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Saga Stories #6: Harðar Saga 

The Reykjavík Grapevine
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Join Dr Matthew Roby ( / matthewhroby ) on a trip around southwest Iceland and he'll tell you all about Harðar saga, the tale of an unlucky hero, some tough outlaws, and two even tougher women.
For the first story, we travel to the southwestern shore of Þingvallavatn, about 15 km south of Þingvellir, to the ruins of an old farmstead at Ölfus. These ruins are relatively recent, but it's thought that they lie on the same site of the medieval farmstead of the same name, and it's possible that this was the very same farm where Hörðr is said to be born in the saga. Here, we learn of Hörðr's catastrophic first steps at the age of three, for which he is cursed by his mother.
For the second story, we travel to Dögurðarnes, a peninsula at the head of Hvalfjörður, about 40 km northeast of Reykjavík. Here, we learn about Hörðr's years as an outlaw on the tiny island of Geirshólmr, which can be seen from the shore. We also learn about how Hörðr and his outlaw band are eventually lured from their island fortress to Dögurðarnes, where they are betrayed and executed.
For the third and final story, we travel just a few kilometres further north along the head of the fjord to the mouth of the Bláskeggsá river. Here, we learn about how Hörðr's courageous wife Helga escapes from the island in the middle of the night. She manages to swim to shore, carrying her four-year-old child and helping her eight-year-old child as she does so, before making the exhausting trek through the mountains to the home of her sister-in-law, Þorbjörg. We also learn about how these two women, Helga and Þorbjörg, ensure that Hörðr is properly avenged by organising twenty-four vengeance killings.
To watch, hear, and read more about the sagas, you can find Dr Matthew Roby at:
Website: www.matthewroby.com​​​
Facebook: / matthewhroby
Twitter: / matthewhroby
Instagram: / matthewharoldroby
Or buy a book in English at our shop:
shop.grapevine.is/search?q=saga​
If you are struggling to understand the Icelandic names of people or places in this video, don’t forget to turn on closed captioning. If you are looking for a compiled information set from Iceland, please consider subscribing to our newsletter: grapevine.is/newsletter-sign-....

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16 апр 2021

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Комментарии : 146   
@adamclark6756
@adamclark6756 3 года назад
The fact that you can tell these stories while showing us where it all happened adds so much to the excellent telling. Love this series, thank you. The outro music from Heilung was very cool too.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you for your comment. We completely agree: nothing complements these gripping stories so well as the chance to tell them in the stunning landscapes where they're set. We're glad you liked it and we hope you'll stay tuned for more. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@philipzivnuska7321
@philipzivnuska7321 3 года назад
Thank you Dr Roby for bringing these stories to life. One can see how these Sagas inspire in inform the Icelandic people even today. Your willingness to travel to the actual location really adds so much to the Saga. In this case the scenery is beyond spectacular. Truly awe inspiring. Wow.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you for your kind words. Yes, the scenery really brings the saga to life, especially in a case like this where the landscape -- especially the island fortress -- plays such a key role in the narrative. This series has been a great opportunity for me to visit all these places I've read about for so long, and I'm glad I can also share them with a wider audience. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@dawnhawley4525
@dawnhawley4525 3 года назад
Dr. Roby, I found your saga stories after I became so interested in watching, with many others, for where and when the volcano in Iceland might erupt. When I started watching the sagas, the first one that was on my youtube "you might be interested" list was saga #4. I watched it -and then I went to find numbers 1, 2, & 3. I watched them all in order that night including #4 again. Since then I have been watching and waiting for the next ones. I love the scenery as you show us where these sagas took place. I use the closed captions to see the Icelandic words and names that are used in the stories... and I find myself trying to pronounce them and rewind and listen to your pronunciation and try to say it. I am so surprised at how much I enjoy listening to the stories and learning some of the words and pronunciation in them. Thank you for bringing them to us that we might learn about some of the history of your country.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you for your interest and support. Really glad you're enjoying the series so much! Our main goal is to bring awareness of Icelandic language and literature to a wider audience, so it's a real joy to read such comments. We'll keep them coming for you! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@northernskys
