Teutonic Mythology: The Gods and Goddesses of the Northland (Vol. 1-3). Viktor Rydberg. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Viktor Rydberg
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He

       { kills twelve brothers.

       {Saxo: Gram secures Groa and slays Henricus on his wedding-day.

       {Saxo: Halfdan Berggram marries Sigrutha, after having

       4. { slain Ebbo on his wedding-day.

       {Saxo: Halfdan Borgarson marries Guritha, after having

       { killed Sivarus on his wedding-day.

      {Saxo: Gram, who slew a Swedish king, is attacked in war

       { by Svipdag.

       {Saxo: Halfdan Berggram, who slew a Swedish king, is

       5. { attacked by Ericus.

       {Combined sources: Svipdag is the slain Swedish king's

       { grandson (daughter's son).

       {Saxo: Ericus is the son of the daughter of the slain Swedish

       { king.

      These parallels are sufficient to show the identity of Gram Skjoldson, Halfdan Berggram, and Halfdan Borgarson. A closer analysis of these sagas, the synthesis possible on the basis of such an analysis, and the position the saga (restored in this manner) concerning the third patriarch, the son of Skjold-Borgar, and the grandson of Heimdal, assumes in the chain of mythic events, gives complete proof of this identity.

      HALFDAN'S ENMITY WITH ORVANDEL AND SVIPDAG (cp. No. 33).

       Table of Contents

      Saxo relates in regard to Gram that he carried away the royal daughter Groa, though she was already bound to another man, and that he slew her father, whereupon he got into a feud with Svipdag, an irreconcilably bitter foe, who fought against him with varying success of arms, and gave himself no rest until he had taken Gram's life and realm. Gram left two sons, whom Svipdag treated in a very different manner. The one named Guthormus (Gudhormr), who was a son of Groa, he received into his good graces. To the other, named Hadingus, or Hadding, and who was a son of Signe, he transferred the deadly hate he had cherished towards the father. The cause of the hatred of Svipdag against Gram, and which could not be extinguished in his blood, Saxo does not mention, but this point is cleared up by a comparison with other sources. Nor does Saxo mention who the person was from whom Gram robbed Groa, but this, too, we learn in another place.

      The Groa of the myth is mentioned in two other places: in Groagalder and in Gylfaginning. Both sources agree in representing her as skilled in good, healing, harm-averting songs; both also in describing her as a tender person devoted to the members of her family. In Gylfaginning she is the loving wife who forgets everything in her joy that her husband, the brave archer Orvandel, has been saved by Thor from a dangerous adventure. In Groagalder she is the mother whose love to her son conquers death and speaks consoling and protecting words from the grave. Her husband is, as stated, Orvandel; her son is Svipdag.

      If we compare the statements in Saxo with those in Groagalder and Gylfaginning we get the following result:

      Saxo: King Sigtrygg has a daughter Groa.

       Gylfaginning: Groa is married to the brave Orvandel.

       Groagalder: Groa has a son Svipdag.

       Saxo: Groa is robbed by Gram-Halfdan.

       Saxo: } Hostilities on account of the robbing of

       Hyndluljod: } the woman. Gram-Halfdan kills

       Skaldskap.mal:} Groa's father Sigtrygg.

       Saxo: With Gram-Halfdan Groa has the son Gudhorm.

       Gram-Halfdan is separated from Groa. He courts

       Signe (Almveig in Hyndluljod; Alveig in Skaldskaparmál),

       daughter of Sumbel, king of the Finns.

       Groagalder: Groa with her son Svipdag is once more with

       her first husband. Groa dies. Svipdag's father Orvandel

       marries a second time. Before her death Groa

       has told Svipdag that he, if need requires her help,

       must go to her grave and wake her out of the sleep

       of death.

       The stepmother gives Svipdag a task which he thinks surpasses

       his strength. He then goes to his mother's

       grave. From the grave Groa sings protecting incantations

       over her son.

       Saxo: Svipdag attacks Gram-Halfdan. After several conflicts

       he succeeds in conquering him and gives him a

       deadly wound.

       Svidpdag pardons the son Gram-Halfdan has had with

       Groa, but persecutes his son with Signe (Alveig).

      In this connection we find the key to Svipdag's irreconcilable conflict with Gram-Halfdan. He must revenge himself on him on his father's and mother's account. He must avenge his mother's disgrace, his grandfather Sigtrygg's death, and, as a further investigation shows, the murder also of his father Orvandel. We also find why he pardons Gudhorm: he is his own half-brother and Groa's son.

      Sigtrygg, Groa, Orvandel, and Svipdag have in the myth belonged to the pedigree of the Ynglings, and hence Saxo calls Sigtrygg king in Svithiod. Concerning the Ynglings, Ynglingasaga remarks that Yngve was the name of everyone who in that time was the head of the family (Yngl., p. 20). Svipdag, the favourite hero of the Teutonic mythology, is accordingly celebrated in song under the name Yngve, and also under other names to which I shall refer later, when I am to give a full account of the myth concerning him.

      HALFDAN'S IDENTITY WITH MANNUS IN "GERMANIA."

       Table of Contents

      With Gram-Halfdan the Teutonic patriarch period ends. The human race had its golden age under Heimdal, its copper age under Skjold-Borgar, and the beginning of its iron age under Halfdan. The Skilfinga-Ynglinga race has been named after Heimdal-Skelfir himself, and he has been regarded as its progenitor. His son Skjold-Borgar has been considered the founder of the Skjoldungs. With Halfdan the pedigree is divided into three through his stepson Yngve-Svipdag, the latter's half-brother Gudhorm, and Gudhorm's half-brother Hading or Hadding. The war between these three—a continuation of the feud between Halfdan and Svipdag—was the subject of a cycle of songs sung throughout Teutondom, songs which continued to live though greatly changed with the lapse of time, on the lips of Germans throughout the middle ages (see Nos. 36–43).

      Like his father, Halfdan was the fruit of a double fatherhood, a divine and a human. Saxo was aware of this double fatherhood, and relates of his Halfdan Berggram that he, although the son of a human prince, was respected as a son of Thor, and honoured as a god among that people who longest remained heathen; that is to say, the Swedes (Igitur apud Sveones tantus haberi cæpit, ut magni Thor filius existimatus, divinis a populo honoribus donaretur ac publico dignus libamine censeretur). In his saga, as told by Saxo, Thor holds his protecting hand over Halfdan like a father over his son.

      It is possible that both the older patriarchs originally were regarded rather as the founders and chiefs of the whole human race than of the Teutons alone. Certain it is that the appellation Teutonic patriarch belonged more particularly to the third of the series. We have a reminiscence of this in Hyndluljod, 14–16. To the question, "Whence came the Skjoldungs, Skilfings, Andlungs, and Ylfings, and all the free-born and gentle-born?" the song answers by pointing to "the foremost among the Skjoldungs"—Sigtrygg's slayer Halfdan—a statement which, after the memory of the myths had faded and become confused, was magnified in the Younger Edda into the report that he was the father of eighteen sons, nine of which were the founders of the heroic families whose names were at that time rediscovered in the heathen-heroic