Wiglaf (Proto-Norse: * , meaning "battle remainder";(Lexicon of nordic personal names before the 8th century) ) is a character in the Anglo-Saxons epic poem Beowulf. He is the son of Weohstan, a Suiones of the Waegmundings Norse clans who had entered the service of Beowulf, king of the Geats. Wiglaf is called Yngling as a metonym for Swede, as the Scylfings were the ruling Swedish clan. While in the service of the Scylfing Onela, king of the Swedes, Weohstan killed the rebel prince Eanmund and took his sword as a trophy;Lines 2612-2615. Wiglaf later inherited it.Lines 2620-2624. Weohstan belonged to the clan of the Wægmundings, the same clan Beowulf's father Ecgþeow belonged to; so Wiglaf is Beowulf's distant cousin, and his only living relative at the time of Beowulf's death.
Scholars have proposed various interpretations of Wiglaf's role in the poem, but agree that he is important, and that he was Beowulf's nephew, a key relationship in heroic tales of the period.
Wiglaf has a counterpart in Scandinavian sources named Hjalti who serves as a side-kick to Beowulf's counterpart Bödvar Bjarki, and in Bjarkamál, Hjalti makes speeches comparable to those made by Wiglaf in Beowulf.
When Beowulf damages his sword wounding the dragon and is burned by the dragon's fire,Lines 2585-2595. Wiglaf is the only man of Beowulf's band to overcome his fear of the dragon.Lines 2599-2600. He rebukes the other thanesLines 2631-2660. and goes to Beowulf's aidLine 2661. crying words of encouragement.Lines 2663-2668.
Wiglaf does not retreat, though his shield is consumed by fire.Lines 2675-2677. When Beowulf wounds the dragon a second time, striking so hard his sword shatters,Lines 2677-2682. Wiglaf strikes at the open wound with his own sword, tearing at the dragon's throat so it can no longer breathe fire.Lines 2699-2702. His hand is badly burned,Lines 2697-2698. but his attack allows Beowulf to close and kill the dragon. The poet says of Wiglaf, "So should a man be, a thane at need!"Lines 2708-2709.
At Beowulf's command, Wiglaf gathers treasure from the dragon's lair and piles it where Beowulf can see it.Lines 2752-2782. The dying Beowulf tells Wiglaf to "watch his people's needs"Lines 2799-2800. (by which he means that Wiglaf is to become the next king.) He tells Wiglaf to build him a funeral moundLines 2802-2808. and gives Wiglaf his rings, helm, and mail-shirt.Lines 2809-2812. He says that Wiglaf is now "the last of the Wægmundings."Lines 2813-2814.
The other eleven men that came with Beowulf gather around the body, and Wiglaf condemns them for their failure of duty and declares that he will order them .Lines 2864-2891. He sends a messenger to tell the other Geats what has happened.Line 2892. When the Geats have gathered, Wiglaf addresses them, mourning Beowulf's death and expressing dismay at the bleak future of the Geats without Beowulf to guard them.Lines 3077-3109.
Wiglaf's last appearance is at line 3120, where he chooses seven thanes to help him push the dragon's corpse over the cliff into the sea, loot the lair, and lay the treasure on Beowulf's funeral pyre.Lines 3120-3136.
The scholar Kevin Kiernan likens the survival of the Beowulf manuscript to Wiglaf's survival of the last fight of Beowulf the hero, noting however that while Wiglaf's efforts were all in vain, the manuscript somehow limped on.
An alternate understanding of the name in the context of a typical dithematic name, where the two elements may be as independent in meaning as separate names, "laf" could be read as "one who remains, one who survives or endures". Gallacher and Damico have acknowledged this alternative interpretation but feel that it is unnecessary to argue that one discernible element within a name submerges another as all interpretations are collectively useful in the pursuit of deep analysis.
In the 2007 film Beowulf (directed by Robert Zemeckis), Wiglaf's role (played by Brendan Gleeson) is larger; he is present in the film from the first introduction of Beowulf and the Geats to the end when Beowulf vanquishes the dragon and dies. The film makes Wiglaf into a sidekick, the second-in-command and the best friend of the epic hero.
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