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BIBLIOGRAPHY

Icelandic authors have been alphabetized by first name, as is common practice. Also note that all “sagas of Icelanders” mentioned in the text whose publication information is not specifically cited may be found in translation in
Complete Sagas of Icelanders
, edited by Viðar Hreinsson. All
fornaldarsögur
whose publication information is not otherwise specified may be found in Guðni Jónsson and Bjarni Vilhjálmson’s 1943-44 edition of
Fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda.

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—. “Studies in the Fornaldarsǫgur Norðrlanda [continued]. I: The Hrómundar saga Gripssonar.”
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.”
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—.
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—. “Fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda: The Stories That Wouldn’t Die.”
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—. “The Long and Winding Road: Manuscript Culture in Late Pre-Modern Iceland.”
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Driscoll, Matthew, and Silvia Hufnagel. “
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:  A Bibliography of Manuscripts, Editions, Translations and Secondary Literature.” Arnamagnæan Institute, Copenhagen.   http://nfi.ku.dk/fornaldarsogur/

Einar Ólafur Sveinsson, ed.
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XII.
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— (Einar G. Pétursson, rev.; Benedikt Benedikz, transl.; Anthony Faulkes, ed.)
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ýki
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.”
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. Kaupmannahöfn [Copenhagen]: S. L. Møller, 1896.

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Beowulf
and
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—.
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Foote, Peter G. “Sagnaskemtan: Reykjahólar 1119.”
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, vol. 14 (1953-57), pp. 226-239.

Gade, Kari Ellen. “Penile Puns: Personal Names and Phallic Symbols in Skaldic Poetry.” 
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, vol. 6 (1989), pp. 57-67.

—. “Northern Lights on the Battle of Hastings.”
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, vol. 28 (1997), pp. 65-81.

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.”
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, vol 18 (2004), pp. 119-146.

Gilliam, Terry, and Terry Jones (dir.)
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4
th
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, vol. 44, no. 4 (1929), pp. 939-967.

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—. “The Relationship Between Icelandic
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—. “The Gautland Cycle of Sagas: II. Evidences of the Cycle.”
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, vol. 11, no. 2 (1912), pp. 209-217.

—. “The ‘Faithless Wife’ Motif in Old Norse Literature.”
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, vol. 27, no. 3 (1912), pp. 71-73.

—, transl.
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