * John McKinnell, tr. ''Viga-Glums Saga: With the Tales of Ögmund Bash and Thorvald Chatterbox''. The New Saga Library / UNESCO Collection of Representative Works, Icelandic Series. Edinburgh: Canongate/UNESCO, 1987. . **(revised version) "Killer-Glum's Saga". In: ''The Complete Sagas of Icelanders, Including 49 Tales''. ed. Viðar Hreinsson, Robert Cook ''et al.'' 5 vols. Volume 2 ''Outlaws Warriors and Poets''. Reykjavík: Leifur Eiriksson, 1997. . pp. 267–314. * George Johnston, tr. ''The Schemers & Víga-Glúm: Bandamanna Saga & Víga-Glúms Saga''. Erin, Ontario: The Porcupine's Quill, 1999. .


External links


The text of the saga with Modern Icelandic spellingFull text and translation at the Icelandic Saga Database
{{DEFAULTSORT:Viga-Glums Saga Sagas of Icelanders, Viga Glums saga