Skip to main content
MEDIUM ÆVUM
user menu 2
  • Donate
  • Join
  • Members
Main navigation
  • About Us
  • Journal
  • Monographs
  • Essay Prize
  • Events
User account menu
Main navigation
  • About Us
    • People
    • Conflict of Interest Policy
    • Constitution
  • Journal
    • For Contributors
    • Get MÆ
  • Monographs
    • Browse / Buy / Download
    • Submit a Proposal
  • Essay Prize
    • Essay Prize Rules
    • Submit your Entry
  • Events
    • Ox. Med. Grad. Conf.
    • Annual Lecture & Gen. Meeting
    • Day Conference
Prose Edda
  • Snorri Sturluson
Articles
Author(s) Title Reference
HEATHER O'DONOGHUE What has Baldr to do with Lamech? The lethal shot of a blind man in Old Norse myth and Jewish exegetical traditions 72/1, p. 82
Reviews
Author(s) Title Reference
Ursula Dronke The Prose Edda of Snorri Sturluson: Tales from Norse Mythology, by Sigurður Nordal, Jean I. Young 25/2, p. 121
ANTHONY FAULKES Ursula Dronke (ed.), The Poetic Edda, II: Mythological Poems 68/1, p. 159

languages

  • Scandinavian
  • Old Norse
  • Old Danish
  • Danish
  • Latin
  • Italian
  • Norse
  • Old French
  • Eddaic
  • Thirteenth-century Old Norse
  • Middle English
  • Dantean Italian
  • Icelandic
  • Prose Old Norse

works

  • Beowulf
  • Baldrs draumar
  • Prose Edda
  • Gesta Danorum
  • Völuspá
  • Gautreks saga
  • The Poetic Edda
  • Skírnismál
  • Vplundarkvida
  • Lokasenna
  • Rigsfiula

people

  • Beowulf
  • Snorri Sturluson
  • E. V. Gordon
  • Saxo Grammaticus
  • Lamech
  • Hreķel
  • Herebeald
  • Haeõcyn
  • Hygelac
  • Baldr
  • Hôõr
  • Frigg
  • Oõinn
  • Loki
  • Gabriel Turville-Petre
  • Roberta Frank
  • Richard North

subjects

  • textuality
  • intertextuality
  • narrative
  • cultural
  • linguistics
  • myth
  • literary
  • secularity
  • humour
  • irony
  • translation
  • interpretation
  • Christianity
  • style
  • heroism
  • speculative
  • rational
  • fratricide
  • accidental
  • sacrificial
  • patriarchal
  • poetics
  • caution
  • pagan
  • comedy
  • academia
  • editorial

places

  • Iceland
  • Norway
  • Birmingham
  • Oxford
  • Cambridge
  • Scandinavia
  • Danish
  • Geats
Main navigation
  • About Us
    • People
    • Conflict of Interest Policy
    • Constitution
  • Journal
    • For Contributors
    • Get MÆ
  • Monographs
    • Browse / Buy / Download
    • Submit a Proposal
  • Essay Prize
    • Essay Prize Rules
    • Submit your Entry
  • Events
    • Ox. Med. Grad. Conf.
    • Annual Lecture & Gen. Meeting
    • Day Conference

(C) MEDIUM ÆVUM / The Society for the Study of Medieval Languages and Literature (SSMLL). The Society is a UK registered charity (no.: 1130022). Address: History Faculty, George Street, Oxford, OX1 2RL. UK. Email: ssmll[at]ox.ac.uk.