Beowulf: The Old English Anglo-Saxon Hero

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Old English Anglo-Saxon heroes, for example, Beowulf, show a progression of properties that differentiate them from the ordinary men and women who depend on them to free them from the persecution of beasts and different dangers. By understanding the qualities that make Beowulf a legend, anyone would then be able to see how other Anglo-Saxon heroes fit into their universe.
As a matter of first importance, a legend must look like it. Greek legends, similar to Hercules, were not only mortals, but rather demigods, and the possibility that a saint must be more than a man persists into Anglo-Saxon cultural belief. Beowulf is welcomed by a Danish king who sees him with acknowledgement of his magnificent presence.
While appearance was important, superhuman qualities, like strength, were also crucial to the Anglo-Saxon hero. In lines 9 to 12 of J. Lesslie Hall’s translation of Beowulf, chapter seven: Hrothgar and Beowulf, Hrothgar depicts Beowulf as having the quality strength of 30 men: "Beowulf is reported to have the strength of thirty men./Who valuable gift-gems of the Geatmen carried/As peace-offering thither, that he thirty men’s grapple/Has in his hand, the hero-in-battle.” …show more content…

In lines 433-440 of Sheamus’ translated Beowulf, Beowulf announces that his battle with Grendel would be hand-to-hand combat than the traditional “slay the monster with my sword.” Announcing something like this would gain him more glory in the eyes of, not only the kings of Geatland and Denmark, but the people as well. Beowulf displays the Anglo-Saxon heroic ideals time and time again in the battles between him and Grendel, Grendel’s mother and a dragon. He shows how his strength and courage should be an inspiration to all other heroes. Strength, courage, or appearance alone wouldn’t be enough to define a

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