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Book Review

Volume 104 • Number 3

July 2005



 

 

 

Oddaannálar og Oddverjaannáll. Edited by Eiríkur Pormódsson and Gudrún Ása Grímsdóttir. Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Islandi, 2003. Pp. clxxxi + 236. ISK 3,591.


Oddi, a place in southwestern Iceland that was famous during the Middle Ages for its rich church farm inhabited for several generations by a prominent family, figures in the titles of the two texts edited in this volume. In fact, most compilers and copyists credit Sæmundur frodi, priest at Oddi for half a century around 1200, with the authorship of Oddaannlar and his descendants (the men [verja] of Oddi) with Oddverjaannll. Doubts of such ancient origins were first expressed in the eighteenth century by Jn "lafsson from Grunnavk and Bishop Finnur Jnsson, but serious scholarly work on the Icelandic annals did not begin until 1888, when Gustav Storm published his edition, Islandske Annaler indtil 1578. Because of the geographic and chronological scope and the genre of the texts under consideration herethey are more chronicles than annalsStorm ignored Oddaannlar (except for a brief Excurs) but treated at length Oddverjaannll and published generous excerpts. In other words, the two texts are published here in their entirety for the first time.

Jenny Jochens
Baltimore, Maryland

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