sagas
A saga is a long narrative, typically in prose, that recounts deeds of historical or legendary figures. The term comes from Old Norse saga, meaning “what is said” or “a tale.” In medieval Iceland and Norway, sagas were written in vernacular Old Norse and later Icelandic, bridging oral tradition and manuscript culture. They cover various kinds, including family sagas detailing the lives of settlers and their kin, kings’ sagas about rulers, and legendary or chivalric sagas drawn from myth and heroic legend.
Sagas are notable for a focus on realistic detail, social norms, kinship, and feud, often conveyed through
Origins and manuscripts: most surviving sagas date from the 13th and 14th centuries and were copied and
Examples and influence: prominent sagas include Njáls saga, Laxdaela saga, Grettis saga, Egil’s Saga, the Volsunga