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The Heliand : the Saxon Gospel : a translation and commentary

Author: G Ronald Murphy
Publisher: New York : Oxford University Press, 1992.
Edition/Format:   Print book : EnglishView all editions and formats
Summary:

A translation of a 9th-century Saxon epic poem that offers a poetic reworking of the Gospel into Northern European warrior imagery and culture. The text of the poem is accompanied by notes and an  Read more...

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Material Type: Internet resource
Document Type: Book, Internet Resource
All Authors / Contributors: G Ronald Murphy
ISBN: 0195073754 9780195073751 0195073762 9780195073768
OCLC Number: 25317714
Language Note: Translated from the Old Saxon G.R. Murphy.
Description: xviii, 238 pages ; 22 cm
Contents: The Heliand: The Saxon Gospel --
The Creator's spell, by which the whole world is held together, is taught to four heroes --
Zachary sees the Chieftain's angel in the shrine --
John comes to the light of mankind --
The All-Ruler's angel comes to Mary in Galileeland --
The Chieftain of mankind is born in David's hill-fort --
The Baby is brought to the Ruler's shrine --
Three thanes from the East, led by the workings of fate, follow a star --
The three foreign warriors present their gifts to the Ruler's Child --
Herod orders his warrior-companions to behead all two-year-old boys around Bethlehem --
Mary and Joseph find the holy Child at the shrine --
John announces Christ's coming to Middlegard --
Christ the Chieftain is immersed in the Jordan by His loyal thane John --
The Champion of mankind fights off the loathsome enemy --
Christ, the mighty Chieftain, chooses His first warrior-companions --
The mighty Rescuer calls twelve to be His men --
The Chieftain's instructions on the mountain; the eight Good Fortunes --
The instructions on the mountain --
The instructions on the mountain --
The instructions on the mountain; the secret runes of the Lord's Prayer --
The instructions on the mountain --
The instructions on the mountain --
The end of the instructions on the mountain --
The marriage feast in the guest-hall at Fort Cana --
At hill-fort Caphamaum, God's Child of Peace heals a household lad of a commander of a hundred men --
Christ the Rescuer raises the dead son of a widow outside Fort Nairn --
Christ commands the wind and the sea --
The mighty Christ heals the cripple lowered through the roof by his warrior-companions --
The story of the earl who sowed good seed --
The explanation of the story --
The story of the wheat and the weeds --
The grim-hearted Jews of Galileeland attempt to throw Christ off a cliff --
John the soothsayer is beheaded --
With five loaves and two fishes the Chieftain of human beings feeds a great throng of earls --
The mighty Child of God and good Peter walk on water --
Christ the Ruler heals the daughter of a woman from a foreign clan --
Peter, the best of thanes, is given power over Hel's gates --
On the mountaintop the Son of God gives off bright light --
Christ pays the king's head-tax to an arrogant thane --
Forgiving; the young man with the great treasure-hoard --
The story of the rich man and the beggar --
The story of the workers who came late to the vineyard --
Christ tells His loyal followers about His future torture and death; the curing of the blind men outside Fort Jericho --
The author explains the meaning of the cure of the blind --
Christ enters Fort Jerusalem and foretells its fate --
Christ praises the small gift to the shrine of the woman fated to poverty; He advises thanes to pay the emperor's taxes --
Christ the Champion protects the life-spirit of the woman caught in adultery --
Dissension over Christ's teaching; Martha and Mary send for Him; Thomas accepts a warrior's fate --
By decree of holy fate, God's son is able to raise Lazarus from the grave --
The clan-gathering of the Jewish warriors decides to kill Christ --
The Chieftain of human clans teaches at the shrine --
The coming of doomsday --
Doomsday --
The Passion begins; Judas betrays his own Chieftain to southern people; Christ washes the feet of His earls and thanes --
The last mead-hall feast with the warrior-companions --
The words of Christ give great powers to the bread and wine --
Christ's deep fear before battle; His last salute in the garden --
Christ the Chieftain is captured; Peter, the mighty swordsman, defends Him boldly --
Peter denies he is a warrior-companion of Christ --
Christ is brought before the assembly as a prisoner --
Christ stands in chains before Pilate of Pontusland --
Judas, the deserter, hangs himself --
Pilate, Caesar's thane, speaks with God's Son --
Warriors bring Christ in irons to King Herod; arrogant earls ridicule God's Child of Peace --
The Jewish warriors threaten Pilate with the ill-will of the emperor at Fort Rome --
Caesar's thane puts the Best of all men into the hands of the Jews --
The Chieftain is hanged on the criminal tree --
The Chieftain of mankind dies by the criminal-tree rope; His spirit escapes --
The body is removed from the gallows tree and buried in the earth; Christ's spirit returns at night to the corpse; Christ rises --
The angel of the All-Ruler tells the women that the Chieftain is on His way to Galileeland --
The grave-guards are bribed with jewels; Peter, John, and Mary Magdalene come to the grave --
Christ the Ruler joins the warrior-company of earls on the road to Emmaus Castle --
Germanic Religious Customs in Adam of Bremen's History of the Archbishops of Hamburg-Bremen --
Germanic Ties and Personal Loyalty --
Magic fn the Heliand --
Symmetrical Structure in the Heliand.
Other Titles: Heliand.
Responsibility: by G. Ronald Murphy.
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'it provides a fascinating insight into a world of which we knew little, assisted by Murphy's Introduction and footnotes ... Besides its fascination, the book raises many hermeneutical issues for the Read more...

 
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