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WALTHARIUS , a Latin poem founded on See also: German popular tradition, relates the exploits of the west See also: Gothic See also: hero Walter of See also: Aquitaine
.
Our knowledge of the author, Ekkehard, a See also: monk of St
See also: Gall, is due to a later Ekkehard, known as Ekkehard IV
.
(d
.
1o6o), who gives some account of him in the Casus Sancti Galli (cap
.
8o)
.
The poem was written by Ekkehard, generally distinguished as Ekkehard I., for his master Geraldus in his schooldays, probably therefore not later than 920, since he was probably no longer See also: young when he became deacon (in See also: charge of ten monks) in 957
.
He died in 973
.
Waltharius was dedicated by Geraldus to Erchanbald, See also: bishop of Strassburg (fl
.
965—991), but See also: MSS. of it were in circulation before that See also: time
.
Ekkehard IV. stated that he corrected the Latin of the poem, the Germanisms of which offended his See also: patron Aribo, archbishop of See also: Mainz
.
The poem was probably based on epic songs now lost, so that if the author was still in his teens when he wrote it he must have possessed considerable and precocious See also: powers
.
Walter was the son of Alphere, ruler of Aquitaine, which in the 5th century, when the See also: legend See also: developed, was a province of the west Gothic See also: Spanish See also: kingdom
.
When See also: Attila invaded the west the western princes are represented as making no resistance
.
They See also: purchased See also: peace by offering tribute and hostages
.
See also: King Gibich, here described as a Frankish king, gave Hagen as a hostage (of Trojan
See also: race, but not, as in the See also: Nibelungenlied, a kinsman of the royal See also: house) in place of his infant son Gunther; the Burgundian king Heririh, his daughter Hiltegund; and Alphere, his son Walter
.
Hagen and Walter became brothels in arms, fighting at the See also: head of Attila's armies, while Hiltegund was put in charge of the See also: queen's treasure
.
Presently Gunther succeeded his See also: father and refused to pay tribute to the See also: Huns, whereupon Hagen fled from Attila's See also: court
.
Walter and Hiltegund, who had been betrothed in childhood, also made See also: good their escape during a drunken feast of the Huns, taking with them a See also: great treasure
.
The See also: story of their See also: flight forms one of the most charming pictures of old German story
.
They were recognized at See also: Worms, however, where the treasure excited the cupidity of Gunther
.
Taking with him twelve knights, among them the reluctant Hagen, he pursued them, and overtook them at the Wasgenstein in the Vosges mountains
.
Walter engaged the Nibelungen knights one at a time, until all were slain but Hagen, who held aloof from the See also: battle, and was only persuaded by Gunther to attack his comrade in arms on the second See also: day
.
He lured Walter from the strong position of the day before, and both Gunther and Hagen attacked at once
.
All three were incapacitated, but their wounds were bound up by Hiltegund and they separated See also: friends,
The essential See also: part of this story is the series of single combats
.
The occasional incoherences of the tale make it probable that many changes have been introduced in the legend . The Thidreks Saga (chaps . 241-244) makes the story more probable by representing the pursuers as Huns . There is reason to believe that Hagen was originally the father of Hiltegund, and that the tale was a variant of the saga of Hild as told in the Skaldskaparmdl . Hild, daughter of King Hogni, was carried off by Hedinn, son of Hjarrandi (A.S . Heorrenda) . The fight between the forces of father andSee also: lover only ceased at sundown, to be renewed on the morrow, since each evening Hild raised the dead by her incantations
.
This is obviously a See also: form of the old myth of the daily recurring struggle between See also: light and darkness
.
The songs sung by Hiltegund in Waltharius during her See also: night watches were probably incantations, a view strengthened by the fact that in a See also: Polish version the glance of Helgunda is said to have inspired the combatants with new strength
.
Hiltegund has retained nothing of Hild's fierceness, but the fragment of the Anglo-Saxon Waldere shows more of the See also: original spirit
.
In Waltharius Hiltegund advises Walter to fly; in Waldere she urges him to the combat
.
See also: Cassel, t881); by F
.
Holthausen in Goteborgs Hogskolas I rsskrift (vol . V., 1899), with autotype reproductions of the two leaves which have been preserved . See also A . See also: Ebert, Allg
.
Gesch. der Lit. See also: des Mittelalters See also: im Abendlande (See also: Leipzig, 1874–1887); R
.
Koegel, Gesch. der deutschen Literatur bis zum Ausgange des Mittelalters (vol. i., pt
.
H., Strassburg, 1897); M
.
D
.
Lamed, The Saga of Walter of Aquitaine (Baltimore, 1892) ; B
.
Symons, Deutsche Heldensage (Strassburg, 1905)
.
With Waltharius compare the Scottish See also: ballads of " See also: Earl Brand " and " Erlinton " (F
.
J
.
See also: Child's See also: English and Scottish Popular Ballads, i
.
88 seq.)
.
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