Magnús Jónsson í Tjaldanesi
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Magnús Jónsson í Tjaldanesi (1835-1922) was one of the foremost Icelandic scribes of his time.


Life

Magnús received no formal education, and spent most of his life as a farmer living on the farm Tjaldanes in
Dalasýsla Dalasýsla () was one of the pre-1988 traditional Counties of Iceland, located in the Western Region of the country. Its only town is Búðardalur. The county had a rich history dating back to the first settlers of Iceland. Leif Erikson grew ...
, for which he is named.Driscoll, Matthew James 2013.
The Long and Winding Road: Manuscript Culture in Late Pre-Modern Iceland
. In: Anna Kuismin & Matthew James Driscoll (eds.), ''White Field Black Seeds. Nordic Literacy Practices in the Long Nineteenth Century''. (Studia Fennica Litteraria 7.) Helsinki: Finnish literary society SKS. Pp. 50-63.


Copying

Magnús is known today for his extraordinary output as a scribe, copying Icelandic sagas. He is unusual, if not unique, for only copying works in this form (and not, for example, poetry or genealogies). As of 2013, 43 surviving manuscripts by Magnús had been identified, comprising 28,000 pages, or over 6 million words. Magnús appears to have begun copying in his teens, but the datable manuscripts are from the period 1874-1916 (though nine are undated and seem to be from before 1874). In total, these contain copies of 171 different sagas—the majority of which Magnús copied two to four times. Moreover, at least some (perhaps half) of Magnús's output is now lost. The sagas that Magnús copied range across the main genres, and include all or nearly all the ''
fornaldarsögur A legendary saga or ''fornaldarsaga'' (literally, "story/history of the ancient era") is a Norse saga that, unlike the Icelanders' sagas, takes place before the settlement of Iceland.The article ''Fornaldarsagor'' in ''Nationalencyklopedin'' (1991) ...
'' and medieval Icelandic
chivalric sagas The ''riddarasögur'' (literally 'sagas of knights', also known in English as 'chivalric sagas', 'romance-sagas', 'knights' sagas', 'sagas of chivalry') are Norse prose sagas of the romance genre. Starting in the thirteenth century with Norse tr ...
, along with 28 post-medieval ''fornaldarsögur'' and nearly 50 post-medieval romances; 13 translations of German chapbooks; and 10 ''
Íslendingasögur The sagas of Icelanders ( is, Íslendingasögur, ), also known as family sagas, are one genre of Icelandic sagas. They are prose narratives mostly based on historical events that mostly took place in Iceland in the ninth, tenth, and early e ...
'' (with other copies known to have been lost). About half of Magnús's surviving manuscripts contain prefaces indicating who he got his exemplars from, naming about 100 individuals. Although Magnús sometimes copied from printed editions, he specified when he did so that he knew the text to have circulated in manuscript form. Like other scribes in the Icelandic saga tradition, Magnús habitually altered the wording of sagas that he copied, though without changing the essentials of the plot; and at times, he seems to have written sagas from memory entirely in his own wording, and sometimes with major changes to the plot, as in his copy of '' Nítíða saga'' in Reykjavík, Lbs 1510 4to.


Influence

Perhaps twelve sagas are known solely from Magnús's copying. Magnús supplied the text for the printed edition of ''
Skáld-Helga saga {{Italic title Skáld-Helga saga (the saga of poet-Helgi) is a lost ''Íslendingasaga''. The action is set in Iceland, Norway, and Greenland from around 1000 to 1050. The main character is Helgi Þórðarson, who travels to Greenland and becomes a p ...
'' published by
Sigfús Eymundsson Sigfús Eymundsson (1837–1911) was an Icelandic photographer and bookseller. He practiced bookbinding from a young age and in 1857 he went to Copenhagen to study the profession. In 1861 he went to Norway where he studied photography. He then ...
(1837–1911) in 1897, and in 1909 the
National Library of Iceland Landsbókasafn Íslands – Háskólabókasafn ( Icelandic: ; English: ''The National and University Library of Iceland'') is the national library of Iceland which also functions as the university library of the University of Iceland. The librar ...
spent around half its acquisitions budget for the year on a twenty-volume set of his ''Fornmannasögur norðurlanda'' (250 krónur). In recent years, Magnús's work has attracted growing scholarly interest.Hufnagel, Silvia Veronika Sörla saga sterka'' in its final phase of manuscript transmission', in ''Legendary Sagas: Origins and Development'', ed. by Annette Lassen, Agneta Ney, Ármann Jakobsson (Reykjavík: University of Iceland Press, 2012), pp. 431-54.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Jonsson i Tjaldanesi, Magnus 1835 births 1922 deaths Magnus Jonsson i Tjaldanesi Old Norse studies scholars