@northernskys 3 года назад
Brilliant story telling. Brilliant camera work. This is how all Saga's should be told.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
We're glad you think so, as we have plans to tell many more this way! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@tuckersbowtie
@tuckersbowtie 3 года назад
Thank you! A great way to bring these stories to a wider audience. 🙏🏼
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you. Our main goal is to try and spread the word about medieval Icelandic literature and culture as far as we can, so it's really satisfying to read comments like this. Glad you liked it and we hope you'll stay tuned for more! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@SunnySunShine175
@SunnySunShine175 3 года назад
It is soo beautiful there .Thank you so much , I quite enjoy these Sagas. It is very interesting. Great Tidings from Florida USA.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you for your interest and support. It's really great to hear that the stories are being enjoyed all around the world! Yes, the scenery for this one was especially beautiful, and the weather was unusually cooperative. Hope you'll stay tuned for more Saga Stories in the future. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@ktoyogasurf
@ktoyogasurf 3 года назад
WOW at 7:00 that scenery! Iceland is breathtaking. Love listening to these Saga Stories. Y'all do a great job making these stories understandable. 👍
@naplesbeachfan
@naplesbeachfan 3 года назад
I haven’t seem a tree. Are there trees in Iceland? Have tou seen any?
@ktoyogasurf
@ktoyogasurf 3 года назад
@@naplesbeachfan From what I have learned there used to be many more trees but still forests around today. Some of this landscape such as the volcanos I guess make it tough for trees to grow but also some websites mention sheep being part of it. I am not totally sure. Have read there are over 230 species of trees in Iceland so there are still forests and maybe we just aren't seeing them in some of these awesome landscapes.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you so much for your interest in the videos! We're glad you're enjoying them. KTO Yoga Surf is correct: there were many more trees at the beginning of the settlement age (c. 870), with an estimated more than 25% of the landmass covered with birch forest. This was possible at the time, because the climate was warmer than it is today. Unfortunately, human activity led to widespread deforestation. The sagas also attest to this, with forested land becoming much sought after (and fought over!). Until recent times, with a colder climate, very shallow soil cover, and much of the arable land used for grazing sheep, it was impossible for these trees to recover. But now there are efforts to re-forest certain areas, including several reasonably sized forests in the capital region. Thanks again for your interest and questions, and we hope you'll stay tuned for more Saga Stories in future. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@vocative-name
@vocative-name 3 года назад
I just love how Dr. Matthew Roby always gives full detailed explanatory answers on people's comments!!! 👏🏻
@ptournas
@ptournas 3 года назад
@@ktoyogasurf I was in Iceland January1969 to January 1971, and the only trees I saw then were relatively small ones in Reykjavik and a few in some of the larger towns and villages. I returned for a vacation in 1989 and the situation seemed pretty much the same. I vacationed there once again two years ago, and was very surprised to see a few small forests here and there in the countryside. I later found out that planting for reforestation began to be taken more seriously around 1990 and the seedling planted per year increased from about 1 million per year to 6 million per year around 2008. It dropped to about 3 million per year by about 2015, mostly due to budget cuts after the financial crisis, but I was never able to find much information on the project after 2015, although I know it is still moving forward, and still see occasional articles on government discussions of the program in the Grapevine and other Icelandic news sources.
@thormusique
@thormusique 3 года назад
Once again, another brilliant story for this wonderful and fascinating series. Thanks very much for sharing!
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you for your continued support, and for your kind words. We're glad you liked it. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@karliw2218
@karliw2218 3 года назад
Thank you for your Saga Stories. Love them💕
@carolrohrer325
@carolrohrer325 3 года назад
This was absolutely delightful though the story was sad. It’s not hard to imagine that survival long ago in Iceland must have been very difficult. Heroism and perseverance, such a big part of sagas, were necessities of life and the twists and turns of the hero’s story kept me interested until the end. Telling the story in the actual setting brings the story to life. The scenery is gorgeous but I’m glad I didn’t have to make a living off of that land. Thanks for the story time!
