Saints’ Lives

Saints’ lives (Latin vitae, sg. vita), also referred to as hagiographies (from the Greek hagios ‘holy’ and graphia ‘writing’), formed one of the most important literary genres in the European Middle Ages, and constitute a substantive portion of those texts composed in medieval Scandinavia. Medieval...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Van Deusen, Natalie M.
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Oxford University Press 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780195396584-0328
Description
Summary:Saints’ lives (Latin vitae, sg. vita), also referred to as hagiographies (from the Greek hagios ‘holy’ and graphia ‘writing’), formed one of the most important literary genres in the European Middle Ages, and constitute a substantive portion of those texts composed in medieval Scandinavia. Medieval Scandinavian saints’ lives can be categorized as East Norse (that is, Danish and Swedish) and West Norse (that is, Norwegian and Icelandic). In both East and West Norse, these works comprise translations from imported foreign (primarily Latin) sources, as well as works produced within Scandinavia in both Latin and the vernacular, which refers to the language spoken by people living in a particular region. The composition of saints’ lives began shortly after the Christianization of the Scandinavian countries, which began during the 8th century and was completed by the 12th century. Indeed, saints’ lives were among the very first works composed in the vernacular in Scandinavia. The majority of the surviving manuscripts containing saints’ lives written in the Scandinavian vernaculars of the Middle Ages come from medieval Iceland and, to a lesser extent, Norway. In Iceland, the lives of saints played a key role in the development of vernacular saga literature, on which hagiographic texts had an ongoing influence throughout the Middle Ages. Saints’ lives from Denmark and Sweden were generally composed in Latin, though there existed translations of select lives as well as larger legendaries—that is to say, collections of saints’ lives—in both the Old Danish and Old Swedish vernaculars. Within the East Norse tradition, by far the largest number of natively produced saints’ lives are associated with St. Birgitta of Sweden (d. 1373), and can be connected to canonization efforts. Also of particular interest throughout the Nordic region were the lives of saintly bishops, dukes, kings, and other noblemen and noblewomen, which comprise the majority of the lives of Scandinavian saints and saintly individuals. The production of ...