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The Truth Behind England’s Oldest Myth
Beowulf eS
44
JOHN GRIGSBY
WATKINS
PUBLISHING
LONDON
First published in the UK in 2005 Reprinted 2006
Watkins Publishing, Sixth Floor, Castle House,
75-76 Wells Street, London W1T 3QH
Distributed in the USA and Canada by Sterling Publishing Co., Inc. 387 Park Avenue South, New York, NY 10016
Text Copyright © John Grigsby 2005 John Grigsby has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
without prior permission in writing from the Publishers
3579108642
Designed and typeset by Paul Saunders Printed and bound in Great Britain
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data Available Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Available
ISBN 13: 978-1-84293-153-0 ISBN 10: 1-84293-153-9
www.watkinspublishing.com
CONTENTS
©) List ofIllustrations List ofPlates Acknowledgements
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Prologue: Where Now the Horse and Rider? Introduction: The Keenest for Fame
- Part | OLD ENGLAND
17
CHAPTER I
Clans of the Sea Coasts
19
CHAPTER 2
Former Days On the Altars of their Idols
26
40
In Dread Waters
52
CHAPTER 3 CHAPTER 4
Part Il GODS AND MONSTERS
61
CHAPTER 5
Scyld Scefing
63
CHAPTER 6
The Barley God
CHAPTER 7 CHAPTER 8
Preyr The Wagon Ran After
75 85 93
CHAPTER 9
Elves and Evil Shades
IOI
CHAPTER I0
Choosers of the Slain
IIo
Part Ill TO KILL A KING
I2I
CHAPTER II _ Royal Obligations
123
CHAPTERI2_
The Hall turned to Ashes
138
CHAPTER 13.
The Wandering Inguz
150
CHAPTERI4
A Midwinter Game
162
Part IV BARLEY WOLF
169
CHAPTER I5
The Demon’s Head
sigs
CHAPTERI6
The Brimwylf
183
Epilogue: People of the Wolf
196
Notes
208
Appendices Timeline: 8000 BC-AD 1939
226
Chart 1: The Wuffingas Chart 2: The Geats Chart 3: The Swedes (Scylfings) Chart 4: The Danes (Scyldings) Map 1: Southern Scandinavia in Late Prehistory Map 2: The Age of Migrations (c. AD 400-600) Map 3: The Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms (c. AD 600-700)
232
Index
232 233 233 234 235 236
237
¢
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 1 Petroglyph of solar boat from prehistoric Scandinavia 2 Egyptian solar barque
71 71
3 Petroglyph of man with shield from prehistoric Scandinavia
73
4 Osiris as the growing corn
78
5 The Djed pillar
78
6 The statuette of Freyr from Rallinge
131
7 Horned figure from Gundestrup Cauldron
131
8 Boar-helmed warrior from Viking Torslunda helmet
185
9 Wolf-warrior from Vendel helmet
187
10 Wolf motif from Sutton Hoo purse-clasp
187
LIST OF PLATES 1 First page of the Beowulf manuscript 2 The Neolithic passage-grave at Om, Denmark 3 Inside the grave at Om. 4 The Trundholm sun-chariot 5 The Tollund Man
6 The remains of the girl from Egtved
_
7 Goddess (Nerthus?) from the Rynkeby Cauldron
8 9 to 11
The goddess Gefion ploughing Zealand from Sweden A Valkyrie on horseback The elves dancing, from an English chapbook The Broddenbjerg Freyr scene from the Gundestrup Cauldron Lemi) The ‘drowning’ Ritual burial monuments at Lejre The site of the Viking hall at Lejre, perhaps once the site of Heorot Plan of the halls at Lejre The rays of the sun entering Newgrange on midwinter’s morning Odin as depicted on a Viking helmet Odin rides his eight-legged horse Sleipnir, from the Gotland stone Os The helmet of the Wuffinga king Raedwald, buried at Sutton Hoo Re On SU Oo XO
eS aS SS SS lanl
Vil
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks to my agent, Frances Kelly, who believed in my work and urged me to continue writing at a point I was despondent; to Michael Mann for taking a risk; to my editor Matthew Cory for his patience, his unfailingly helpful suggestions and ability to sort the wheat from the chaff; to Helga Schtitze at the National Museum of Denmark who was so kind and helpful to us on our brief visit to the land of the Scyldings, and without whom we would never have found the ruins of Heorot or the tomb of the giants at @m; to Brian Bates, Kathleen
Herbert and Richard North without whose pioneering and inspiring works this book would not have been possible to write; to Paul Devereux for letting me rant; and, finally, to a certain late professor of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford, JRR Tolkien, whose books first kindled the
northern-fire within me. On a personal note, I would like to thank Heidi, for once again
putting up with a husband living more in the Dark Ages than the 21st century. I hope you read this book, and see where I have been the last six months - if not, at least read the dedication. Thanks to Chloe, who
took her cousin’s place as ‘the wolf in our living-room’ when our much-missed Siri left us. Your silent companionship makes the hours of typing less lonely.
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