|
Akkerisfrakki:
Traditions Concerning
Óláfr Tryggvason and Hallfredr Óttarsson
vandrædaskáld and the Problem of the Conversion
by JOHN LINDOW,
University of California, Berkely
According to the opening words of Ari Porgilsson's account of the Conversion
of Iceland to Christianity, in chapter 7 of his Íslendingabók,
Óláfr Tryggvason brought Christianity into Norway and out
to Iceland. King Óláfr sent the missionary bishop Pangbrandr
to Iceland, and after the failure of that mission, he flew into a rage
and threatened to maim or kill those Icelanders who were in Norway. That
same summer he extracted from the leading men, Hjalti Skeggjason and Gizurr
Teitsson, a promise of support and the assurance that the prospects for
a successful Conversion were good. Upon their return to Iceland, accompanied
by the priest Pormódr, their efforts on behalf of the new religion
and those of their opponents culminated in the famous scene at the alpingi
(general assembly) when the pagan lawspeaker Porgeirr went under the cloak
and emerged to proclaim a new religion for the land.
|
|