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Yes, life must have been tough. Makes it all the more impressive that this society produced so many great works of literature. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@bobfenz3184
@bobfenz3184 3 года назад
These saga stories are fascinating. A view of medieval Iceland which is new to me. Well done and I look for more!
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you for your continued interest and support! Glad you're enjoying them. We'll keep them coming! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@DanNovatnak
@DanNovatnak 3 года назад
Thank you for breathing life into the Sagas! This series is incredibly helpful for setting the scene of each one in the context of the landscape of Iceland.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you! Yes, it's been a great experience for me too: finally visiting all these places I've only read about for years. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@epincion
@epincion 3 года назад
Excellently done, if a very grim tale. Life in medieval Iceland must have been very tough. Thanks Mathew.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Yes, it's hard for most of us to imagine just how challenging it was, especially for the less wealthy farmers. But the laws and sagas show us that, in the face of such hardship, society can only thrive if there are mechanisms in place to ensure that people take care of one another. Thanks for your interest and we hope you'll stay tuned for more. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@philadams964
@philadams964 3 года назад
Very interesting saga, brought to life walking the landscape it happen in.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you for your support. We're glad you liked it, and we hope you'll stay tuned for more Saga Stories in the future. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@earthjustice01
@earthjustice01 11 месяцев назад
The landscape tells the tale! The utter starkness and emptiness of the landscape suggests the poverty and desperation of the protagonists of these sagas.
@patponce
@patponce 3 года назад
Really awesome story Dr Roby! I had a lot of images in my mind while you were telling the story. Being on site adds a fantastic dimension to the tale. I would love to follow a series of short films with all the sagas you have already told us!
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you for your continued interest and support. We really appreciate it! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@andreasvonsinnen
@andreasvonsinnen 3 года назад
well, congrats, you managed to let me watch an almost 30mins long video. this is something that happens not very often. looking forward for forthcoming episodes.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
High praise indeed! Thank you for your continued interest and support; we really appreciate it. And we'll keep the videos coming for you. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@leslie3832
@leslie3832 3 года назад
I have enjoyed these Sagas so much and particularly your version of them. So understandable. Thank you so much for creating them and telling them in your way!! I just finished the History of the Vikings: Children of Ash and Elm, by Neil Price. So much inside there. Your saga versions help put real people to the history. Thank you for all your thinking through the sagas and creating these videos. I appreciate it. Best wishes.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you for your kind words. Glad to hear you're enjoying the series so much! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@barbaraseymour3437
@barbaraseymour3437 3 года назад
Hard life in those times.
@mattdavis2985
@mattdavis2985 3 года назад
Thank you for sharing with us It is beautiful place come with sad stories 💔
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you for watching! Glad you enjoyed it. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@clydewaltenbaugh563
@clydewaltenbaugh563 2 года назад
This series is terrific and Dr. Roby is such a great storyteller. Walking through the areas that the sagas took part and giving us the story is icing on the cake!
@arminlauss
@arminlauss 3 года назад
His voice is so soothing and relaxing. Wanna listen to him forever. Very nice video
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 2 года назад
Thanks very much! Hope you'll stay tuned for more coming soon!
@lm3741
@lm3741 3 года назад
Another wonderful interpretation of a great saga story. Hvalfjörður is a beautiful area; it’s hard to imagine such tragedy and treachery happening here. It is so peaceful and quiet today. Thank you for bringing this story to life. 🇮🇸🇨🇦
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 2 года назад
Thanks for your kind words. Glad you enjoyed it and we hope you'll stick around for more Saga Stories coming soon!
@juliocean1331
@juliocean1331 3 года назад
Brilliant! Great saga. Thanks very much. Stay safe. 🙏
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 2 года назад
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it.
@mikebattista1523
@mikebattista1523 3 года назад
The blood fued stories are the most interesting of the Sagas. Please keep them coming!
