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Beowulf

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Beowulf also illustrates the transition of the heroic world to the medieval world. The world of violence and ruined civilization fades with the old gods, as the Christian promise of virtue and mortal valor overcoming the forces of evil gains prominence. A new culture, including a more peaceful world, dawns in the background of this epic poem. * 30,000 lines of Anglo-Saxon poetry survive today * 3, 182 (10%) of the lines are from Beowulf * Setting – Denmark and Sweden * Oldest surviving English poem * Oldest text in English. * Composed in Anglo-Saxon (Old English) between 600 and 700 CE. * Written down sometime in the 10th century. * There is a manuscript of it in the British Library, that barely survived a fire. * It is a literary picture of melding religious traditions, Norse, Celtic, Roman, and Christian. *

Culture
Christian writers like the Beowulf poet were fascinated by the distant culture of their pagan ancestors and by the inherent conflict between the heroic code and a religion that teaches that we should ‘forgive those who trespass against us’ and that ‘all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword.’ The Beowulf poet looks back on that ancient world with admiration for the courage of which it was capable and at the same time with elegiac sympathy for its inevitable doom.

* Fierce, hardy life of warrior and seamen * Strength, courage, leadership abilities appreciated * Boisterous yet elaborately ritualized customs of the mead-hall * Expected the hero to boast

* Beo means “bright” or “noble” wulf means “wolf”. * Beowulf means bright or noble wolf * Other sources say Beo means “bear”

Tradition
Many epics were not originally written down by their authors. Instead, they were memorized and retold or sung by wandering entertainers. Some

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