Gripla - 01.01.1977, Side 42

Gripla - 01.01.1977, Side 42
38 GRIPLA out to be a version of a widespread popular prayer, but not a very exact account of the Christian faith. ‘Þykki mér engi mynd á, segir hon (i.e. Þóra), á kredo.’ Þrándr’s defence is that there are many variants of the faith that have equal validity: ‘eru margar kreddur, ok er slíkt, segir hann, eigi á eina lund rétt.’19 From this anecdote it is apparent, not only that the modern Icelandic word kredda, which means ‘superstition, illogically held belief’ is a hypocoristic form of the Latin word credo as used substantivally to mean ‘affirmation of faith’, but that this derivation was known and understood in thirteenth-century Iceland.20 This parallel makes it pos- sible to imagine Snorri, or one of his small circle of interested friends who must have constituted the first readership of his book, coining the word edda from edo in conscious imitation of the word kredda, which he knew was derived from credo, as a half-humorous description of the treatise, thus implying that the Edda stood in a similar relation to Latin artes poeticæ as Þrándr’s kredda to the official credo. There may also at the same time have been an awareness of the pun on the other word edda, which might have been taken to reflect the fact that the treatise dealt with a kind of poetry that in the thirteenth century must have been thought by many rather old-fashioned. * * * * Not until I had written the above did I see Stefán Karlsson’s lively de- fence of the same etymology of edda on very much the same lines as mine in ‘Eddukredda’, Bríarí á sextugsafmœli Halldórs Halldórssonar 13. júlí 1971, pp. 25-33, published in a single typewritten copy in Reykjavík in that year.21 The main difference in his argument is that he takes edda to be derived from edo in the sense ‘edit, compile, relate’ with reference principally to Snorri’s activity in compiling Gylfaginning. 19 Fœreyinga saga, ed. Ólafur Halldórsson, Reykjavík 1967, pp. 110-111; Flat- eyjarbók, Christiania 1860-68, II 400^101. 20 Kredda probably came into Icelandic via the Old English loan-word creda, but this ntakes no difference to the present argument, since it is the ultimate etymo- logy of the word and the fact that this was known that is significant. 21 I have incorporated some corrections and additional remarks suggested by Stefán Karlsson in comments on what I had written, which were offered in a splendid spirit of academic detachment.
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