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Before Beowulf: on the proto-history of old Germanic verse

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 06:27 authored by Bernard Mees
It has long been held that the alliterating long line common to the earliest traditions of medieval Germanic literature is of ancient pedigree. Essential similarities in Old English, Old Norse and early German poetry are typically held up as evidence for a common Germanic use of an alliterating 4/4 metrical line in the earliest vernacular poetry of England, Scandinavia and Germany. The evidence of early Germanic verse afforded by runic inscriptions from late antiquity and the early medieval period, however, suggest a rather different picture - few examples of runic verse are reconcilable with long and widely held assumptions concerning the early medieval alliterating Germanic long lines. This paper summarises the metrical and stylistic evidence from these eary epigraphic testimonies and suggests a more nuanced and linguistically plausible scheme for the history of native English, continental and Scandinavian verse in the late proto-historical period.

History

Journal

Journal of the Australian Early Medieval Association

Volume

3

Start page

207

End page

224

Total pages

18

Publisher

Australian Early Medieval Association Inc.

Place published

Australia

Language

English

Copyright

© 2007 Australian Early Medieval Association Inc.

Former Identifier

2006013765

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2013-02-11

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