Dacians, Varangians, Vlachs and The Golden Bough

The essay interprets four parts of Mihai Sadoveanu’s 1933 enigmatical novel The Golden Bough. The Dacian section focuses on the way geographical, historical, ethnical and social guide marks are introduced to define an uncertain moment in history, the late eighth century in the Carpathians. It also i...

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Main Author: Lucian Vasile Bâgiu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre for Languages and Literature, Lund University 2025-05-01
Series:Swedish Journal of Romanian Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lub.lu.se/sjrs/article/view/26500
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author Lucian Vasile Bâgiu
author_facet Lucian Vasile Bâgiu
author_sort Lucian Vasile Bâgiu
collection DOAJ
description The essay interprets four parts of Mihai Sadoveanu’s 1933 enigmatical novel The Golden Bough. The Dacian section focuses on the way geographical, historical, ethnical and social guide marks are introduced to define an uncertain moment in history, the late eighth century in the Carpathians. It also introduces the impetus that must have driven the author to do so and continues with an intertextual comparative reading with Eminescu’s poem The Ghosts, particularly on the depiction of the magus and the unexpected reasons behind the author’s choice, i. e. the Viking pathway. The Varangians segment highlights all seven occurrences of the Northmen collective personage within the story, with minimal historical contextualization of the 787-797 Byzantium, lying before the awkward discrepancy between the Northerners’ enhanced fictional role and the factual inexistence at that particular time and place. The Vlachs fragment presents the six occurrences of “Blacherne” in Sadoveanu’s novel, a documented linguistic and historic speculation of two Romanian scholars on the origin of the exonym “Vlach” as having its source in the Greek milieu of the early Eastern Roman Empire, and the role the Vikings might have played in its spreading, thus proposing an unaccounted-for rationale for the Varangians’ diegetic significance. The Golden Bough division depicts the similarities and the incongruities in comparative readings with Frazer’s anthropological approach and with Virgil’s Aeneid, suggesting a more adequate analogy with the Egyptian hermetic philosophy. The essay ends up with a brief expounding of Sadoveanu’s Masonic status and its likely function in initiating the imaginary Golden Bough.
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spelling doaj-art-07afafb7be324673b591dd86f766eac52025-08-20T03:10:25ZengCentre for Languages and Literature, Lund UniversitySwedish Journal of Romanian Studies2003-09242025-05-0182426510.35824/sjrs.v8i2.26500Dacians, Varangians, Vlachs and The Golden BoughLucian Vasile Bâgiu0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8588-8528"1 Decembrie 1918" University of Alba Iulia, RomaniaThe essay interprets four parts of Mihai Sadoveanu’s 1933 enigmatical novel The Golden Bough. The Dacian section focuses on the way geographical, historical, ethnical and social guide marks are introduced to define an uncertain moment in history, the late eighth century in the Carpathians. It also introduces the impetus that must have driven the author to do so and continues with an intertextual comparative reading with Eminescu’s poem The Ghosts, particularly on the depiction of the magus and the unexpected reasons behind the author’s choice, i. e. the Viking pathway. The Varangians segment highlights all seven occurrences of the Northmen collective personage within the story, with minimal historical contextualization of the 787-797 Byzantium, lying before the awkward discrepancy between the Northerners’ enhanced fictional role and the factual inexistence at that particular time and place. The Vlachs fragment presents the six occurrences of “Blacherne” in Sadoveanu’s novel, a documented linguistic and historic speculation of two Romanian scholars on the origin of the exonym “Vlach” as having its source in the Greek milieu of the early Eastern Roman Empire, and the role the Vikings might have played in its spreading, thus proposing an unaccounted-for rationale for the Varangians’ diegetic significance. The Golden Bough division depicts the similarities and the incongruities in comparative readings with Frazer’s anthropological approach and with Virgil’s Aeneid, suggesting a more adequate analogy with the Egyptian hermetic philosophy. The essay ends up with a brief expounding of Sadoveanu’s Masonic status and its likely function in initiating the imaginary Golden Bough.https://journals.lub.lu.se/sjrs/article/view/26500aeneidbyzantiumcarpathianschristianityhermeticinfernomasonvikings
spellingShingle Lucian Vasile Bâgiu
Dacians, Varangians, Vlachs and The Golden Bough
Swedish Journal of Romanian Studies
aeneid
byzantium
carpathians
christianity
hermetic
inferno
mason
vikings
title Dacians, Varangians, Vlachs and The Golden Bough
title_full Dacians, Varangians, Vlachs and The Golden Bough
title_fullStr Dacians, Varangians, Vlachs and The Golden Bough
title_full_unstemmed Dacians, Varangians, Vlachs and The Golden Bough
title_short Dacians, Varangians, Vlachs and The Golden Bough
title_sort dacians varangians vlachs and the golden bough
topic aeneid
byzantium
carpathians
christianity
hermetic
inferno
mason
vikings
url https://journals.lub.lu.se/sjrs/article/view/26500
work_keys_str_mv AT lucianvasilebagiu daciansvarangiansvlachsandthegoldenbough