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The Heroic Age

Chapter 3: NOTES.
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About This Book

A comparative study analyzes early Teutonic and Greek heroic poetry alongside the social and historical conditions that produced it. The author surveys Teutonic narrative traditions, their distribution, antiquity, modes of performance, and the mixture of historical, mythical, supernatural, and fictional elements they contain. He then examines Greek epic and related minstrelsy, weighing similar features despite scarcer external evidence. A concluding section identifies common characteristics across the two corpora and argues that parallels stem from analogous social conditions during corresponding heroic ages. Final chapters consider implications for society, government, religion, and the antecedent causes of those formative periods.


NOTES.

CHAPTER PAGE
I. The use of heroic names in England 64
II. On the dating of certain sound-changes in Anglo-Saxon 66
III. Literary influence in Beowulf 73
IV. On the Heroic poetry of the Slavonic peoples 101
V. The Heroic poetry of the Celtic peoples 105
VI. The Trojan Catalogue 244
VII. The Battle of Kossovo in Servian poetry 313
VIII. The social, political and religious characteristics of the Celtic and Slavonic Heroic Ages 427

Addenda Et Corrigenda 464
Index 469