Tuesday 9th February, 2010
Home > 
History Today October 2006 | Volume: 56 Issue: 10 | Page 40-44 | Words: 3785 | Author: Niles, John D.

Beowulf’s Great Hall

John D. Niles reports on the search for the real ­location of the Heorot, the hall where Beowulf feasted before fighting the monster Grendel.

Beowulf and Grendel, released in North America in 2006

Readers of Beowulf will be familiar with the moment, early in the poem, when Hrothgar, the reigning king of Denmark in the Scylding line of kings, orders that a great hall be built. Soon, the poet says, it was completely finished, ‘the biggest of halls’:

 

Then, as I have heard, the work of constructing a building 

Was proclaimed to many a tribe throughout this middle earth.

In time – quickly, as such things happen among men –

It was all ready, the biggest of halls.

He whose word was law

Far and wide gave it the name ‘Heorot’. (lines 74-79)

 

The hall stands high, a visible sign of the wealth and stature of the Scylding kings: ‘The hall towered up, high and wide gabled’ (81-82). It is a bright counterpart to ....

ontlineSubscription PayPerView
Bookmark and Share