Skráningarfærsla handrits
Acc. 59
Handrit hefur ekki verið myndað stafrænt
Huldar saga hinnar miklu; Danmörk, 1815-1816
Sagan | af | Huld Tröllkonu (1r)
Innihald
Huldar saga hinnar miklu
„I: Capituli.“
„Hiörvardur hefur kongur heited, sonur Hilldebrands hins hamramma“
„enn hier sklltu gi|sting hafa i nott ok skiemt þier vid godann | fagnad. “
„ (Resten mangler.) “
The text is divided into 25 numbered chapters.
The tile page on 1r is not paginated. F. 27v is blank and not paginated.
Íslenska
Lýsing á handriti
No foliation. Pagination 1-51 starts on f. 2r. The title page and the last three blank leaves are not paginated.
The manuscript is in a good condition.
The text is written in one column.
There are 27-29 lines per page.
Written by Frederik Julius Schaldemose.
No decorations.
On the title page the is a note „ (Efter et haandskrift, som tilhörer hr. prof. | B. Thorlacius.) Schaldemose | Nykiöping paa Falster | 1816.“
On the same page there is an addition „foræret af Afskriveren til Skolebibliothek[ke].“
Half-bound in the 19th cent. Boards covered with marbled paper (gray, blue, and ornage); brown leather spine and corners.
Red label with a gilded embosed title on the front cover „SAGA | AF | HULD | TROLLKONU“
A provenance sticker affixed to foot of spine: „Nykjöbing Cath-Skole Bibliothek“.
Uppruni og ferill
The manuscript was written in Denmark by Frederik Julius Schaldemose between 1815-1816, as the dates attested in the watermarks and in the note on the title page suggest.
The manuscripts Acc. 51-62 came from Nykøbing cathedral school. Most of them are Fredrik Schaldemose's transcriptions of Norse texts.
The manuscripts were given as a gift to the Nykøbing Katedralskole by Frederik Julius Schaldemose.
The Arnamagnæan Institute in Copenhagen acquired the manuscript from the school in April 2007 as a gift.
Aðrar upplýsingar
Catalogued from the manuscript on 25. október 2018 by Katarzyna Anna Kapitan.
- Microfilm Neg 2018 from 30. maí 2011.
- Microfilm (archive) 2000 from 1. júní 2011.
- Backup film TS 1296 from 1. júní 2011.