Arnljot opera

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Arnjolt opera was written by the Swedish composer Wilhelm Peterson-Berger.

The origin to Arnjolt is a melody that Wilhelm Peterson-Berger created when he first visited Jamtland in 1898. When journeyed over Storsjön he was inspired by the nearby mountains, Oviksfjällen. The opera consists of three parts and the historical foundations of the opera is the character Arnljot Gelline that are mentioned in Snorri Sturluson saga about Olav Haraldsson (den Hellige, Rex perpetuus Norwegiae) and the writings on Frösöstenen, the rune stone that are placed on Frösön. Out of these components, Wilhelm Peterson-Berger wrote his drama.

The original performance of Arnljot as an opera were put on in on April 13, 1910 at the Royal Theater in Stockholm. However, Wilhelm Peterson-Berger had already two years earlier allowed amateurs to perform parts of the texts and music on Frösön on a midsummer night eve. Nearly 3.000 persons witnessed this amateur performance of the Arnjolt play.

Today, each summer the Arnjolt play (the opera is rewritten as a play, but the tesxts and music remains the same) staged in an outdoor environment on the island of Frösön. The background of the stage is a panorama view over Storsjön and Oviksfjällen, thus, when the audience hears the introduction tune of the opera they see the same view as Wilhelm Peterson-Berger did when he created the first tune of the opera.

[edit] Famous Quotes from the Opera

The quote below serves as an inspiration for the present-day independence movement that exists in the Swedish province of Jamtland.

"Listen Jamtar to what I have to say for a while. Not even eighty winters have passed since Jamtland was still free and governed its own business. Back then, no taxes was given away to foreign kings. Why we settled being enslaved, at first under Norway and then under Svitiod [a reference to Sweden], are something that I have never understood. This country, being protected by forests, bogs and mountains, is difficult to raid and easy to defend. There are plenty of fighting men among us and more such men can be brought here if paid by goods. Therefore, I now advise you - end this dispute of which kingdom we belong. Let us refuse all foreign attempts to make us a county, no matter who demands this from us. Let us again seize our former freedom and elect a chief for all of our country, a king who will lead our struggle if the struggle is needed to defend our homes and our land."