Some linguistic remarks regarding Romanian Viking Studies

In Romania there is no academic program dedicated entirely to the study of the Viking period in Scandinavia and Europe, but Romanian historiography can still boast with a decent number of monographs, translations and studies relating to early medieval Northern Europe. The concern of the present stud...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Costel Coroban
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Romanian Association for Baltic and Nordic Studies 2013-11-01
Series:Revista Română pentru Studii Baltice şi Nordice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://f-origin.hypotheses.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/5711/files/2018/12/08.-Coroban.pdf
id doaj-766764ad583b4aaf85a6fceb1c202dab
record_format Article
spelling doaj-766764ad583b4aaf85a6fceb1c202dab2020-11-25T03:30:18ZengThe Romanian Association for Baltic and Nordic StudiesRevista Română pentru Studii Baltice şi Nordice2067-17252067-225X2013-11-0152119144Some linguistic remarks regarding Romanian Viking StudiesCostel Coroban0Ovidius University of ConstantaIn Romania there is no academic program dedicated entirely to the study of the Viking period in Scandinavia and Europe, but Romanian historiography can still boast with a decent number of monographs, translations and studies relating to early medieval Northern Europe. The concern of the present study is that of offering a general view on the language variations used by Romanian historians or translators when referring to certain Viking historical characters, rituals, artefacts or any other aspects regarding the history of the Norsemen. One of the first terms that ought to be considered by this study is the Old Norse word “viking” (used in runic inscriptions in contexts such as the verbal group “fara í víking” – meaning “to go on a raid”, “to go a-viking”). The complexity of translating this verbal structure into Romanian comes from the difficulty of turning the borrowed ethnonym “Viking” into a verbal phrase. Thus, it has been rendered as “a merge in expediţie vikingă”/”going on a Viking [+fem. desinence] expedition”. The only downside of using this phrase is that it might imply pleonasm since the Romanian noun “viking” already refers to raids and seafaring activities. Other authors have instead proposed the translation of “cineva care face un înconjur”/”somebody who goes on an expedition”, or simply “care e departe de casă”/”someone away from home”. But a royal saga also tells us about a noble who was “stundum í kaupferdum en stundum í víkingu” which is translated into Romanian as “în acelaşi timp în călătorie de afaceri şi în expediţie vikingă [at the same time in business trip and in viking expedition]”. The translation of í víking as “a merge în expediţie viking [going on a viking expedition]” also appears. In the translation of Frans G. Bengtsson’s well know The Long Ships, going a-viking is translated into Romanian as “seceriş [reaping], incursiune de jaf [raid for plundering]”, which is interestingly the only identifiable metaphor for this activity. Vikings also rarely appear as “wikingi” instead of the very common “vikingi” in Romanian translations.https://f-origin.hypotheses.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/5711/files/2018/12/08.-Coroban.pdfviking studiesromaniatranslationseddaold norse
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Costel Coroban
spellingShingle Costel Coroban
Some linguistic remarks regarding Romanian Viking Studies
Revista Română pentru Studii Baltice şi Nordice
viking studies
romania
translations
edda
old norse
author_facet Costel Coroban
author_sort Costel Coroban
title Some linguistic remarks regarding Romanian Viking Studies
title_short Some linguistic remarks regarding Romanian Viking Studies
title_full Some linguistic remarks regarding Romanian Viking Studies
title_fullStr Some linguistic remarks regarding Romanian Viking Studies
title_full_unstemmed Some linguistic remarks regarding Romanian Viking Studies
title_sort some linguistic remarks regarding romanian viking studies
publisher The Romanian Association for Baltic and Nordic Studies
series Revista Română pentru Studii Baltice şi Nordice
issn 2067-1725
2067-225X
publishDate 2013-11-01
description In Romania there is no academic program dedicated entirely to the study of the Viking period in Scandinavia and Europe, but Romanian historiography can still boast with a decent number of monographs, translations and studies relating to early medieval Northern Europe. The concern of the present study is that of offering a general view on the language variations used by Romanian historians or translators when referring to certain Viking historical characters, rituals, artefacts or any other aspects regarding the history of the Norsemen. One of the first terms that ought to be considered by this study is the Old Norse word “viking” (used in runic inscriptions in contexts such as the verbal group “fara í víking” – meaning “to go on a raid”, “to go a-viking”). The complexity of translating this verbal structure into Romanian comes from the difficulty of turning the borrowed ethnonym “Viking” into a verbal phrase. Thus, it has been rendered as “a merge in expediţie vikingă”/”going on a Viking [+fem. desinence] expedition”. The only downside of using this phrase is that it might imply pleonasm since the Romanian noun “viking” already refers to raids and seafaring activities. Other authors have instead proposed the translation of “cineva care face un înconjur”/”somebody who goes on an expedition”, or simply “care e departe de casă”/”someone away from home”. But a royal saga also tells us about a noble who was “stundum í kaupferdum en stundum í víkingu” which is translated into Romanian as “în acelaşi timp în călătorie de afaceri şi în expediţie vikingă [at the same time in business trip and in viking expedition]”. The translation of í víking as “a merge în expediţie viking [going on a viking expedition]” also appears. In the translation of Frans G. Bengtsson’s well know The Long Ships, going a-viking is translated into Romanian as “seceriş [reaping], incursiune de jaf [raid for plundering]”, which is interestingly the only identifiable metaphor for this activity. Vikings also rarely appear as “wikingi” instead of the very common “vikingi” in Romanian translations.
topic viking studies
romania
translations
edda
old norse
url https://f-origin.hypotheses.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/5711/files/2018/12/08.-Coroban.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT costelcoroban somelinguisticremarksregardingromanianvikingstudies
_version_ 1724576346046201856