- Gothicismus
Gothicismus, Gothism, or Gothicism ( _sv. Göticism) is the name given to what is considered to have been a
cultural movement inSweden . The founders of the movement wereNicolaus Ragvaldi , the brothersJohannes Magnus ,Olaus Magnus andOlof Rudbeck d.ä. . They all held the belief that theGoths had originally lived in Sweden. This myth continued to hold power in the 17th century, when Sweden was a great power following theThirty Years' War , but lost most of its sway in the 18th. It was revitalized bynational romanticism in the early 19th century, this time with thevikings as heroic figures.Origins
The name is derived from
Jordanes 's account of the Gothicurheimat inScandinavia (Scandza ), and the Gothicists in Sweden believed that the Goths had originated from Sweden. Some scholars in Denmark also attempted to identify the Goths with theJutes , however, these ideas did not lead to the same widespread cultural movement in the Danish society as it did in the Swedish. In contrast with the Swedes, the Danes of this era did not forward claims to political legitimacy based on assertions that their country was the original homeland of the Goths and that the conquest of the Roman Empire was proof of their own country's military valor and power through history. [Sondrup, Steven P. and Virgil Nemoianu (2004). "Nonfictional Romantic Prose: Expanding Borders". In the International Comparative Literature Association's History of Literatures in European Languages series. John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2004, ISBN 9027234515, p. 143.]The Gothicismus movement took pride in the Gothic tradition that the
Ostrogoth s and their kingTheodoric the Great who assumed power in theRoman Empire had Scandinavian ancestry. This pride was expressed as early as themedieval chronicle s, where chroniclers wrote about the Goths as the ancestors of the Scandinavians, and it permeated the writings of the Swedish writerJohannes Magnus ("Historia de omnibus gothorum seonumque regibus") and his brotherOlaus Magnus ("Historia de gentibus septentrionalibus "). Both works had a large impact on contemporary scholarship in Sweden.During the 17th century, Danes and Swedes competed for the collection and publication of
Iceland manuscript s,Norse saga s, and the twoEdda s. In Sweden, the Icelandic manuscripts became part of an origin myth and were seen as proof that the greatness and heroism of the oldGeat s had been passed down through the generations to the current population. This pride culminated in the publication ofOlaus Rudbeck 's "Atland eller Manheim " (1679–1702), where he claimed thatSweden was identical toAtlantis .Romantic nationalism
During the 18th century, the Swedish Gothicismus movement had sobered somewhat, but it resurged again during the
Romantic nationalism from ca 1800 and onwards with Geijer and Tegnér in theGeatish society .In
Denmark , romantic nationalism led writers such as Ewald, Grundtvig and Oehlenschläger to take a renewed interest in Old Norse subjects, and in other parts of Europe, the interest in Norse mythology, history and language was represented by the Englishman Gray, the Germans Herder and Klopstock, and by the Swiss Mallet.Architecture
In
Scandinavia narchitecture , Gothicismus had a prime in the 1860s and 1870s, but it continued until ca 1900. The interest in Old Norse subjects led to the creation of a special architecture in wood inspired by theStave church es, and it was inNorway that the style had its largest impact. The details that are often found in this style are dragon heads, and it is often called "dragon style", false arcades, lathedcolonnade s, protruding lofts and a ridged roof.References
ee also
*
Götaland theory
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.