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E-raamat: Remembering England: Cultural Memory in the Sagas of Icelanders

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This book provides an in-depth study of depictions of England in the Saga of Icelanders (Ķslendingasögur), examining their utility as sources for the history of Viking Age Anglo-Scandinavian cultural contact.

The Ķslendingasögur present themselves as histories, but they are difficult historical sources. Their setting is the Saga Age, a period that begins with the settlement of Iceland in the late ninth century and ends along with the Viking Age in the late eleventh centuryhowever, the saga texts are disconnected from this setting, having first been written down in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. This book traces the transmission and development of Icelandic cultural memory of Saga Age England across this distance of centuries. It offers case study analyses of how historical time, place, cultures, and events are adapted and conceptualised in the Ķslendingasögur and suggests methodological approaches to their study as historical literature.

Remembering England is an interdisciplinary book that will appeal to scholars and students of the history of pre-Norman England, the Icelandic sagas, medieval literature, and cultural memory.
Introduction: Literature and Memory, History and Historiography

Cultural Memory and the Ķslendingasögur

Ķslendingasögur as Sources of History: The Debate

Ęthelstan, Ęthelred and Knśtr: A Historical Overview

Chapter Overview

Part 1

1 Narrative, Verse and Memory

The Fear of Forgetting and the Value of Writing

Cultural Memory and Medieval memoria

Communicative Memory and Skaldic verse

Memory and Literature

2 Saga Age England

England in the Ķslendingasögur

England in the skįldasögur: Egils saga

England in the skįldasögur: Gunnlaugs saga, Bjarnar saga

3 Iceland and the Writing of the Ķslendingasögur

The Ķslendingasögur Corpus

Saga Age Iceland

Iceland in the Age of Saga Writing

Part 2

4 Memories of Heroism: Bjarnar saga Hķtdlakappa

Manuscript Contexts

Bjrns Travels

Reconstructing a Chronology

Thematic Intertextuality: Of Kings and Dragons

5 Memories of Rulers: Gunnlaugs saga ormstungu

Gunnlaugrs Travels

The skįld in Literary Frameworks

The skįld as Poet: The Hierarchies of Verse

The skįld as Warrior: A Fabricated Narrative

6 Memories of Conflict: Egils saga Skallagrķmssonar

Egills Travels

The Battle of Brunanburh

The Court of Eirķkr blóšųx in York

Conclusion

Interpretation and Reinterpretation

Remembering England

Bibliography
Matthew Firth is Australian Research Council Fellow (DECRA) and Associate Lecturer in Medieval History at Flinders University, Australia. His research focuses on historical narrative and its transmission across time and place with particular interest in the historiography of tenth- century England. Matthews first monograph, Early English Queens, 850 1000: Potestas Regina, was published by Routledge in 2024. He is also the author of over twenty articles and book chapters focused on the development of medieval history writing traditions.