Representations of English history in Icelandinc Kings'saga: Haraldssaga hardrada and knytlinga saga

Cataloged from PDF version of article. The Icelandic sagas are one of the most important historical sources for Viking studies. Although there are many different types of saga, only the kings‟ sagas and family sagas are generally considered historically accurate to some extent. Unfortunately, becaus...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gülen, Deniz Cem
Other Authors: Thornton, David
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Bilkent University 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11693/30033
Description
Summary:Cataloged from PDF version of article. The Icelandic sagas are one of the most important historical sources for Viking studies. Although there are many different types of saga, only the kings‟ sagas and family sagas are generally considered historically accurate to some extent. Unfortunately, because they were composed centuries after the Viking age, even these sagas contain a number of historical inaccuracies. In this research, I will try to discuss this problem by focusing on the Heimskringla version of King Harald‟s saga and the Knýtlinga saga, and how English history is represented in them. After discussing the nature of the sagas and the problems of the Icelandic sources, I will consider the saga accounts of certain events that occurred in England during the reigns of Harald Hardrada and Cnut the Great. In order to show the possible mistakes in these sagas, primary sources from outside of Scandinavia and Iceland, notably the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, as well as modern studies, will be used to assess these possible errors in the Heimskringla and Knýtlinga saga. Gülen, Deniz Cem M.A.