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thanks for your continued support! We'll definitely keep them coming and, of course, we'll make sure there's plenty of feud stories in future episodes. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@reginaromsey
@reginaromsey 3 года назад
Isn’t the Sampo and the stories around it from Finland? Vainomoinen, Lemonkeinin,the hag? Many many years ago there was a live action movie or child’s TV show, one episode, or The Sampo! Telling the story with actors painted to become the road, and other scenes in the story. Vainomoinen, the great Smith crafts the Sampo, a Mill that will always by full of food. Leminkeinen, the idiot hero loses it to the Hag and tries to get it back.
@alisonstandley1910
@alisonstandley1910 3 года назад
Excellent summary of a complicated story.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you! Yes, it can certainly be challenging to keep all the details straight in my head. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@betthauser
@betthauser 3 года назад
Excellent. Brilliant. Riveting.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thanks for watching! Glad you enjoyed it. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@leandabee
@leandabee 3 года назад
There ya go, the both of you on your epic walks😃. At 4.51, omg, that mountain range, serious volcanic activity went on there😲. Amazeballs! 😍🇦🇺
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Yes, it keeps us in shape! Thanks for your interest and support. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@lailsevickmtornetto9485
@lailsevickmtornetto9485 3 года назад
I love the way you present these sagas...walking the land brings a great experience to these sagas.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Glad you like them! Yes, it's a really great opportunity for me too. I've been reading about these places for years, so it's a real treat to see them in person! Thanks for your interest and support. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@hellerjerry
@hellerjerry 3 года назад
Great story and matching location...........thanks
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thanks for watching! Glad you enjoyed it. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@janineschneebeli7992
@janineschneebeli7992 3 года назад
Thank you very much for this interesting saga!
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Glad you enjoyed it! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@reginaromsey
@reginaromsey 3 года назад
Good! A lovely surprise for today! Thank you for taking the time and energy to do this!
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thanks, as ever, Wanda! It's our pleasure. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@allanroff202
@allanroff202 3 года назад
Awesome job on the saga story. Matthew Keep up the good work
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you! Glad you're enjoying them. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@riciarites5065
@riciarites5065 3 года назад
Wonderful, #5 has arrived. saved for later!
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thanks for your continued support! I hope you enjoy it. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@annamichaelsdottir5834
@annamichaelsdottir5834 3 года назад
Another great Saga story. Thank you.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you for your continued interest! Glad you enjoyed it! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@pretense101
@pretense101 3 года назад
This was a fantastic story my fist time on this site, I have subscribed and wait for more , thanks for the best scenery and the way you tell it !
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thanks for your interest. Glad you're enjoying the series. We'll keep them coming! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@astrodiver1
@astrodiver1 3 года назад
What a great series. Thank you! When you mentioned an island in the fjord about 35 miles to the NE of Reykjavik, I thought "I remember that Island!" I remember a small roadside sign pointing it out. For some reason I thought the sign was on the South side of the fjord but that wouldn't make sense. I dunno. Even though I don't believe a word of it, interesting story.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 2 года назад
Yes, I think many people drive by without noticing it. And yes, you're right: this is a good example of a saga whose historical accuracy must have been questioned by even the most credulous medieval audiences. The island just seems too small to accommodate all those outlaws. Thanks for your interest in the series and we hope you'll stick around for more videos coming soon! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@peterszabo1967
@peterszabo1967 3 года назад
Wow, fantastiskt berättande, fascinerande landskap. Jag tyckte verkligen om varje enskilt avsnitt hittills ... och kan inte vänta med att se nästa lilla påminnelse dyker upp och meddela om din nästa video. Fortsätt med den goda vanan och lägg upp dessa vids. Det var också underbart när du citerade några meningar på isländska originalspråket (eller gamla norska kanske :))
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Tack så mycket! Med vänliga hälsningar, Matthew Roby
@guitarmark40
@guitarmark40 3 года назад
Keep it up! I am enjoying the story's.👍✌🤯
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thanks for your interest! Glad you're enjoying them. There's some more very interesting ones coming soon. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@thorsgoldensSong
@thorsgoldensSong 3 года назад
Something magical happened at 22:48 😍 I love this series! Anticipating the next one already.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thanks for your continued interest in the series! We look forward to bringing you another one soon. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@chartiermarielle2604
@chartiermarielle2604 2 года назад
Very interesting, thank you!
