Konec řádu na kraji světa. K historické sociologii islandských ság

This article discusses the historical background to the medieval Icelandic sagas. It draws on the work of Icelandic historians, especially Gunnar Karlsson, to argue that the key factor was a distinctive political order established in Iceland before the conversion to Christianity. This was not a peas...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:HISTORICKÁ SOCIOLOGIE
Main Author: Jóhann Páll Árnason
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Czech
English
Slovak
Published: Karolinum Press 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.14712/23363525.2023.20
https://doaj.org/article/ec101f4615fa4d56a66e3a2deb66dfba
Description
Summary:This article discusses the historical background to the medieval Icelandic sagas. It draws on the work of Icelandic historians, especially Gunnar Karlsson, to argue that the key factor was a distinctive political order established in Iceland before the conversion to Christianity. This was not a peasant democracy, as some idealizing interpretations have suggested; it was an oligarchy sui generis, with power (and a remnant of religious authority) vested in an elite of chieftains. However, there was no executive centre. This decentralized regime left its mark on the Christianizing process; the Icelanders accepted Christianity without monarchy, and for a long time without a fully empowered Church. Together with a pronounced cultural focus on narrativity, this political context explains the rise of a vernacular literature that was in many ways influenced by Christian sources, but retained a connection to pre-Christian traditions.