Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Side 106

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Side 106
88 TÍMARIT ÞJÓÐRÆKNISFÉLAGS ÍSLENDINGA It would be tempting if time al- lowed to dwell on constitutional similarities between Anglo-Saxon England and the Icelandic common- wealth,—not so much in the hope of finding parallel institutions but for the light which Icelandic insti- tutions and linguistic relics which survived longer in Iceland than in other Germanic countries might throw on some of the more obscure passages in English laws and diplo- matic. I find it difficult for ex- ample to believe that the passage in the laws of the Kentish King, Wihtred,47 dating from ca. 695, de- fining the way in which a gesi may clear himself, is not to be elucidated in the light of what the sagas of the Norwegians kings tell of the gesiir at the courts of the Norwegian kings and that the word is not errone- ously translated as “stranger”. Simi- larly when in the will of Æthelric, dated ca. 995, it is stated that a yearly rent is paid mid healfum punde 7 mid anre garan,48 it seems to me that gare can only be the Old Norse gæra, whether this be a direct borrowing by the Anglo-Saxons from Old Norse or the words are a common derivative from an Old Germanic *garjon. But as there is a time and place for everything there will no doubt occur a time and place for the treatment of such abstruse but fascinating topics. Here it is obviously the time and place for me to end. FOOTNOTES 1. One of the latest and best surveys is Einar Ól. Sveinsson, fslenzkar bókmenntir í fornöld, I, Reykjavik, 1962. 2. Egils saga (ÍF. II, 1933), ch. 17. The edition of the Icelandic sagas which I have used (unless otherwise stated) is íslenzk fornrit abbr. ÍF). Reyk- javik, 1933-. Reference is made to chapters rather than pages, for the benefit of those using other editions. 3. Gísla saga Súrssonar (ÍF, VI, 1943), chs. 5, 8. 4. Laxdæla saga (ÍF, V, 1934), ch. 43. 5. Heiðarvíga saga (ÍF, III, 1938), ch. 13. 6. Halldórs þáilr Snorrasonar II (ÍF, V), ch. 2. 7. E. Emerton, The Letters of Saint Boniface, New York, 1940, p. 179, 8. William of Malmesbury, Gesta regum in D. Whitelock, English Hisiorical Documenis, I, London, 1955, pp. 280- 281. 9. Flaleyjarbók, Christiania, 1860-1868, 1, 107. 10. Egils saga, chs. 50-55. 11. Ibid, ch. 55. 12. Grágás, Copenhagen, 1879, II, 436. 13. Heimskringla, ed. F. Jónsson, Copen- hagen, 1911, pp. 303-304. 14. Cf. Diplomalarium Islandicum, Co- penhagen and Reykjavik, 1857-, X, 1-2. Giraldus Cambrensis is the first British writer to mention Icelandic falcons. It has been conjectured that he may have been acquainted with Páll Jónsson (bishop of Skálholt 1195-1211) when the latter was a stu- dent in England ca._ 1180 (Björn Þórðarson, fslenzkir fálkar (Safn til sögu fslands, Sec. Ser. I, 5), Reyk- javik, 1957, pp. 33-34). It is known that Bishop Páll sent falcons as gifts to his friends abroad (Biskupa sögur, Copenhagen, 1858-1878, I, 143). 15. T. J. Oleson, “Polar Bears in the Middle Ages” Canadian Hislorical Review, XXXI (1950), 47-55. 16. Biskupa sögur, II, p. 143. 17. Diplomalarium Norvegicum, O s 1 O 1849-, XIX, 191-192. Another oddity or mystery is the presence of walrus skulls buried in the churchyard of the episcopal church of Garðar in Greenland. Some were found in the church itself. Was some veneration attached to the skulls of these mar- vellous and precious beasts? (Poul Norlund, Norse ruins at Gardar (Meddelelser om Gronland, LXXVI, No. 1, Copenhagen, 1930, pp. 137-138).
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