Gjúki


Gibica, better know by his later legendary names Gjúki or Gibeche, was an early king of the Burgundians. He is attested as one of the earlier kings in the prologue to the Lex Burgundionum ; otherwise, nothing is known about the historical figure. In later Germanic heroic legend, he becomes the father of other Burgundian kings and figures, including Gunther/Gunnarr and Gudrun/Kriemhild. Depending on the text, he may also be the father of Giselher, Gernot, and/or Högni. Some German sources, including the Nibelungenlied, replace the name Gibeche with another name such as Dancrat.

Historical Gibica

The historical Gibica is the first in a list of old Kings of Burgundy, along with Gundomar, Gislaharius, and Gundaharius, in the Lex Burgundionum. While Gundaharius is attested in Roman sources, no other information about Gibica or Gundomar and Gislaharius is known and the Lex does not indicate how the kings are related.

Attestations in heroic legend

In Germanic heroic legend, Gibica becomes the father of the three subsequent kings.

Scandinavian tradition

He is mentioned as Gjúki in the Eddic poem Atlakviða and also, among further 14 poems, as Gjúci in the Atlamál, where he was the father of Gunnar. Gjúki's sister is mentioned in the Guðrúnarkviða I.
In the Prose Edda, Snorri Sturluson says that Gjúki was the father of sons Gunnar and Hogni and a daughter Gudrun. Gotthorm is his stepson from his wife Grimhild's previous marriage.
The Prose Edda mentions Gudny, a second daughter of Gjúki and Grimhild. In the Gudrunarkviða, this second daughter is named Gullrond.

Continental and Anglo-Saxon tradition

In the Anglo-Saxon poem Widsith, Gibica is mentioned as the ruler of the Burgundians. In Waltharius, Gibica appears as Gibicho, the king of Francia with a capital at Worms, who sends his son Gunther as a hostage to Attila; when he dies, Gunther returns to Worms as the new Frankish king.
In the Rosengarten zu Worms, Gibeche is the father of Kriemhild and the other Burgundians; he fights in the combats at Worms and is defeated by Hildebrand, in some versions becoming a vassal to Dietrich von Bern. He also features as the father of the Burgundian kings in the Lied vom Hürnen Seyfrid, and the Heldenbuch-Prosa.
The Nibelungenlied does not use the name "Gibeche" for the character, nor do the Nibelungenklage or Biterolf und Dietleib : these sources call the king Dancrat. The Old Norse Þiðreks saga, based on German sources, names him either Aldrian or Irungr, depending on the recension, although Gunnarr and his brothers are still sometimes referred to as Giucungar.

Works cited

Category:4th-century births
Category:Year of death unknown
Category:Kings of the Burgundians
Category:Nibelung tradition
Category:Heroes in Norse myths and legends
Category:Völsung cycle
Category:4th-century monarchs in Europe
Category:5th-century monarchs in Europe