Prose Edda
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Beschrijving
Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda is both a treasury of Norse mythology and a technical manual for the art of skaldic poetry. Composed in thirteenth-century Iceland, it gathers cosmogony, divine genealogies, heroic legends, and poetic diction into a lucid prose framework, most famously through Gylfaginning, Skáldskaparmál, and Háttatal. Its style is pedagogical, elegant, and at times wry, preserving pagan myth within a Christian literary culture. Snorri Sturluson (1179-1241) was an Icelandic chieftain, lawspeaker, historian, and poet whose political authority was matched by exceptional literary ambition. Living centuries after Iceland's conversion to Christianity, he recognized that the intricate language of earlier court poetry-especially kennings and mythic allusions-was becoming unintelligible. The Prose Edda was likely written to educate poets while safeguarding an endangered cultural memory. This book is indispensable for readers of medieval literature, mythology, and the history of poetic form. It offers the richest surviving account of the Norse gods and an unmatched guide to the aesthetics of skaldic verse. Anyone seeking the roots of Northern European imagination should read it closely.