Möðruvallabók
Möðruvallabók or AM 132 fol is an Icelandic manuscript from the mid-14th century, inscribed on vellum. It contains the following Icelandic sagas in this order:
- Njáls saga
- Egils saga
- Finnboga saga ramma
- Bandamanna saga
- Kormáks saga
- Víga-Glúms saga
- Droplaugarsona saga
- Ölkofra þáttr
- Hallfreðar saga
- Laxdœla saga
- Fóstbrœðra saga
Many of those sagas are preserved in fragments elsewhere but are only found in their full length in Möðruvallabók, which contains the largest known single repertoire of Icelandic sagas of the Middle Ages.
The manuscript takes its name from Möðruvellir, the farm in Eyjafjörður where it was found.[1] In 1628 Magnús Björnsson signed his name in it with the location.[2] It was brought to Denmark in 1684 by Thomas Bartholin and incorporated into the Arnamagnæan Collection in 1690. It was returned to Iceland in 1974 after the collection's division into an Icelandic and a Danish section.[1]
See also
- Árni Magnússon, who assembled the Arnamagnæan Manuscript Collection
References
- 1 2 Sarah M. Anderson, "Introduction: 'og eru köld kvenna ráð'", Cold Counsel: The Women in Old Norse Literature and Myth, ed. Sarah M Anderson and Karen Swenson, 2000, e-book ed. Hoboken, New Jersey: Taylor and Francis, 2013, ISBN 9781134821389, pp. xi–xv, p. xv, note 1.
- ↑ Íslendínga sögur, udgivne efter gamle Haandskrifter af det kongelige nordiske Oldskrift-Selskab, 4 vols., OCLC 465745666, Volume 4, ed. Konráð Gíslason and Eiríkur Jónsson, Njála Volume 2, Copenhagen: Gyldendal, 1889, p. 666 (Danish)
External links
- Images of manuscripts at the Árni Magnússon Institute site (Möðruvallabók is the second from the top in the list)
- Best quality images at handrit.is
- Text in Icelandic at the Árni Magnússon Institute site
- Entry at Sagnanet
- Árni Magnússon and the Collecting of Icelandic Manuscripts
Further reading
- Bjarni Einarsson. "Um Möðruvallabók". Tíminn, 17 June 1965, p. 25 (Icelandic)
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