The Eddas (Norse mythology).
Aage Henriksen has written: 'Den erindrende faun' -- subject(s): History and criticism, Danish literature, Norwegian literature 'Kierkegaards romaner' 'Gotisk tid' -- subject(s): Danish literature 'Methods and results of Kierkegaard studies in Scandinavia'
Stefania Buccini has written: 'The Americas in Italian Literature in the Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries'
F. J Daniels has written: 'Selections from Japanese literature (12th to 19th centuries)' -- subject(s): Translations into English, English literature, Japanese literature, Translations from Japanese
Frederic Edward Coenen has written: 'Studies in German literature of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries' -- subject(s): German literature, History and criticism
Matthew James Driscoll has written: 'The unwashed children of Eve' -- subject(s): History and criticism, Sagas, Icelandic literature, Popular literature, Iceland, Criticism and interpretation
A saga is like a series. For example, the Twilight SAGAis four books that go together. like a seriesA prose narrative usually written in Iceland between the years 1120-1400, dealing with the families that first settled in Iceland and their descendants, with the histories of the kings of Norway and the myths and legends of early Germanic gods and heroes.A modern prose narrative resembling a saga.A long, detailed report: recounted the saga of their family problems.
Eberhard Christopher Kennedy has written: 'Two Centuries of Roman Prose' -- subject(s): Latin prose literature
Peter Godfrey Foote has written: 'The Viking achievement' -- subject(s): Civilization, Northmen, Scandinavia, Social history, Viking Civilization, Vikings 'Aurvandilsta' '1117 in Iceland and England' -- subject(s): History, Law
Alexander Kazhdan has written: 'Studies on Byzantine literature of the eleventh and twelfth centuries' -- subject(s): Byzantine literature, History and criticism 'Change in Byzantine culture in the eleventh and twelfth centuries' -- subject(s): History, Histyory 'Byzanz und seine Kultur' 'People and power in Byzantium' -- subject(s): Civilization
Vikings lived mostly in Scandinavia, that's their homeland. Vikings also had some colonies in Iceland, Greenland and islands in between. They ruled parts of Britain for some centuries. There was a colony in Vinland around the year 1,000 in North America, which was first told about in oral histories then first written about in The Saga of Eric the Red and The Saga of Greenlandersabout 250 years after the fact.
Gunnar Thoroddsen. has written: 'The Constitution of Iceland' -- subject(s): Iceland
Bridget Moss has written: 'My foreign correspondent in Scandinavia'