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WAYLAND THE SMITH (Scand. Volundr, Ge...

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 432 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WAYLAND THE SMITH (Scand. Volundr, Ger. Wieland)  , hero of
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romance . The legend of Wayland probably had its home in the north, where he and his
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brother Egi112 were the types of the skilled workman, but there are abundant
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local traditions of the wonderful smith in Westphalia and in
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southern England . His story is told in one of the
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oldest songs of the
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Edda, the Volundarkiba, and, with considerable variations, in the
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prose pi8rekssaga (Thidrek's sage) , while the Anglo-Saxon
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Beowulf and Deor's Lament contain allusions to it . The tale of Wayland falls naturally into two parts, the former of which contains obviously mythical features . He was the son of the giant sailor Wate and of a mermaiden . His grandfather was that Vilkinus, king of Norway, who lent his name to the Vilkina- or pi8rekssaga . Three brothers Vdlundr, Egill and Slagfipr seized the swan-maidens Hlapgupr, Olr{1n and Hervor, who, divested of their feather dresses, stayed with them seven or eight years as their wives . The second
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part of the story concerns Volundr, lord of the elves, the cunning smith, who, after learning his
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art from
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Mime, then from the dwarfs, came to the court of King NiPopr, and there defeated in fight the smith Amilias . Volundr's sword, Mimung, with which he won this victory, was one of the famous weapons in German epic
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poetry . In the Dietrich cycle it descended to 2 Egill was compelled to prove his skill as an archer by
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shooting an apple off the head of his three-
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year-old son; he is thus the prototype of William Tell . Wayland's son Wittich, and was cunningly exchanged by Hildebrand for a commoner blade before Wittich's fight with Dietrich . Nfyopr, in order to secure Volundr's services, lamed him by cutting the sinews of his knees, and then established him in a smithy on a neighbouring island .

The smith avenged himself by the slaughter of Nipopr's two sons and the

rape of his daughter Bodvildr . He then soared away on wings he had prepared . The story in its main outlines bears a striking resemblance to the myth of
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Daedalus . For the vengeance of VSlundr there is a very close counterpart in the
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medieval versions of the vengeance, of the Moorish slave on his master . The denouement of this tale, which made its first appearance in
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European literature in the De obedientia (Opera, Venice, 3 vols., 1518–1519) of Jovianus Pontanus (d . 1503), is different, for the Moorish slave casts himself down from a high tower . The
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Aaron of the Shakespearian
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play of Titus Andronicus was eventually derived from this source . Swords fashioned by Wayland are
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regular properties of medieval romance . King Rhydderich gave one to Merlin, and Rimenhild made a similar gift to Child Horn .
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English local tradition placed Wayland Smith's forge in a cave close to the White Horse in Berkshire_ If a horse to be shod, or any broken tool were
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left with a sixpenny piece at the entrance of the cave the repairs would presently be executed . The earliest extant record of the Wayland legend is the representation in carved ivory on a
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casket of Northumbrian workman-
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ship of a date not later than the beginning of the 8th century . The fragments of this casket, known as the Franks casket, came The Franks Casket .

into the

possession of a professor at Clermont in
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Auvergne about the
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middle of the last century, and was presented to the
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British Museum by
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Sir A . W . Franks, who had bought it in Paris for a dealer . One fragment is in Florence . The left-hand compartment of the front of the casket shows Volundr holding with a pair of tongs the
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skull of one of Nfpopr's children, which he is fashioning into a goblet . The boy's
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body lies at his feet . Bodvildr and her attendant also appear, and Egill, who in one version made Volundr's wings, is depicted in the act of catching birds . See also Vigfusson and Powell, Corpus poet. bor . (i. pp . 168-174, Oxford, 1883); A . S . Napier, The Franks Casket (Oxford, 19o1); G .

Sarrazin, Germanische Heldensage in Shakespere's Titus Andronicus (Herrig's Archiv, xevii., Brunswick, 1896); P . Maurus, Die Wielandsage in der Literatur (
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Erlangen and
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Leipzig, 1902) ; C . B . Depping and F . Michel, Veland le Forgeron (Paris, 1833) . Sir Walter Scott handled the Wayland legend in
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Kenilworth; there are dramas on the subject by Borsch (
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Bonn, I895), English version by A . Comyn (
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London, 1898), August
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Demmin (Leipzig, 1880), H . Drachmann Co nhagen, 1898), and one founded on K . Simrock's heroic poem on Wieland is printed in Richard Wagner's Gesammelte Schriften (vol. iii. and ed., Leipzig, 1887) .

End of Article: WAYLAND THE SMITH (Scand. Volundr, Ger. Wieland)
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