The reason for the usage of both
Thryth and the compound name
Modthryth is that the latter name is an emendation by
Klaeber (1953).
Mod appears just before
Þryð on line 1932 of the poem, where she is introduced, and scholars are divided as to whether
mod is part of her name, or a separate word. The queen of the eighth-century Mercian king Offa in the thirteenth-century
Vitae duorum Offarum, which portrays both this Offa and his fifth-century namesake, is called Quendrida, a somewhat flawed Latin rendering of
Cynethryth, the actual name of Offa's wife. The author, moreover, etymologised the word as consisting of the words
quen 'queen' and the personal name Drida:
Quendrida, id est regina Drida. This parallel has sometimes been taken as a further argument that the Offa of
Beowulf had a queen called Thryth and that the passage was intended as a veiled reference to the eighth-century queen. More recently,
R. D. Fulk has challenged the long-held view that the queen was named either Modthryth or Thryth, pointing out difficulties with the ending -
o, its implications for the overall syntax, and the weaknesses of the Drida argument. Instead, he revives the suggestion made by Ernst A. Kock in 1920 that '
is not an adjective modifying ' "the people's princess" and meaning "excellent" (which would be inappropriate at this stage of the narrative), but her actual name. On the basis of such parallels as ''
"bore arrogance" (Old English Genesis A
line 2240b), he likewise treats as a common noun, although this necessitates an emendation of the ending -o
to -a''. Eric Weiskott has challenged Fulk's reinterpretation on grounds of poetic syntax, concluding that the queen remains anonymous. The name Thryth may also have been paraphrased in
Saxo Grammaticus' portrait of the war-like maiden-queen of Schotland,
Herminthrud, who is courted by
Amleth (
History of the Danes, Book IV), as well as by the name of the
shield-maiden Drot(a), bride of king Borcar of
Scania (Book VII). ==From wicked princess to virtuous queen==