- language.
Grettis saga
inspired a
number of
Icelandic rímur: 15th century:
Grettis rímur (8 rímur, anonymous,
attested in Kollsbók) 1656:
Grettis rímur (14...
-
inside the
burial mound or
grave (as in the
example of Kárr inn
gamli in
Grettis saga).
Commentators extend the term
draugr to the
undead in
medieval literature...
- Magnússon and
William Morris used it, too, in
their 1869
translation of
Grettis saga,
which features a
fight with the "barrow-wight" or "barrow-dweller"...
- i Hafrsfjorden".
Store norske leksikon.
Retrieved December 15, 2016. "
Grettis saga". islendingasogur.
Retrieved December 15, 2016.
Battle in Hafersfjord...
-
similarities with
other traditions and accounts,
including the
Icelandic Grettis saga, the
Norse story of
Hrolf Kraki and his bear-shapeshifting servant...
-
Greenland and
Vinland (modern Newfoundland).
Egils saga, Laxdæla saga,
Grettis saga, Gísla saga and
Gunnlaugs saga
ormstungu are also
notable and po****r...
-
unlike Egil's Saga, Harald's
conquest of
Norway sets off the plot of
Grettis saga.
Gretti's great-grandfather Önundr Wood-foot is said to be one of many people...
-
descriptions of the game are to be
found in the
following Icelandic sagas:
Grettis saga
chapter 15 Gísla saga
chapters 15 and 18
Egils saga
chapter 40 Eyrbyggja...
-
mentioned in a
number of
medieval Icelandic sources,
including Egil's saga and
Grettis saga. It is
however unclear how
similar this was to modern-day skyr, as...
- ulfheðinn), are
mentioned in the Vatnsdæla saga, the Haraldskvæði and the
Grettis saga and are
consistently referred to in the
sagas as a
group of berserkers...