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The heroic tradition in England died out with the Norman Conquest, which replaced the Germanic-speaking aristocracy who had cultivated Germanic heroic legend with a Romance-speaking one. [209] In Germany, the heroic tradition largely disappears from writing around 1600; it is likely that the oral tradition had been dying out prior to this. [210]
figures from the genre of minstrel epic are generally not included unless they are commonly discussed in secondary sources dealing with heroic epic in medieval Germany. gods and deities Although this list excludes Germanic deities , it includes other entities stemming from Germanic folklore that appear in the legends (such as valkyries , dwarfs ...
In the MHG tradition, represented most prominently by Hermanafrid (Irnfrid) and Iring, which is the only clear example of a heroic legend developing within modern Germany. [358] The Thuringians, with Hermanafrid as an exiled margrave, appear among Attila's men in the Nibelungenlied .
The first element in the Middle High German name is hart ("hard"). [189] The name is probably of West Germanic origin, as no other Norse name contains the element *nīþ-, but it is common in the south. [191] In Völundarkviða, king of the Njárar, in Sweden, but in Þiðreks saga, a ruler in Jutland. Nithhad hamstrings Wayland the smith and ...
The period corresponds to the Germanic Wars in terms of historiography, and to the Germanic Iron Age in terms of archaeology, spanning the early centuries of the 1st millennium, in particular the 4th and 5th centuries, the period of the final collapse of the Western Roman Empire and the establishment of stable "barbarian kingdoms" larger than at the tribal level (the kingdoms of the Visigoths ...
In Norse tradition, the ancestral sword of the Völsungs. Gullinhjalti Old Norse: Gullinhjalti, Old English: Gyldenhilt: The name means "Golden-Hilt". [17] In Beowulf, the giant-sword with which the hero Beowulf slays Grendel's mother.
King of the Huns and a central figure of Germanic heroic legend. [202] Son of Buðli 1 (Botelung). In Norse tradition, brother of Brunhild. In German tradition brother of Bleda. In the Nibelungenlied after his marriage to Kriemhild, Attila invites the Burgundian kings to visit. Kriemhild arranges for fighting to break out, resulting in the ...
In Old High German, an equivalent personal name Sintarvizzilo is attested. [140] May be based on the equivalents of OHG sintar ("cinder") and fezzil ("fetlock"), meaning "Bright-foot" and a kenning for wolf. [140] In Beowulf, he is the nephew of Sigmund. [140] In the Norse tradition, Sigmund's son through incest with his sister Signy.