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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: HAN-HEG |
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HAVELOK THE DANE , an Anglo-Danish romance. The hero, under the name of CUHERAN or CUARAN, was a scullion-jongleur at the court of Edelsi (Alsi) or Godric, king of Lincoln and Lindsey. At the same court was brought up Argentille or Goldborough, the orphan daughter of Adelbrict, the Danish king of Norfolk, and his wife Orwain, Edelsi's sister; and Edelsi, to humiliate his ward, married her to the scullion Cuaran. But, inspired by a vision, Cuaran and Goldborough set out for Grimsby
interpolation between Geffrei Gaimar's Brut and his Estorie des Engles (c. 115o) and in the Anglo-Norman Lai d'Havelok (12th century). The English Havelok (c. 1300) is written in a Lincoln-shire dialect and embodies abundant local tradition. A short version of the tale is interpolated in the Lambeth MS. of Robert Mannyng's Handlyng Synne. The story reappears more than once in English literature, notably in the ballad of " Argentille and Curan " in William Warner's Albion's England. The name of Havelok (Habloc, Abloec, Abloyc) is said to correspond in Welsh to Anlaf or Olaf. Now the historical Anlaf Curan was the son of a Viking chief
exile by his stepmother's brother iEthelstan, and took refuge
The mythical elements in the Havelok story are numerous. Argentille, as H. L. Ward points out, is a disguised Valkyrie. Like Svava she inspired a dull and nameless youth, and as Hild raised the dead to fight by magic, so Argentille in Havelok and Hermuthruda in Amlelh prop up dead or wounded men with stakes to bluff the enemy. Havelok's royal lineage is betrayed by his flame breath when he is asleep, a phenomenon which has parallels in the history of Servius Tullius and of Dietrich of Bern. Part of the Havelok legend lingers in local tradition. Havelok destroyed his enemies in Denmark by casting down great stones upon them from the top of a tower, and Grim is said to have ' H. L. Ward (Cat. of Romances, i. 426) suggests that it was the mention of Constantine in the Havelock
, A different person from the second wife of Anlaf Curan, also (;ormflaith, who forms another link with Amlethus, as she was a woman of the Hermuthruda type and married her husband's conqueror.kicked three of the turrets from the church tower in his efforts to destroy the enemy's ships. John Weever (Antient Funerall Monuments, 1631, p. 749) says that the privilege of the town in Elsinore, where its merchants were free from toll, was due to the interest
Grimsby
The English MS. of Havelok (MSS. Laud Misc. ro8) in the Bodleian library is unique. It was edited for the Roxburghe Club by Sir F. Madden in 1828. This edition contains, besides the English text, the two French versions. There are subsequent editions by W. W. Skeat (1868) for the E.E. Text Society, by F. Holthausen (London, New York
Hardy
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