Read The Nibelungenlied: The Lay of the Nibelungs (Oxford World's Classics) Online
Authors: Cyril Edwards
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Das Nibelungenlied
, 2 vols. (Hamburg: Fischer Bücherei, 1970).
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Das Nibelungenlied
, Deutsche Klassiker des Mittelalters, based upon the edn. of Karl Bartsch, 22nd edn., rev. Roswitha Wisniewski (Wiesbaden: F. A. Brockhaus, 1988).
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Das Nibelungenlied
. A complete transcription in Modern German type of the text of Manuscript C from the Fürstenberg Court Library Donaueschingen (New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1969).
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Der Nibelunge Noth und Die Klage
, 5th edn. (1878; repr. Hamburg: Robert Mölich, 1948).
Cyril Edwards (ed. and trans.),
Hartmann von Aue: Iwein or The Knight with the Lion
, Arthurian Archives, German Romance, 3 (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2007).
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Edda: Prologue and Gylfaginning
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1982).
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The Saga of the Volsungs
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Waltharius
and
Ruodlieb
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Waltharius; Ruodlieb; Märchenepen. Lateinische Epik des Mittelalters mit deutschen Versen
, 3rd edn. (Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1967).
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A Guide to Old English
, 6th edn. (Oxford: Blackwell, 2001).
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The Nibelungenlied
, Penguin Classics (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1965).
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The Nibelungenlied
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Burton Raffel,
Das Nibelungenlied—Song of the Nibelungs
(New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2006).
Jesse L. Byock,
The Saga of the Volsungs: The Norse Epic of Sigurd the Dragon Slayer
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990).
Kevin Crossley-Holland,
Beowulf
(London: Macmillan, 1968).
Cyril Edwards,
Wolfram von Eschenbach: Parzival and Titurel
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Andrew Faulkes (trans.),
Snorri Sturluson: Edda
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Edward R. Haymes,
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The Saga of the Volsungs; The Saga of Ragnar Lodbrok together with the Lay of Kraka
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Lewis Thorpe,
Gregory of Tours: The History of the Franks
(Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1974).
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The Fourth Book of the Chronicle of Fredegar with its Continuations
(Edinburgh: Thomas Nelson, 1960).
C. M. Bowra,
Heroic Poetry
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George T. Gillespie,
A Catalogue of Persons Named in German Heroic Literature
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Edward R. Haymes and Susann Samples,
Heroic Legends of the North
(New York: Garland, 1996).
Albert B. Lord,
The Singer of Tales
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Theodore M. Andersson,
The Legend of Brynhild
, Islandica, 43 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1980).
——
A Preface to the Nibelungenlied
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Philological Quarterly
, 19 (1940), 29–65.
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[NL = the
Nibelungenlied
]
437 | Death of Gundaharius, Burgundian king, together with his family and 20,000 of his men, in battle against Huns, perhaps in the employ of Aetius, Roman governor of Gaul. |
c | Bleda (Blœdelin in |
453 | Death of Attila the Hun (Etzel in NL). |
454–526 | Theodoric the Great (Dietrich of Bern in NL). |
523 | Death of King Sigismund of Burgundy. |
567 | Brunihildis, Brunhild (=? Prünhilt in NL), Visigothic princess, marries Sigebert of Metz (=? Sivrit in NL). Ruled Burgundy from 599 to 613. |
575 | Murder of Sigebert of Metz by emissaries of Queen Fredegund. |
613 | Queen Brunhild tortured to death. |
c | The |
c | The oldest surviving |
c | MS A, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich, Cgm 34. |
1551, 1557 | Publication by Wolfgang Lazius of some strophes from MS C (now lost). |
1755 | Jakob Hermann Obereit rediscovers MS C of the |
1756 | Johann Jakob Bodmer publishes the last third of MS C. |
1768 | Rediscovery of MS B in St Gall Stiftsbibliothek. |
1779 | Rediscovery of MS A in the Hohenems library. |
