- Kudrun
"Kudrun" (sometimes known as Gudrun Lied), is a
Middle High German epic, written probably in the early years of the 13th century, not long after theNibelungenlied , the influence of which may be traced upon it.It is preserved in a single
manuscript , which was prepared at the command of Maximilian I, and was discovered as late as 1820 in theCastle of Ambras inTirol . The author was an unnamedAustria n poet, but the story itself belongs to the cycle of sagas, which originated on the shores of theNorth Sea .The epic falls into three easily distinguishable parts: the adventures of
King Hagen ofIreland ; the romance ofHettel , king of theHegelingen , who woos and wins Hagen's daughter Hilde; and lastly the more or less parallel story of howHerwig , king ofSeeland , wins Gudrun, the daughter of Hettel and Hilde, in opposition to her father's wishes. Gudrun is carried off by a king ofNormandy , and her kinsfolk, who are in pursuit, are defeated in a great battle on the island ofWulpensand off the Dutch coast. The finest parts of the epic are those in which Gudrun, a prisoner in the Norman castle, refuses to become the wife of her captor, and is condemned to do the most menial work of the household. Here, thirteen years later, Herwig and her brotherOrtwin find her washing clothes by the sea; on the following day they attack the Norman castle with their army and carry out the long-delayed retribution.The epic of Gudrun is not unworthy to stand beside the greater Nibelungenlied, and it has been aptly compared with it as the
Odyssey to theIliad . Like the Odyssey, Gudrun is an epic of the sea, a story of adventure; it does not turn solely round the conflict of human passions; nor is it built up around one all-absorbing, all-dominating idea as the Nibelungenlied is. Scenery and incident are more varied, and the poet has an opportunity for a more lyric interpretation of motive and character. Gudrun is composed in stanzas similar to those of the Nibelungenlied, but with the essential difference that the last line of each stanza is identical with the others, and does not contain the extra accented syllable characteristic of the Nibelungen metre.Gudrun is also an unrelated character inNorse mythology .Editions
Gudrun was first edited by
von der Hagen in vol. 1. of his "Heldenbuch" (1820). Subsequent editions byA. Ziemann andA. J. Vollmer followed in 1837 and 1845. The best editions are those byKarl Bartsch (4th ed., 1880), who has also edited the poem for "Kurschners Deutsche Nationalliteratur" (vol. 6, 1885), byBarend Symons (1883) and byE. Martin (2nd ed., 1901).Ludwig Ettmüller first appliedLachmann 's ballad-theory to the poem (1841), andK. Mullenhoff ("Kudrun, die echten Teile des Gedichts", 1845) rejected more than three-quarters of the whole as not genuine. There are many translations of the epic into modern German, the best known being that ofK. Simrock (15th ed., 1884). A translation into English byM. P. Nichols appeared at Boston, U.S.A., in 1889.References
*1911
*K. Bartsch , "Beitrage fur Geschichte und Kritik der Kudrun" (1865)
*H. Keck "Die Gudrunsage" (1867)
*W. Wilmanns , "Die Entwickelung der Kudrundicbtung" (1873)
*A. Fecamp , "Le Poeme de Gudrun, ses origines, saformation et son histoire" (1892)
*F. Panzer , "Hilde-Gudrun" (1901).For later versions and adaptations of the saga see
0. Benedict , "Die Gudrunsage in der neueren Literatur" (1902).
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