Additional Baskerville genealogy : a supplement to the author's Genealogy of the Baskerville family of 1912; being a miscellany of additional notes and sketches from later information, including a study of the family history in Normandy . Silver Vase, two-thirds keal size, found at (Ioetlaxd. The chief of these skalds was Snorre Slurlason, born inIceland in 1178, and died in 1241. who could boast of manyillustrious ancestors, his grandfather being a gode or chief-tain. He inherited a valuable library and was a great bookcollector. In addition to smaller poems, he composed two : \wO) )T<J ••
Additional Baskerville genealogy : a supplement to the author's Genealogy of the Baskerville family of 1912; being a miscellany of additional notes and sketches from later information, including a study of the family history in Normandy . Silver Vase, two-thirds keal size, found at (Ioetlaxd. The chief of these skalds was Snorre Slurlason, born inIceland in 1178, and died in 1241. who could boast of manyillustrious ancestors, his grandfather being a gode or chief-tain. He inherited a valuable library and was a great bookcollector. In addition to smaller poems, he composed two : \wO) )T<J •• uiAWVs K .ilIV/ (V. T,:- ?? Our Norse Ancestors • 9 Important works, his Younger or Prose Edda, and his Heims-kringla, or Sagas of the Norse Kings, both being compila-tions from the old parchment records. There is one otherEdda, a collection of ancient mythological poems, of whichthe author is not certainly known, called the Elder Edda, andthese two seem to be the only works, to which the nameEdda is applied. Care must be taken not to confuse theterm Edda with the term Saga, the latter being- generic, andapplied to a large number of writings. The Snorra Eddais prose, treating of Scandinavian mythology and of thelanguage
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookida, booksubjectmurrayfamily