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  1. Kriemhild swears revenge against Hagen while Brunhild commits suicide at the foot of Siegfried's corpse, which has been laid in state in the cathedral. A transformation sequence from Die Nibelungen: Siegfried: After Siegfried's death, Kriemhild has a vision of Siegfried's last farewell to her.

  2. The Nibelungenlied Summary. Next. Chapter 1. In Burgundy lives a maiden princess named Kriemhild who is known far and wide for her beauty and charm. Kriemhild is the sister of renowned kings Gunther, Gernot, and Giselher, who rule from Worms beside the Rhine and are served by many proud knights. As a girl, Kriemhild decides to foreswear love ...

  3. Key Facts about The Nibelungenlied. Full Title: The Nibelungenlied ( The Song of the Nibelungs ) When Written: c. 1200. Where Written: Austria. When Published: c. 1200. Literary Period: High Medieval. Genre: Epic poetry. Setting: Worms, Germany (Burgundy), and Hungary. Climax: Hagen vengefully murders Siegfried when he bends over to drink water ...

  4. Die Nibelungen was made into a two-part black-and-white silent movie in 1924. It was produced in Germany, and directed by Fritz Lang. It was produced in Germany, and directed by Fritz Lang.

  5. German: “Song of the Nibelungs”. Nibelungenlied: Siegfried. Siegfried, illustration from a printing of Nibelungenlied. Nibelungenlied, Middle High German epic poem written about 1200 by an unknown Austrian from the Danube region. It is preserved in three main 13th-century manuscripts, A (now in Munich), B (St. Gall), and C (Donaueschingen ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. The Nibelungenlied, translated as The Song of the Nibelungs, is an epic poem in Middle High German. It tells the story of dragon -slayer Siegfried at the court of the Burgundians, his murder, and of his wife Kriemhild's revenge, which ultimately brings about the deaths of every one of the main protagonists.

  7. Overview. Sometimes referred to as the “German Iliad ,” Nibelungenlied is a 13th-century German epic poem that combines historical events with German heroic legend. The epic’s poet is unknown—though some clues within the text suggest that he was from Passau, Germany. The epic, which literally translates to “The Song of the Nibelungs ...