Kolbeinn Tumason (Kolb)
13th century; volume 4; ed. Guðrún Nordal;
Lausavísur (Lv) - 9
III. Lausavísa (Lv) - 1
VII. Jónsvísur (Jónv) - 5
This edition is currently in preparation.
The biography below may represent a superseded edition, notes and/or
an interim or draft version. Do not cite this material without
consulting the volume and skald editors. Kolbeinn Tumason (1173-1208) was a member of the Ásbirningar family and the most powerful chieftain in northern Iceland around 1200. In order to cement his position, Kolbeinn used his influence to ensure the election of his wife’s cousin Guðmundr Árason as bishop of Hólar, the episcopal seat in Skagafjörður, in 1201. Guðmundr, however, proved to be a staunch advocate of ecclesiastical independence from secular chieftains and thus he and Kolbeinn soon came into conflict with one another. Guðmundr excommunicated Kolbeinn several times between 1205 and 1207; in 1208 Kolbeinn mounted an attack on Guðmundr and his supporters at Víðines (Hjaltadalur), in the course of which Kolbeinn was killed (Gunnar Karlsson 1975, 34-5; Magnús Stefánsson 1975, 118-29).
Kolbeinn lived at Víðimýrr in Skagafjǫrðr, where he had a church dedicated to the Virgin and S. Peter. Although he was not in orders, Kolbeinn was a man of some education, as his poetry reveals. It also reveals his deeply religious nature, notwithstanding his opposition to Guðmundr Árason. In addition to several lvv (Kolb LvIV) and three sts composed immediately before his death, which are variously quoted in Stu, GBp or TGT, Kolbeinn is said to have been the author of a poem in praise of Mary, of which, however, no trace remains (GBpA, 457 n. 1, 491 n. 2; GBpB, 569-70). Five sts from a poem in honour of S. John (Kolb Jónv) have been preserved in Jón4. ‘It is no doubt [John] the Evangelist’s Association with [Mary] which led him to compose poetry in his honour’ (Cormack 1994, 42).
|
Jónsvísur (‘Vísur about John the Apostle’)
—
Kolb JónvVII
Beatrice La Farge 2007, ‘ Kolbeinn Tumason, Jónsvísur’ in Margaret Clunies Ross (ed.), Poetry on Christian Subjects. Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 7. Turnhout: Brepols, pp. 223-7. <https://skaldic.org/m.php?p=text&i=1289> (accessed 27 May 2022)
stanzas: 1
2
3
4
5
Skj: Kolbeinn Tumason: 1. Jónsvísur (AII, 37, BII, 45-6)
SkP info: VII, 226-7 |
old edition
introduction
edition
manuscripts
transcriptions
concordance
search
files
| 5 — Kolb Jónv 5VII
edition
interactive
full text
transcriptions
old edition
references concordance
Cite as: Beatrice La Farge (ed.) 2007, ‘Kolbeinn Tumason, Jónsvísur 5’ in Margaret Clunies Ross (ed.), Poetry on Christian Subjects. Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 7. Turnhout: Brepols, pp. 226-7.
Frami gengr hátt, sás himna herteitir þér veitir, snardeilandi sólar sunds, á margar lundir. Hárs á hvern veg meiri hyrbjóðr, an kyn þjóðar, Alda garðs, með orðum yðra dýrð geti skýrða.
Frami gengr hátt, sás himna herteitir þér veitir, snardeilandi sólar sunds, á margar lundir. Hárs á hvern veg meiri hyrbjóðr, an kyn þjóðar, Alda garðs, með orðum yðra dýrð geti skýrða.
Frami, sás himna her teitir veitir þér, gengr hátt á margar lundir, snardeilandi sólar sunds. Hár Alda garðs hyrbjóðr [e]s meiri á hvern veg, an kyn þjóðar geti skýrða yðra dýrð með orðum.
|
text
prose order
That distinction which {the gladdener {of the host of the heavens}} [(lit. ‘host-gladdener of the heavens’) ANGELS > = God (= Christ)] grants you rises high in many ways, {speedy distributer {of the sun of the sound}}. [GOLD > GENEROUS MAN] {The high offerer {of the fire {of the fence of Alden}}} [(lit. ‘high fire-offerer of the Alden-fence’) SEA > GOLD > GENEROUS MAN] is greater in every way than {the family of people} [MANKIND] are able to expound your glory with words. |
context: In Jón4 1874, 512 this st. is prefaced with the remark: Nærr enda sins verks setr Ko[l]beinn þessa visu af guðligum veitzlum ok verðleikum sęls Johannis; hann segir sva ‘Near the end of his poem Kolbeinn places this st. about the divine gifts and merits of blessed John; he says as follows’.
texts: ‹Jón4 12 editions: Skj Kolbeinn Tumason: 1. Jónsvísur 5 (AII, 37; BII, 46); Skald II, 29, NN §2165; Jón4 1874, 512, Bugge 1874, 936, GBpB, 570n.
sources
|
|