Talk:Old Norse poetry

Latest comment: 4 months ago by PDDeane in topic Content moved here from Alliterative verse

Untitled edit

The Eggjum Stone is certainly important for all sorts of reasons, historical and linguistic, but does it really belong on a list of "Important examples of Norse poetry" next to Hávamál and Völuspá? Io 17:29, 23 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Alliterative verse edit

There is an article (and a very good one, IMO) under development, Alliterative verse, which overlaps Old Norse poetry to a considerable degree. Any thoughts about how we might avoid reduplication of effort? Cheers Io 16:13, 9 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Funny how this remains the case 18 years later. Mårtensås (talk) 18:38, 26 November 2022 (UTC)Reply

I removed the reference to the Eggjum Stone after careful consideration. I really do not believe it counts as an example of important Norse poetry. It is important as an example of runic writing and as evidence of language development, but not as poetry. If it is an emotional matter for anyone, just undo my change. I won't make an issue out of it — at least not without discussion. Cheers Io 16:20, 9 Sep 2004 (UTC)

you have a point. My idea was to point to the possibly earliest known sample: If the stanza is correctly identified, it would be a very important example of Old Norse poetry, since it would be the oldest record by far (the Edda was written down some 400 years later). But seeing that it is really fragmentary, and maybe not poetry at all, I won't insist to include it here. dab 07:29, 18 Sep 2004 (UTC)
True. But there are poems of a similar age recorded, although the actual writing down took place much later (some of the Edda poems, the poetry of Bragi Boddason and of some of ghe the court poets of Haraldur hárfagri - although the latter of these are a century younger). My main objection to the Eggjum Stone is, that it hardly qualifies as poetry. If we include that we might as well include the inscription of the Golden Horns. Cheers Io 16:36, 18 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Eddic vs. Eddaic edit

Both Eddic an Eddaic are synonymously proper English language words; however, the two sources used (so far) prefer "Eddic" rather than "Eddaic". I am thinking of making Eddic the main term, and mentioning Eddaic as an alternative. Dcattell (talk) 01:15, 27 March 2023 (UTC)Reply

Content moved here from Alliterative verse edit

I've been working on the Alliterative Verse entry, and felt that for that article to work, a lot of the details on Old Norse poetry more logically belonged here. So I've moved them here and merged them in, which I think gives a much more satisfying and complete discussion of Old Norse verse forms. However, a lot of the material is not well cited. More work needs to be done to get this article up to spec. PDDeane (talk) 00:58, 2 December 2023 (UTC)Reply