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More information on Beowulf
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More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Dec 30, 2015

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Page 1: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

More information on Beowulf

Page 2: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Beowulf and epics

• Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil

Page 3: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Celtic and Anglo-Saxon mythology

• All mythology is an answer to common human question or yearning - that is why it is all so similar in so many cultures• The movement to an Anglo-Saxon culture from a Celtic culture -

Middle Earth, Tom Bombadil indicates that something has gone before

Page 4: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Ubi Sunt

• One of the huge themes of Anglo-Saxon literature that is present in LOTR is the idea of Ubi Sunt – where are they now.

• Thus, through reading LOTR – Readers have an incentive to go back and read Beowulf and The Wanderer.

• Beowulf is called by Harold Bloom – The Fortunate Survivor

Page 5: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Writing of Beowulf

• Its story is the product of centuries – both before and following

• It was written and rewritten during the times of the Anglo-Saxons in Britain.

Page 6: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Ruins

• The Romans left many ruins – huge ruins when they fled the island and it is this that the writer of Beowulf refers to when he talks of buildings from the time of the giants.

Page 7: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Sutton Hoo

• When Rome left – there is still communication with England - evidence one of the oldest archaeological Anglo-Saxons ships uncovered at Sutton Hoo in England contained a Greek plate and Roman coins from the 600s

Page 8: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Anglo-Saxons - Pagan

• The Anglo-Saxons were pagan – thus the monk who wrote the Bible in Latin was descended very recently from Pagan ancestors.

Page 9: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Bede - Chronicle of England

• The most famous monk – Bede who wrote a history of Anglo-Saxon England and was the first to start dating historical events from the birth of Christ – explored this clash of civilizations between the pagans and the Christians.

Page 10: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Historical Evidence

• There is actual historical evidence that Beowulf may have been one of those histories that turned into a story to account actual events – Beowulf’s uncle – Higlac is mentioned by in a historical chronicle of the history of the Franks as having died in 520 AD.

• The only manuscript we have of Beowulf that survives is from the 900s – the gap of time between the actual events in Beowulf and the writing of the manuscript is a huge cultural gap – the writer went from having a mostly pagan audience to a mainly Christian one – but the heroes in Beowulf are still pagan.

• Hrothgar’s people in Beowulf are pagan and were the actual ancestors of the Anglo-Saxon kings. Epics usually follow nobility.

Page 11: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Melding

• The huge gap is that the poet of Beowulf would have had the enlightenment of Christianity

• But Beowulf is Old Testament

• Grendel descends from Cain

• Poet includes the northern virtues of warriors with the virtues of southern Christianity.

Page 12: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Beowulf is a quest romance

Starts out in a normal world – a court sometimes, all is well, usually people of some famous quality are mentioned – there is order, law, certainty

• Hero receives a challenge or quest

• Hero goes out into the wilderness to encounter the supernatural, monsters, all sorts of challenges

• Hero returns triumphant – but scarred, order is restored but following tradition of Beowulf – there is no happily ever after – life catches up in some sort of sadness. Beowulf dies at end.

Page 13: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Negative Impact on Fame

• In 800AD an Anglo-Saxon monk wrote to complain to Rome that his fellow monks were reading and singing songs from pagan books – specifically Beowulf – hence they believe that the poem was changed as the monks needed a good rationale for the poem – so there is emphasis in that last part on the transience, impermanent of power, wealth, and worldly fame.

Page 14: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

• Beowulf offers a negative experience of fame – lessons from the Christian faith.

• The sadness is that Beowulf committed himself to a fame that doesn’t last.

Page 15: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

• The theme in Anglo-Saxon poetry is again the theme of Ubi Sunt – where are they that have gone before.

• English poetry is the oldest and first vernacular poetry in Europe – Alfred the Great

Page 16: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Survival

• Beowulf only survives by accident as another example of Anglo-Saxon poetry called the Vercelli – which ended up in Italy – contains The Dream of the Rood. The idea is that a pilgrim traveling through Italy left the book and it ended up in an Italian monastery – Lucky accident.

• Many manuscripts were destroyed in England during the reformation in Henry VIII’s time.

Page 17: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

History

• Beowulf has an interesting history – it was originally Mercian – the text that survives was written during Alfred the Great’s literary Renaissance in the 800s

• Beowulf ended up in a library that burnt in the 1700s. the manuscript is water stained and parts of it are unreadable due to the burns on it.

Page 18: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

1833

• 1833 – first translation of Beowulf – due in part to the writing of the Oxford English Dictionary – Editors of the dictionary needed the old texts to be in print in order to cite them so many were published.

• This also made the manuscripts available for study and Beowulf was studied in three ways

• 1 – As a means of boosting nationalism

• 2 – an archive of Old English language

• 3 – following Jacob Grimm’s example in Germany – to preserve folklore

Page 19: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

1936

• Tolkien changes all this in 1936 – literary appreciation

• Argued for it to be included in the syllabus

• Leapt from the preserve to readers

• Tolkien guaranteed the longevity of Beowulf

• Bilbo – Beowulf – fights the dragon

• Bjorn is a shape shifter in the Hobbit who too represent Beowulf – bee-wolf or bear

• LOTR contains recognizable characters from Beowulf

• Theoden – Hrothgar

• Gollum – Grendel

Page 20: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

In film

• Michael Crichton recreated Beowulf in his book Eaters of the Dead – film was the 13th Warrior

• Film adaptations – Beowulf has been badly served.

Page 21: More information on Beowulf. Beowulf and epics Answering the common assumption that the world must be protected in ways from evil.

Literature Now

• The difference in the literary tradition is that now much of what you read and see is tinged by the great classic poet Ovid – his idea was that every story must contain a love interest – Beowulf does not.

• Beowulf is also famous today in that in the 1990’s a translation came out that became a bestseller – Seamus Heaney.