Studia Islandica - 01.07.1963, Side 106

Studia Islandica - 01.07.1963, Side 106
104 based on definite years. Both works must have been composed before 1259, the year of Ólafr’s death. On the other hand, Knýtlinga would have been written after his stay at King Valdemar’s court in the winter 1240—41. And considering Ólafr’s age — he is said to be bom about 1210 — such a mature and monumental work as Laxdœla can hardly have been composed before his long travels abroad, beginning in 1237. It would be more plausible to think of the years around 1250, a dating which agrees perfectly with the view of leading scholars. Of the two works here dealt with, Knýtlinga is likely to be the ear- lier one. At least it seems natural that Ólafr would have set to work to compose Knýtlinga while the impression and information from Den- mark were fresh in his memory. In the light of this inquiry, Ólafr Þórðarson seems as a writer to have been the equal of his brother Sturla, perhaps even of his great uncle Snorri, who seems to have been his ideal as an author. Like Snorri, Ólafr devoted an essay to philological and poetical questions (“Third grammatical treatise”). In imitation of Snorri and with Heimskringla as his model he wrote the history of the Danish Kings (Knýtlinga). But by far his greatest achievement as a prose artist is Laxdœla, comparable to Snorri’s Egla. (As to the influence on the vocabulary of Laxdæla from Egla, cf. Studia Islandica 20, pp. 49—50, Summary pp. 190—91, where the testimony of the pair words is dis- cussed.) That, in spite of rather unfavourable auspices, common individual traits of language should stand out clearly in such works as Knýt- linga saga and Laxdæla saga has, to the author of this paper, as pro- bably to most of its readers, been a surprise. But the result in itself is anything but surprising. Snorri’s nephew, the travelled and clas- sically educated Lawman Ólafr Þórðarson hvítaskáld, introduced both at the Norwegian and the Danish Kings’ courts, takes his place in a most natural way as one of the greatest among the saga writers of Iceland.
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Studia Islandica

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