Emoji u1f384.svg
Merry Christmas from the IIWiki Team! Have a happy new year!

User:MichCOdel/Sandbox 3

Revision as of 09:06, 16 May 2020 by MichCOdel (talk | contribs) (Created page with "=Ahtivala= {{Infobox book | name = Ahtivala | title_orig = Ahtivala {{noitalic|(or}} Achtiwala{{noitalic|, first edition, 1837)}} | translator = | ima...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Ahtivala

Ahtivala
Ahtivala.png
Ahtivala. The Hilyic national epic by Kaarle Fristen. Third edition, 1853.
AuthorKaarle Fristen
Original titleAhtivala (or Achtiwala, first edition, 1837)
CountryLhedwinic Empire
LanguageHilyic; translated multiple times
GenreEpic poetry, National epic
PublisherUusisatama Publishing, among others
Publication date
1837: First Ahtivala
1848: Second Ahtivala
1853: Third Ahtivala
PagesFirst Ahtivala: 542pp
Second Ahtivala: 731pp
Third Ahtivala: ~600pp.

The Ahtivala is the national epic of the Hilyic people and a recognized work of cultural importance in X and X. It is based on West Hilyic and Liemska folk poetry collected during the travels of Kaarle Fristen starting from 1826 in Lhedwin. The first edition of the Ahtivala, known as the First Ahtivala (Hilyic: Ensimmäinen Achtiwala) was published in 1837 followed by two other editions being published in 1846 and 1853 known as the Second Ahtivala (Hilyic: Toinen Ahtivala) and Third Ahtivala (Hilyic: Kolmas Ahtivala) respectively. What is today known as simply Ahtivala refers to the Third Ahtivala.

The Ahtivala is a collection of poems in the Ahtivalan metre. The poems are not directly written as they were first recorded rather they have been altered with their vocabulary and grammar having been centralised into a more unified form of Hilyic. The peoms have also been restructured and recontextualized with even some poems having been written by Fristen himself to connect similar storylines.

The Ahtivala begins with the Hilyic creation myth where the world was created from the corpse of Kekko, the storm god, by the sage hero Valtari and the great smith Rautia. The Ahtivala depicts conflicts between the people of Ahtivala and the people of Tuonela as well as conflicts, revenge trips and proposal trips between its various protagonists. The Ahtivala ends in the arrival of the Lhedwinic peoples.

The Ahtivala has been one of the most significant pieces of Hilyic literature helping to centralize the language as well as being instrumental in the creation of a distinctive Hilyic identity. It contributed greatly to the Hiloman Movement as well as having influenced the arts and sciences significantly.