Ála flekks saga

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Ála flekks saga (

Romance saga, with influence from theological teachings, especially that of Augustine of Hippo.[1] It was the basis for three cycles of rímur.[2][3][4] It has been seen as an important early witness to the Snow White folktale type (ATU 709).[5]

Synopsis

Kalinke and Mitchell summarise the saga thus:

The saga blends motifs from the

folk tales. As a baby, Áli flekkr, the son of King Ríkarðr of England, is left exposed in the woods but is rescued by peasants. After he marries Þornbjǫrg, a maiden king, a number of misfortunes befall him because he has rejected the love of a female troll. He is temporarily turned into a wolf; in a dream he is wounded and can be cured only by the rejected troll's brothers. Eventually Áli succeeds his father as king of England.[6]

Manuscripts

Kalinke and Mitchell identified the following manuscripts of the saga:[6]

  • Arnamagnæan Institute: AM 181i, fol. (ca. 1670)
  • AM 181k, fol. (ca. 1650)
  • AM 181m, fol. (late 17th c)
  • AM 182, fol. (17th c)
  • AM 395, fol. (18th c)
  • AM 571, 4° (16th c), vellum, 3 leaves
  • AM 588b, 4° (late 17th c)
  • AM 588c, 4° (late 17th c)
  • AM 588p, 4° (17th c), defective
  • AM 589e, 4° (15th c), vellum, defective
  • AM 592a, 4° (17th c), defective beginning.
  • Royal Library, Copenhagen
    : NKS 1144, fol. (18th c), resume
  • NKS 1160, fol. (late 18th c)
  • NKS 1717, 4° (late 18th c)
  • NKS 1718, 4° (late 18th c), fragment
  • The British Library
    , London: Add. 4860, fol. (18th c.)
  • National Library, Reykjavik
    : Lbs 272, fol. (ca. 1700)
  • Lbs 840, 4° (1737)
  • Lbs 980, 4° (1686–87)
  • Lbs 1499, 4° (1880–1905)
  • Lbs 1940, 4° (1820)
  • Lbs 3966, 4° (1869–71)
  • Lbs 4447, 4° (1868–69), 1 leaf missing
  • Lbs 4485, 4° (1895–96)
  • JS 27, fol. (ca. 1670)
  • JS 634, 4° (17th–19th c)
  • JS 103, 8° (1788–89)
  • JS 408, 8° (19th c)
  • IB 201, 8° (late 17th c)
  • IB 801, 8° (19th c)
  • IBR 5, fol. (1680)
  • IBR 41, 8° (19th c)
  • IBR 92, 8° (ca. 1800)
  • National Museum, Reykjavik
    : Ásbúðarsafn, Sögubók (1795)
  • Royal Library, Stockholm: Papp. fol. nr 47
    (1690–91)
  • Papp. 4:o nr 5 (ca. 1650)
  • Papp. 4:o nr 6 (1663)

Editions and translations

References

  1. ^ Tiffany Nicole White, "Corruption and Redemption: An Ecotheological Reading of Ála Flekks saga," in Reading the Natural World in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance: Perceptions of the Environment and Ecology, ed. Thomas Willard (Turnhout: Brepols, 2020), 101-118.[1]  
  2. . Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  3. ISBN 9780253205476. Retrieved 15 January 2016. {{cite book}}: |first1= has generic name (help
    )
  4. . Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  5. ^ Jonathan Y. H. Hui, Caitlin Ellis, James McIntosh and Katherine Marie Olley, 'Ála flekks saga: A Snow White Variant from Late Medieval Iceland', Leeds Studies in English, n.s. 49 (2018), 45-64.
  6. ^ .

External links