Heldenlieder

Heldenlieder, body of short, poignant poetic songs celebrating dramatic, and usually tragic, episodes in the lives of the Germanic heroes. Other themes concerned pagan religious ritual, battle songs, and laments for the dead. The heroic lay originated c. 375–500, during the period of the great migrations (Völkerwanderungen). Because they were transmitted orally, very little survives. Some examples survive in Scandinavian and Old English (in the fragmentary Fight at Finnsburg), but the sole survivor in Old High German is the Hildebrandslied (c. 800), which, though incomplete, reveals a sophisticated technique of dramatic selection and treatment.

Originally composed and recited by Skofs (court poets), the hero songs survived in the Christian Era as an underground literature, despite church disapproval, and were later disseminated by Spielleute (wandering minstrels). Their stories, which survived the actual poems in popular memory, centred about historic persons and events, the Ostrogothic kings Ermanaric and Theodoric (Dietrich von Bern), and the Hunnish king Attila (Etzel). Other cycles commemorated the Low German hero Siegfried and the fate of the Burgundians. In the 13th century they supplied the subject matter for the great Middle High German epic Nibelungenlied.