Oddr Snorrason, a Benedictine monk in northern Iceland in the
late twelfth century, composed a landmark Latin biography of the
legendary Norwegian king Olaf Tryggvason (died 1000 C.E.). This
biography was soon translated into Icelandic, and the translation
(though not the Latin original) is preserved in two somewhat
differing versions and a small fragment of a third. The Saga of
Olaf Tryggvason is the first English translation of this text,
augmented by an introduction and notes to guide the reader.
There is a strong possibility that Oddr's biography was the
first full-length saga of the Icelandic Middle Ages. It ushered in
a century of saga writing that assured Iceland a unique place in
medieval literature and in the history of prose writing. Aside from
being a harbinger of the saga tradition, and indeed of the modern
novel, The Saga of Olaf Tryggvason has its own literary merits,
including an epic description of the great Battle of Svoldr, in
which King Olaf succumbed. In significant ways the narrative of
this battle anticipates the mature style of the classical sagas in
the thirteenth century.
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