Wealhtheow (like
Hygd) fulfills the important role of hostess in the poem. The importance of this cup carrying practice is emphasized in lines 1161–1231. Here Wealhtheow, anxious that Hrothgar secures the succession for her own offspring, gives a speech and recompenses
Beowulf for slaying
Grendel with three horses and a necklace. The necklace is called
Brosinga mene, and the name is held to be either a corruption or a misspelling of
OE Breosinga mene,
ON Brisingamen,
Freyja's necklace. Richard North compares the gift of the necklace to
Brosing, Freyja's Brisingamen and he comments that, :The wider
Old Norse-
Icelandic tradition attributes the Brisinga men or giroli Brisings (Brisinger's girdle c.900) to Freya who is at once the sister of
Ingvi-freyr of the
Vanir, the leading Norse goddess of love, and a
witch with the power to revive the dead. Freya's acquisition of this necklace and its theft by
Loki are the central incidents in
Sorlaþattr. As queen, Wealhtheow represents the “female's duty to maintain peace between two warring tribes” and to “signify the status of the court.” While her position may appear ritualistic, she also maintains “the cohesiveness of the unity of the warriors.” Wealhtheow inhabits this role by constantly speaking to each of the men in her hall and reminding them of their obligations – obligations to their country, their family, or their king. In a grimly ironic passage that would not be lost on the Anglo-Saxon audience of
Beowulf Wealhtheow commends her sons to Hroðulf's generosity and protection, not suspecting that he will murder her sons to claim the throne for himself. All the qualities marking Wealhtheow as an ideal queen place her in contrast to
Grendel's mother, who appears for the first time following a lengthy passage concerned with Wealhtheow and her sons. The contrast between Wealhtheow and Grendel's mother echoes the parallels between Beowulf, Hrothgar, and Grendel. == Notes ==