Grand finales in the kings’ sagas between Christian piety and Germanic stoicism

The Old Norse kings’ sagas often display grand finales and impressive endings. From time to time, they also display the so-called ‘beautiful deaths’, i.e. those deaths that have the immediate advantage of rousing admiration in a secular sense and to convey immortality, at least in the memories of p...

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Main Author: Giovanna Salvucci
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Ledizioni 2024-09-01
Series:Filologia Germanica
Online Access:https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/filologiagermanica/article/view/2613
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author Giovanna Salvucci
author_facet Giovanna Salvucci
author_sort Giovanna Salvucci
collection DOAJ
description The Old Norse kings’ sagas often display grand finales and impressive endings. From time to time, they also display the so-called ‘beautiful deaths’, i.e. those deaths that have the immediate advantage of rousing admiration in a secular sense and to convey immortality, at least in the memories of people. The authors of the kings’ sagas seem to be fascinated by the ability to endure physical suffering and to maintain a virile and cool attitude at the moment of death, and by glorious and spectacular deaths on the battlefield, as were the poets from whom they took inspiration and information. However, with the conversion to Christianity, the heathen conception of a ‘beautiful death’ interpreted as being a violent death, was gradually replaced by the notion of ‘good death’, that not only required the fulfilment of the last duties to ensure eternal life but, if it was a violent death, it had to occur while fighting for a just cause. As the Christian faith became firmly established, its insistence that a king should be morally worthy of his role became more important: a king who was thought to be living in a state of mortal sin or to be suffering damnation in Hell after his death was seen as being in fundamental conflict with his royal function. The aim of this paper is to discover, through the methods of literary analysis, the attitudes of 13th-century historians towards the death of their royal characters in the light of Christianity, the way they coped with the new dictates of their faith and how they attempted a reconciliation between Germanic stoicism and Christian piety.
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spelling doaj-art-e7e97a3fd60348bb978f593da8220e062025-08-20T02:38:59ZdeuLedizioniFilologia Germanica2036-89922024-09-01410.14672/fg.v4i.2613Grand finales in the kings’ sagas between Christian piety and Germanic stoicism Giovanna Salvucci0Professore a contratto di Lingua e letteratura inglese alla Facoltà di Scienze della Formazione dell’Università di Macerata The Old Norse kings’ sagas often display grand finales and impressive endings. From time to time, they also display the so-called ‘beautiful deaths’, i.e. those deaths that have the immediate advantage of rousing admiration in a secular sense and to convey immortality, at least in the memories of people. The authors of the kings’ sagas seem to be fascinated by the ability to endure physical suffering and to maintain a virile and cool attitude at the moment of death, and by glorious and spectacular deaths on the battlefield, as were the poets from whom they took inspiration and information. However, with the conversion to Christianity, the heathen conception of a ‘beautiful death’ interpreted as being a violent death, was gradually replaced by the notion of ‘good death’, that not only required the fulfilment of the last duties to ensure eternal life but, if it was a violent death, it had to occur while fighting for a just cause. As the Christian faith became firmly established, its insistence that a king should be morally worthy of his role became more important: a king who was thought to be living in a state of mortal sin or to be suffering damnation in Hell after his death was seen as being in fundamental conflict with his royal function. The aim of this paper is to discover, through the methods of literary analysis, the attitudes of 13th-century historians towards the death of their royal characters in the light of Christianity, the way they coped with the new dictates of their faith and how they attempted a reconciliation between Germanic stoicism and Christian piety. https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/filologiagermanica/article/view/2613
spellingShingle Giovanna Salvucci
Grand finales in the kings’ sagas between Christian piety and Germanic stoicism
Filologia Germanica
title Grand finales in the kings’ sagas between Christian piety and Germanic stoicism
title_full Grand finales in the kings’ sagas between Christian piety and Germanic stoicism
title_fullStr Grand finales in the kings’ sagas between Christian piety and Germanic stoicism
title_full_unstemmed Grand finales in the kings’ sagas between Christian piety and Germanic stoicism
title_short Grand finales in the kings’ sagas between Christian piety and Germanic stoicism
title_sort grand finales in the kings sagas between christian piety and germanic stoicism
url https://www.ledijournals.com/ojs/index.php/filologiagermanica/article/view/2613
work_keys_str_mv AT giovannasalvucci grandfinalesinthekingssagasbetweenchristianpietyandgermanicstoicism