1782 | First complete edition of |
1807–16 | Three editions of |
1826 | Der Nibelunge Not und die Klage |
1848–74 | Richard Wagner’s composition of |
1855–62 | Friedrich Hebbel’s trilogy, |
1866 | Karl Bartsch’s first edition of the |
1923–4 | Fritz Lang’s two-part film |
THE NIBELUNGENLIED
3rd Adventure. How Sivrit came to Worms
4th Adventure. How Sivrit fought against the Saxons
5th Adventure. How Sivrit beheld Kriemhilt for the very first time
6th Adventure. How Gunther went to Iceland to woo Prünhilt
7th Adventure. How Gunther won Prünhilt
8th Adventure. How Sivrit fetched his men
9th Adventure. How Sivrit was sent to Worms
10th Adventure. How Prünhilt was welcomed in Worms
11th Adventure. How Sivrit returned to his homeland with his wife
12th Adventure. How Gunther invited Sivrit to the festivity
13th Adventure. How Sivrit went with his wife to the festivity
14th Adventure. How the queens scolded one another
15th Adventure. How Sivrit was betrayed
16th Adventure. How Sivrit was slain
17th Adventure. How Sivrit was mourned over and buried
18th Adventure. How Sigmunt returned to his homeland
19th Adventure. How the hoard of the Nibelungs was brought to Worms
20th Adventure. How King Etzel sent to Burgundy for Kriemhilt
21st Adventure. How Kriemhilt travelled to the Huns
22nd Adventure. How Kriemhilt was welcomed by Etzel
23rd Adventure. How Kriemhilt saw to it that her brothers came to the festivity
24th Adventure. How Wärbel and Swemmel carried out their lord’s embassy
25th Adventure. How the Nibelungs travelled to the Huns
26th Adventure. How Gelpfrat was slain by Dancwart
27th Adventure. How they arrived in Pöchlarn
28th Adventure. How the Burgundians arrived among the Huns
29th Adventure. How Kriemhilt rebuked Hagen and how he did not stand up to greet her
30th Adventure. How Hagen and Volker kept watch
31st Adventure. How they went to church
32nd Adventure. How Dancwart slew Blœdelin
33rd Adventure. How the Burgundians fought against the Huns
34th Adventure. How they threw the dead out of the hall
35th Adventure. How Irinc was slain
36th Adventure. How the queen ordered that the hall be burned down
37th Adventure. How Rüedeger was slain
38th Adventure. How Lord Dietrich’s warriors were all slain
39th Adventure. How Sir Dietrich fought with Gunther and with Hagen
I
N
ancient tales many marvels are told us: of renowned heroes, of great hardship, of joys, festivities, of weeping and lamenting, of bold
warriors’ battles—now
you
may hear such marvels told!
*
1
There grew up in Burgundy a most noble maiden.
*
No one in all the lands
*
could be fairer. She was called Kriemhilt—she grew to be a beautiful woman. For her sake many knights were to lose their lives.
2
Wooing became that lovely maiden well. Bold warriors sought her love—no one wished her ill. Her noble form was beautiful beyond measure. The damsel’s virtues were an ornament to all other women.
3
Three kings, noble and powerful, were her guardians: Gunther and Gernot, those renowned warriors, and young Giselher, an outstanding knight. The lady was their sister—the princes had her in their care.
4
Those lords were munificent, of high-born lineage, outstanding warriors possessing armies of boldness beyond measure. Burgundy was the name of their land. In time to come they wrought great marvels in Etzel’s land. They resided with their armies in Worms by the
5
Rhine. Many proud knights from their lands served them with honour and renown until their end came. They afterwards died wretchedly because of two noble ladies’ enmity.
6
Their mother, a powerful queen, was called Lady Uote. Their father was called Dancrat, a man rich in courage, who bequeathed them their inheritance on his death—in his youth he had also won great repute.
7
The three kings were, as I have said, of very great courage. Subject to them were also the best warriors of whom tale has ever been told, strong and valiant, undaunted in fierce battles. These were Hagen of
8
Tronege, and also his brother, valiant Dancwart; Ortwin of Metz; the two margraves
*
Gere and Ekkewart; Volker of Alzey, never lacking in courage; Rumolt, the master of the kitchen, an outstanding knight;
9
Sindolt and Hunolt, those lords who had charge of the court and its repute—they were vassals of the three kings. They had many other warriors whose names I cannot tell.
10
Dancwart was marshal, and his kinsman, Ortwin of Metz, was the king’s steward. Sindolt, an outstanding knight, was cup-bearer.
Hunolt was chamberlain.
*
They knew how to act with high honour.
11
No one, indeed, could ever give you a full and true account of that court’s might and far-reaching power, of its most high dignity and of its chivalry, joyfully practised by those lords all their lives.