Kvæði are the old
ballad
A ballad is a form of verse, often a narrative set to music. Ballads were particularly characteristic of the popular poetry and song of Great Britain and Ireland from the Late Middle Ages until the 19th century. They were widely used across Eur ...
s of the
Faroe Islands
The Faroe Islands ( ) (alt. the Faroes) are an archipelago in the North Atlantic Ocean and an autonomous territory of the Danish Realm, Kingdom of Denmark. Located between Iceland, Norway, and the United Kingdom, the islands have a populat ...
, accompanied by the
Faroese chain dance.
They typically recite stories and can have hundreds of
stanza
In poetry, a stanza (; from Italian ''stanza'', ; ) is a group of lines within a poem, usually set off from others by a blank line or indentation. Stanzas can have regular rhyme and metrical schemes, but they are not required to have either. ...
s plus a
chorus
Chorus may refer to:
Music
* Chorus (song), the part of a song that is repeated several times, usually after each verse
* Chorus effect, the perception of similar sounds from multiple sources as a single, richer sound
* Chorus form, song in whic ...
sung between every verse.
History
It is generally thought that Faroese ballads, as elsewhere in Europe, began to be composed in the Middle Ages, but very little medieval Faroese writing survives, so the ballads' medieval history is obscure. The subject matter of Faroese ballads varies widely, including heroic narratives set in the distant past, contemporary politics, and comic tales. The most archaic-looking layer, however, is the heroic narratives. It was once thought that these derive independently from Viking-Age oral narratives, and this may be true of a few, but it has since been shown that most derive directly from written Icelandic
saga
Sagas are prose stories and histories, composed in Iceland and to a lesser extent elsewhere in Scandinavia.
The most famous saga-genre is the (sagas concerning Icelanders), which feature Viking voyages, migration to Iceland, and feuds between ...
s or occasionally ''
rÃmur
In Icelandic literature, a ''rÃma'' (, literally "a rhyme", pl. ''rÃmur'', ) is an epic poetry, epic poem written in any of the so-called ''rÃmnahættir'' (, "rÃmur meters"). They are rhymed, they alliterative verse, alliterate and consist of ...
''. The traceable origins of Faroese balladry, then, seem to lie between the fourteenth century (when the relevant Icelandic sagas tended to be composed) and the seventeenth (when contacts with Iceland diminished).
Faroese ballads began to be collected by
Jens Christian Svabo in 1781–1782, though Svabo's collection was not published in his lifetime; the most prominent of Svabo's successors was
Venceslaus Ulricus Hammershaimb
Venceslaus Ulricus Hammershaimb (, ; March 25, 1819 – April 8, 1909) was a Faroese Lutheran minister who established the modern orthography of Faroesethe language of the Faroe Islandsbased on the Icelandic language, which like Faroese, d ...
. The Danish historians
Svend Grundtvig
Svend Hersleb Grundtvig (9 September 1824 – 14 July 1883) was a Danish literary historian and ethnographer. He was one of the first systematic collectors of Danish traditional music, and he was especially interested in Danish folk songs. He ...
and
Jørgen Bloch began the process of a complete, standard edition of the ballads, which eventually gave rise to the ''Føroya kvæði/
Corpus Carminum Færoensium
''Føroya kvæði: Corpus Carminum Færoensium'' (CCF) is a scholarly edition collecting traditional Faroese ballads, or ''kvæði''.
The songs were collected by Svend Grundtvig and Jørgen Bloch, and published by Napoleon Djurhuus and Chris ...
'', published between 1941 and 2003. In the last volume,
Marianne Clausen
Marianne Clausen (25 December 1947 – 17 September 2014) was a Danish musicologist and Choirmaster, choir conductor. She was the daughter of composer, choir conductor and musicologist Karl Clausen (1904–1972). Her main achievement, begun in col ...
presented a large collection of music transcriptions of kvæði melodies, based on sound recordings.
In the eighteenth to twentieth centuries, the period for which scholars have information about how ''kvæði'' were performed: 'the family-oriented ''
kvøldseta'', in which aurally memorized texts of family ballads were sung to pass the time, and the village dance, in which the memorized texts of the kvøldseta were performed by ballad owners who might add or delete stanzas in order to suit the mood of the dancers'.
Ballads took an important role in the development of Faroese national consciousness and the promotion of literacy in Faroes in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Examples
Among the most famous of all kvæði is ''
Sjúrðarkvæði'', which tells the story of
Sjúrður Sigmundarson, containing material from the
Thidrekssaga and the
Völsunga saga
The ''Völsunga saga'' (often referred to in English as the ''Volsunga Saga'' or ''Saga of the Völsungs'') is a legendary saga, a late 13th-century prose rendition in Old Norse of the origin and decline of the Völsung clan (including the story ...
. More well known examples include ''
Ormurin langi'' written by
Jens Christian Djurhuus Jens Christian Djurhuus or Sjóvarbóndin (21 August 1773 – 21 November 1853) was the first poet who wrote in Faroese. He composed several Faroese ballads in traditional style on historical themes. The best known is '' Ormurin langi''. Djurhuus ...
, telling the story of the
Battle of Svolder
The Battle of Svolder (''Svold'' or ''Swold'') was a large naval battle during the Viking age, fought in September 1000 in the western Baltic Sea between King Olaf of Norway and an alliance of the Kings of Denmark and Sweden and Olaf's enemies ...
, and
Ragnars kvæði, both of which having modern renditions by the Faroese
folk metal
Folk metal is a fusion genre of heavy metal music and traditional folk music that developed in Europe during the 1990s. It is characterised by the widespread use of folk instruments and, to a lesser extent, traditional singing styles (for example ...
band
Týr
(; Old Norse: , ) is a god in Germanic mythology and member of the . In Norse mythology, which provides most of the surviving narratives about gods among the Germanic peoples, sacrifices his right hand to the monstrous wolf , who bites it off ...
.
Example of the structure of kvæði, from ''Mariu vÃsa fyrra'':
[https://heimskringla.no/wiki/Mariu_v%C3%ADsa_fyrra ]
English translations
*
*N. Kershaw,
Stories and Ballads of the Far Past' (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1921), also available a
Project Gutenberg
References
External links
*The digital edition o
Føroya Kvæði/Corpus Carminum Færoensiumat snar.fo
Heimskringla.no - Føroysk kvæði og vÃsurFotatradk.com, kvæði (text) on the website of ''Fótatraðk'', which is a Faroese Chain Dance Association in Copenhagen, the members are mainly Faroese students, who study in Copenhagen.Bandasavn.setur.fo- Hundreds of archived recordings of kvæði and vÃsur
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kvaedi
Music of the Faroe Islands
Faroese literature
Faroese folklore
Ballad collections