@28105wsking
@28105wsking 3 года назад
A very wonderful recounting, Dr. Roby, and thanks for walking all that way to show us just where the story happened. It is so amazing that she could swim from the island to the headland! It must have been so cold! BTW, I wrote a saga for Valur and Polly. Ask him to show it to you! I had fun writing it. I just haven't read the sagas in Icelandic of course, so I don't know their meter and cadence, but I did my best with some from Old English sagas. Its short. I think you will get a kick out of it!
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 2 года назад
Thank you, Wendy. I'll be sure to ask him about it. Thanks for your continued interest in the series and we hope you'll stick around for more coming soon! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@alainboullard7942
@alainboullard7942 3 года назад
Merci, pour cette ballade, paysages fabuleux, la nature à l’état pure...si seulement votre reportage était en français....
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Malheureusement mon français n'est pas assez bon. Merci d'avoir regardé! From Matthew Roby
@pattirockgarden4423
@pattirockgarden4423 3 года назад
It must be difficult to tell the story, & navigate the landscape? Nice presentation. To me, the sagas are much less heroic than I expected. So much trouble & strife!
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
A very good point. The sagas do include lots of fantastical heroics, but these are often (though not always) set in scenes that take place outside of Iceland. A good example would be Hörðr's battle with with the zombie in the grave mound, which is much more fantastical than the small-scale, domestic disputes he has when he returns home: fighting over horses, stealing food, etc. And, indeed, scenes of large-scale or supernatural heroics are particularly common in genres that take place entirely abroad or in another time period, such as the fornaldarsögur and riddarasögur. Thanks for your interest and we hope you'll stay tuned for more Saga Stories in future! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@ptournas
@ptournas 3 года назад
Thanks for another great video. I don't think I've heard of this saga before, but now I'll be searching for the book!
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you for your continued interest and support! Yes, it's not a commonly known saga, but there is a good translation in Anthony Faulkes's "Three Icelandic Outlaw Sagas" collection from Everyman. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@ptournas
@ptournas 3 года назад
@@TheReykjavikGrapevine Thank you so much. I'm about to order it right now. I found a new hardcover copy on Amazon to add to my collection!
@ptournas
@ptournas 3 года назад
Just to update my last comment, it looks as though Amazon had some paperbacks wrongly listed under a link to "other buying options" in a sub-link that said "hardcover format". It turns out none were actually hardcover and they no longer have that section listed. I investigated further and it looks the book probably was never printed in hardcover. But I'm still quite happy to have the paperback on the way!
@milesbliss3256
@milesbliss3256 4 месяца назад
Thanks it was lovely ❤
@carolbv890
@carolbv890 3 года назад
Thankyou wonderful storytelling
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Glad you enjoyed it! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@ani.dimitrova
@ani.dimitrova 3 года назад
Love these stories! Especially the Njals Saga which I bought when I visited Iceland but find it kind of difficult to read and Dr.Roby's story was super interesting just like the rest of the Sagas =)))
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 2 года назад
Thank you for your interest in the videos. We're so glad you like them and hope you'll stay tuned for more coming very soon! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@jorgecarrasco8088
@jorgecarrasco8088 3 года назад
Muy completo y entretenido el documental. Gracias por mostrar los textos en ingles y aprender asi también vuestro idioma. Saludos desde Chile.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 2 года назад
Gracias!
@elvarwinston
@elvarwinston 3 года назад
Vel gert félagi þetta eru virkilega flott myndbönd hjá þér! Njála is the first and only Íslendingasaga I have read and its probably my favourite book ever. its epicness and buty is out of this world. I am going to read Króka refs-saga next as that one was recommend to me by my teacher he said it was very different and very adventurous.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 2 года назад
Takk kærlega fyrir! Yes, Króka-Refs saga is certainly very different from what are usually considered the "classics" of the genre. Hope you enjoy it, and that you'll stick around for more Saga Stories videos coming soon! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@adriennem9832
@adriennem9832 Год назад
Late to the listening but very cool story and can't wait to hear more now that I'm back.
