Ekkehard (novel)

Last updated
Ekkehard
Author Joseph Victor von Scheffel
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman
Genre historican novel
PublisherJohann Valentin Meidinger Sohn
Publication date
1855
Pages467

Ekkehard is an 1855 historical novel by the German writer Joseph Victor von Scheffel.

Contents

Plot

The novel is about the 10th-century monk and hymn writer Ekkehard II at the Abbey of Saint Gall. Ekkehard has a romantic affair with a widow who visits the abbey. He has an oak cut down when he learns a woman is using it in pagan ceremonies. When there is a Hun invasion, Ekkehart goes to battle and proves to be a skilled warrior. [1]

Reception

The novel was published in 1855 by Johann Valentin Meidinger Sohn. With the 4th edition in 1873, it turned into a phenomenon, becoming one of Germany's most popular novels of the 19th century. By 1903, it had been printed in 200 editions. [2]

Adaptations

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Abbey of Saint Gall</span> Church in St. Gallen, Switzerland

The Abbey of Saint Gall is a dissolved abbey (747–1805) in a Catholic religious complex in the city of St. Gallen in Switzerland. The Carolingian-era monastery existed from 719, founded by Saint Othmar on the spot where Saint Gall had erected his hermitage. It became an independent principality between 9th and 13th centuries, and was for many centuries one of the chief Benedictine abbeys in Europe. The library of the Abbey is one of the oldest monastic libraries in the world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Saint Gall</span> Irish disciple and saint

Gall according to hagiographic tradition was a disciple and one of the traditional twelve companions of Columbanus on his mission from Ireland to the continent. However, he may have originally come from the border region between Lorraine and Alemannia and only met Columbanus at the monastery of Luxeuil in the Vosges. Gall is known as a representative of the Irish monastic tradition. The Abbey of Saint Gall in the city of Saint Gallen, Switzerland was built upon his original hermitage. Deicolus was the elder brother of Gall.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Notker the Stammerer</span> Composer, poet and scholar (c. 840–912)

Notker the Stammerer, Notker Balbulus, or simply Notker, was a Benedictine monk at the Abbey of Saint Gall active as a composer, poet and scholar. Described as "a significant figure in the Western Church", Notker made substantial contributions to both the music and literature of his time. He is usually credited with two major works of the Carolingian period: the Liber Hymnorum, which includes an important collection of early musical sequences, and an early biography of Charlemagne, the Gesta Karoli Magni. His other works include a biography of Saint Gall known as the Vita Sancti Galli and a martyrology, among others.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joseph Victor von Scheffel</span> German poet and novelist (1826–1886)

Joseph Victor von Scheffel was a German poet and novelist. His novel Ekkehard (1855) became one of the most popular German novels in the 19th century.

<i>Waltharius</i> Latin epic poem

Waltharius is a Latin epic poem founded on German popular tradition relating the exploits of the Visigothic hero Walter of Aquitaine. While its subject matter is taken from early medieval Germanic legend, the epic stands firmly in the Latin literary tradition in terms of its form and the stylistic devices used. Thus, its 1456 verses are written in dactylic hexameter and the poem includes copious references to various Latin epics of antiquity, especially Vergil's Aeneid.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Burtscheid Abbey</span>

Burtscheid Abbey was a Benedictine monastery, after 1220 a Cistercian nunnery, located at Burtscheid, near Aachen, North Rhine-Westphalia, in Germany.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Solomon III (bishop of Constance)</span> Swiss Catholic bishop

Solomon III was the Bishop of Constance from 890 to his death. In 885, the Emperor Charles III made him archchancellor of the Empire, for Konstanz was then the greatest diocese in Swabia, which had been Charles' original kingdom and was still his home most of the time. As well as bishop, he was also abbot of Reichenau and Saint Gall, immensely powerful abbeys in Swabia. Solomon founded a church in honour of Saint Magnus at Saint Gall.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Walter of Aquitaine</span> Legendary king of the Visigoths

Walter or Walther of Aquitaine is a king of the Visigoths in Germanic heroic legend.

Ekkehard IV was a monk of the Abbey of Saint Gall and the author of the Casus sancti Galli and Liber Benedictionum.

Ekkehard is a German given name. It is composed of the elements ekke "edge, blade; sword" and hart "brave; hardy". Variant forms include Eckard, Eckhard, Eckhart, Eckart. The Anglo-Saxon form of the name was Ecgheard, possibly attested in the toponym Eggerton.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tuotilo</span> Medieval composer and monk (died 915)

Tuotilo was a Frankish monk at the Abbey of Saint Gall. He was a composer, and according to Ekkehard IV a century later, also a poet, musician, painter and sculptor. Various trope melodies can be assigned to Tuotilo, but works of other mediums are attributed with less certainty. He was a student of Iso of St. Gallen and friends with the fellow monk Notker the Stammerer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ekkehard I</span>

Ekkehard I, called Major or Senex, was a monk of the Abbey of Saint Gall. He was of noble birth, of the Jonschwyl family in Toggenburg, and was educated in the monastery of St. Gall; after joining the Benedictine Order, he was appointed director of the inner school there. Later, under Abbot Kralo, who trusted him implicitly, he was elected dean of the monastery, and for a while directed all the affairs of the abbey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">St. Mang's Abbey, Füssen</span> Monastery in Bavaria, Germany

St. Mang's Abbey, Füssen or Füssen Abbey was a Benedictine monastery in Füssen in Bavaria, Germany. It was founded in the 9th century, and dissolved during the post-Napoleonic secularisation of Bavaria.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Johann Joseph Abert</span> German composer

Johann Joseph Abert was a German composer. An ethnic German from the Sudetenland, he is also known in Czech as Jan Josef Abert.

Ekkehard II, called Palatinus, was a monk of the Abbey of Saint Gall who became known for his sequence poetry.

Ratpert of St Gallen was a scholar, writer, chronicler and poet at the Abbey of Saint Gall. He wrote in Medieval Latin and in Old High German.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amalie Bensinger</span> German painter

Amalie Bensinger was a German painter associated with the Nazarene movement.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Grimald of Weissenburg</span>

Grimald, Latinised Grimaldus, was abbot of Weissenburg Abbey, abbot of the Abbey of Saint Gall (841–872), arch-chaplain of the East Frankish king Louis the German (848–870) and chancellor. He was one of the founders of scholarly education in the East Franconian Empire and in St. Gall.

Georg von Dadelsen was a German musicologist, who taught at the University of Hamburg and the University of Tübingen. He focused on Johann Sebastian Bach, his family and his environment, and the chronology of his works. As director of the Johann Sebastian Bach Institute in Göttingen, he influenced the Neue Bach-Ausgabe (NBA), the second complete edition of Bach's works.

Ekkehard is an 1878 German-language opera by Johann Joseph Abert to a libretto by Adolf Kröner after the novel Ekkehard by Joseph Victor von Scheffel. The plot tells a romantic episode in the life of Ekkehard II of Saint Gall.

References

  1. Wunderlich, Werner (1998). "Medieval Images: Joseph Viktor von Scheffel's Novel Ekkehard and St. Gall". Medievalism in the Modern World. Brepols. pp. 193–226. ISBN   2503501664.
  2. Eggert, Hartmut (1971). Studien zur Wirkungsgeschichte des deutschen historischen Romans 1850-1875. Studien zur Philosophie und Literatur des neunzehnten Jahrhundert (in German). Vol. 14. Frankfurt: Klostermann. ISBN   3465008731.