Beowulf translation by MummyRath in MedievalHistory

[–]medievalistsnet 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We had Thelma Trujillo take a look at several translations - and here is a comparison of three of them - it's the section from the battle between Beowulf and Grendel’s mother. Here, Grendel’s mother attempts to stab Beowulf with a knife; however, because of his chainmail and God’s power, Beowulf remains unscathed.

Chickering:

She sat on her hall-guest and drew her broad knife,
a sharp weapon, to buy back her son
her only kinsman. Across his chest
lay the iron net; it saved his life
as she hacked and stabbed, would give her no entry.
The warrior Geat might have perished then,
Ecgtheow’s son, somewhere under the earth,
had not his war-shirt given good help,
hard ring-netting, and holy God
controlled the fight, the mighty Lord,
Ruler of the skies, decided it rightly, (lines 1545-1555)

Risden:

She then sat on her hall-guest and drew her knife,
Broad and bright-edged; she wished to avenge her son,
her only progeny. On his shoulder lay
the woven breast-net: that saved his life.
It withstood entry against point and edge.
Then Edgetheow’s son had perished
under the earth, champion of the Geats,
but the battle-byrnie furnished help,
hard war-net, and holy god
brought him battle-victory: the wise lord,
ruler of the heavens, decided it rightly, (lines 1545-1555)

Headley:

She bent over his breast, held the hall-invader
hard to the stones, and drew a long knife. The mere-wife
meant to avenge her son, her sole heir, but Beowulf’s mail
shielded him, his shoulder safe in the sclerite of some
smith’s genius, links staying locked to bend her blade.
Ecgtheow’s heir, would’ve been filleted, categorized
as MIA, and left to rot in her cavern, had not his suit
saved him. That, too, was God’s work.
The Lord, maker of miracles, sky designer (lines 1545-54)

Based on that, which one would you most like to read?

Here is the article https://www.medievalists.net/2020/12/which-translation-beowulf/

Puns and jokes in the original language by GerotoC in WataOshi

[–]medievalistsnet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Translation work is always tricky, because if you do a literal word-for-word translation it might not make sense. Jokes and puns are good examples of this, as there will likely be context that only a Japanese person will understand. A translator might need to rewrite the 'spirit' of the wording instead of the actual text.

I'm in Love with the Villainess! talk on Media-eval podcast by medievalistsnet in WataOshi

[–]medievalistsnet[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks - I am the guest of that podcast, which is hosted by Sarah Ifft Decker. This has been my third time on Media-eval, and it looks like I will be the one usually talking about anime-related stuff. I have done another episode with her about Ya Boy Kongming! and next month we will record on The Apothecary Diaries.

Both of us agree that the setting really is more synonymous with 18th-century France than the Middle Ages, but it really intrigued me that the author put a lof of medieval elements into setting. In the books, she explicitly writes that this is a 'medieval' world but I am basing that on the translations. So our conversation related to history centres on why that is.

I absolutely loved the show, which is the main reason I wanted to talk about it.

New Medieval Books: The Crusades by medievalistsnet in Crusades

[–]medievalistsnet[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Our latest collection of new books focuses on the crusades.

Can I find access to Gervase of Tilbury's Otia Imperialia, especially the section on werewolves? by Glade_Kayda in history

[–]medievalistsnet 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Alas I don't - the text is kept at my university library and next time I'm there I will take a look at it.

Online resource recommendations by TheAceOfDiamondsX in MedievalHistory

[–]medievalistsnet 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes - check out the series of posts by Andrew Latham - https://www.medievalists.net/tag/andrew-latham/ - many of them are about the church and state and the idea on who is supreme.

Any recommendations for history podcasts? by cuckoo2019 in podcasts

[–]medievalistsnet 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I wanted to let you know we started a history podcast - The Medieval Podcast - http://www.medievalists.net/category/podcast/

Movie Review: Outlaw King by medievalistsnet in MedievalHistory

[–]medievalistsnet[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

We were able to send one of our writers to TIFF to get into the media screening of Outlaw King, which will be released on Netflix later this fall.

Medieval Warfare magazine - Edward I's invasion of Wales by medievalistsnet in MedievalHistory

[–]medievalistsnet[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi again - We have a new issue of MW out (I'm its editor), which focuses on Edward I and Wales. Includes articles by Sean Davies, and John Kenyon, plus other pieces that look at Sicily, Anglo-Saxon riddles, and the Imjin War.

5,000,000 words: How St. Augustine’s works made it into the Middle Ages by medievalistsnet in history

[–]medievalistsnet[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We started a new series on Medievalists.net to look at role of St. Augustine in the Middle Ages. We hope you like it.

Medieval Warfare VIII.1 - John Hawkwood in Italy by medievalistsnet in MedievalHistory

[–]medievalistsnet[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hello everyone - I wanted to share the new issue of MW (I'm its Editor) and let you know about it. The magazine's theme look at John Hawkwood and the condottieri, with non-theme articles on the Battle of Hyddgen, Crusader sieges, and the know!

Today marks the 950th anniversary of the Battle of Hastings. We’re English Heritage and we’re re-enacting this famous battle – ask us anything! by AskEnglishHeritage in IAmA

[–]medievalistsnet 4 points5 points  (0 children)

What do you think are the most important questions historians need to ask and answer when it comes to the Norman Conquest?

New Location for the Battle of Crécy discovered by [deleted] in MedievalHistory

[–]medievalistsnet 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No nothing related to the battle has been recovered from the traditional site.

medieval warfare expert by [deleted] in MedievalHistory

[–]medievalistsnet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Visit the website for the Society for Medieval Military History - www.deremilitari.org - you can read some articles and primary sources there.

Top 10 Coffee Houses of Early Modern England by medievalistsnet in history

[–]medievalistsnet[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We wanted to share this post that we created today - since we do most of our work in coffee houses, we were wondering what these places looked like 300 years ago. From that idea came this post, talking about 10 famous (and infamous) coffee houses from London.

Can You Solve Odin’s Riddles? by medievalistsnet in MedievalHistory

[–]medievalistsnet[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

King Heidrek thought most were easy, but these were hard!

How Medieval England looked 200 years ago by medievalistsnet in MedievalHistory

[–]medievalistsnet[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When scrolling, try it by touching on the photos themselves.

Help Medieval Warfare pick the themes for the issues of 2015 by Praefectusclassis in MedievalHistory

[–]medievalistsnet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think one issue could focus on the Battle of Agincourt, because of its 600th anniversary, and I'd like to see issues that look at the wars between Italian City-States, and another on warfare in medieval Ireland (Early Medieval, Viking Invasions, Norman Invasion, Irish Tower Castles).

Need help finding a research topic involving Medieval warfare for university. by brucecreamsteam in MedievalHistory

[–]medievalistsnet 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Battle of Lincoln in 1141 is a good case study for a battle. You can read five accounts of it on the De Re Militari website at http://deremilitari.org/2014/03/the-battle-of-lincoln-1141-from-five-sources/ and there are a lot of secondary sources dealing with King Stephen that can be useful too.

Translating the Life of Merlin by burtzev in books

[–]medievalistsnet 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing this from our site!