@joshtippett8236
@joshtippett8236 3 года назад
Will these continue? I love this series so much
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 2 года назад
Hi Josh. Thanks for your interest! We're sorry for the delay, but we have several new "Saga Stories" videos in the pipeline and the first one should be released in the next week or so. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@RoseannMcCabe
@RoseannMcCabe 3 года назад
Heart goes out to Hurther (phonetic speling, I'm sorry Iceland!) I blame his mother
@richardspiller7247
@richardspiller7247 3 года назад
Takk !
@epincion
@epincion 3 года назад
Mathew as a future topic perhaps discuss the saga of the Icelanders who ended up on Baffin Island?
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thanks for your interest. We do have plans for a Vínland sagas video at some point, so we hope you'll enjoy that when it comes out. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@creed6.549
@creed6.549 3 года назад
awesome
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thanks! Glad you liked it. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@damama4209
@damama4209 3 года назад
very interesting but tragic story
@MickeyDichter
@MickeyDichter 3 года назад
Of course we appreciate your stories! So convoluted, but fascinating... and how do you remember them? Do you make some intricate diagrams along the way?
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
It can be a challenge keeping it all clear in your head and, as you can see, we try to do as much as we can in only one take. When I first started studying the sagas, I did indeed make diagrams (especially family trees), but I have found reading them to be an acquired skill and you just get better with practice. Thanks for your interest in the series and we hope you'll stay tuned for more. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@ldaniel888
@ldaniel888 2 года назад
You are showing 8 Saga Stories, but on our smart TV RU-vid channel only 6 are still showing. And looks like the same here. So are those only available to the High 5 Club? Happy to join to get access. Love the Saga Stories!
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 2 года назад
Hello Sarah. There are 6 published videos, plus one that will be released tomorrow (Friday 13th :) Number 8 showing on the playlist is just an error on RU-vid.
@naplesbeachfan
@naplesbeachfan 3 года назад
Nice story. Monty Python showed it. But The Sampo is the Crown Jewel of mythical histories.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@reginaromsey
@reginaromsey 3 года назад
The stealing from mounds never goes well!
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Absolutely right. Thanks for your continued support and interest, Wanda! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@pbanther3902
@pbanther3902 3 года назад
Dr Roby, esp liked the third part!! Brave strong Female involvement! Still no Trolls??
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Yes, the sagas are rightly famous for their strong women. Trolls and other monsters on the way, I assure you! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@petebeatminister
@petebeatminister 3 года назад
What a hilarious story... I wonder what those guys have been smoking back then... :)
@JoMad53
@JoMad53 3 года назад
Very interesting and well presented. One question…the sagas mention farmers…what did they farm in such an inhospitable landscape? Sheep rather than crops?
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 2 года назад
Thanks for your question. Yes, you're absolutely right. According to the sagas, the primary mode of food production going on in Iceland during the settlement period was (as it still is today) animal husbandry, especially sheep. This also required grass to be grown and dried as hay for winter fodder. However, the climate in Iceland was warmer back then and it's possible that other crops could be cultivated. For example, Ölkofra þáttr (which we look at in our video on Þingvellir) talks about barley being grown for ale. Thanks for your interest in the videos and we hope you'll stick around for more! Bets wishes, Matthew Roby
@hinkelstein69
@hinkelstein69 3 года назад
So when you state that "Geir is less wise than Hardar", what you mean is that Geir is an idiot? By the way, I love the dry sense of humor in those retellings (like: while he is an outlaw and a murderer and a thief, he is still a very honorable man...). It is the same dry sense of humor that I enjoyed in Halldor Laxness' work.
@hinkelstein69
@hinkelstein69 3 года назад
"Hordar who is still an honorable man, tries to stay calm an follow legal procedure, but ends up ... killing his neighbor and burning his house down" - ah, it happens to the best of us.... we try but then we fail.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thanks for your interest! Yes, it's a similar story with some other saga characters, especially Grettir. We kind of root for him, but he inevitably ends up doing some pretty horrible things. The sagas tell us that they are honourable and well-meaning and just have bad luck, but you have to wonder how ironic that is sometimes. We'll be doing a Grettis saga video soon, so I hope you'll stay tuned for that. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@Norfolk250
@Norfolk250 3 года назад
Yikes!
@karineacote812
@karineacote812 3 года назад
MARY ME!!! :)
@casarierol6469
@casarierol6469 3 года назад
Hey Matthew, many and honest thanks to your Icelandic Sagas, you perform on Reykjavik Grapevine. I love this Sagas and all the details. Very impressive style and telling this stories by moving near the original places and showing the landscape. For my point of view you give good entertainment and show respect to the exciting history of the Icelandic people. In summer july we'll be in Iceland, of course we plan to visit some places of the Sagas. May be later with some little movies or pictures on RU-vid. By the way: I have several Saga books, written in German, my favourite is written by Helmut Hinrichsen & Max Schmid / Eine Märchen- und Sagenreise ISLAND, produced by BENTELLI. My favourite Saga is the life of Fjalla - Eyvindur, many places in Iceland and: do you know the movie from 1918, director Victor Sjöström? Original swedish title is "Berg-Ejvind och hans hustru" keep well and best greetings Hans 😎
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
I don't know very much about Fjalla-Eyvindur, since he was post-medieval, but my partner speaks Swedish so we'll definitely try and find this film! Also interesting to see that the lullaby "Sofðu unga ástin mín" came from a play about him. Thanks for your interest and support and we hope you'll stay tuned for more Saga Stories in the future. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@casarierol6469
@casarierol6469 3 года назад
@@TheReykjavikGrapevine Hey Matthew, I sent you two interesting and informative YT links for movies concerning Eyvindur on your private FB account. A PN in your chatroom. I hope they can be useful for you. Best regards Hans and Iceland Fans
@marin803
@marin803 3 года назад
Hi, trying to find out why Icelanders call the new volcano Ballareldar. What/Who is Ballar? Bölur? Gellir? Kellir? Rolf saga? If the name is from a saga, I would love to see a Saga story video on it.
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 2 года назад
I haven't heard any Icelanders calling it that. If they call it anything other than eldgosið, it's usually Fagradalsfjall. From what I can see, the name Ballareldar -- presumably a rude joke, as böllur (ballar in genitive singular) refers to male genitalia -- is primarily being used by one volcano blogger. Glad you're enjoying the videos and I hope you'll stick around for more Saga Stories coming soon! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@marin803
@marin803 2 года назад
Haha, ok, I will certainly not use that name then. Thanks for answering! I love your videos!
@ewmbr1164
@ewmbr1164 3 года назад
Try as I might, I simply find myself utterly incapable to add anything to teh appreciation and commendations expressed here by other viewers. Let the Sagas speak, and us be silent and listen....
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Wise words. Thank you very much for your interest and support. We're glad you enjoyed it. Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@PACstove
@PACstove 3 года назад
HEY! Second time watching this i notice a UFO at 14.09.
@johnrowson7639
@johnrowson7639 3 года назад
Yeah
@Rawshella
@Rawshella 3 года назад
:)
@TheReykjavikGrapevine
@TheReykjavikGrapevine 3 года назад
Thanks for watching! Best wishes, from Matthew Roby
@J-tron-ke2fn
@J-tron-ke2fn 14 дней назад
All these sagas contain such an incredible amount of killing and violence that makes more credible all the Indridason, Sigurdardottir, Jonasson and others' Nordic Noir books. In fact, Nordic Noir are just fairy tales in comparison.
@matthewmorgan7106
@matthewmorgan7106 3 года назад
The Godfather meets Lady Macbeth
@sal2372
@sal2372 Год назад
It is nothing but a G Thang Baby.. 2 locek'd up niggas now we crazy
@Logan.Ninefingers
@Logan.Ninefingers 3 года назад
Can't get past that hairstyle.
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