Heroism and Leadership: Beowulf

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In the era of my rule, a king was not someone who simply delivered orders to his “men” while he sat on his throne awaiting confirmation of a victory. Men admired their leader for: outstanding courage, selflessness to his tribe, personal valor, and ability to survive despite the toughest opposition. Heroism and leadership are characteristics that brought my fellow men to abide by my side despite the situation, which in response led me to become such an aspiring leader, and in the end a hero – the demonstration to attain glory through brawls. Traditions, natural laws, and religion are descriptions of my heroism and leadership.
In medieval literature, heroes are defined to be courageous, valiant, courteous, generous, and loyal. According to Napierkowski, he adds more to the nature of an Anglo-Saxon hero; a hero should be able to have the: ability to live in harmony with both the laws and noble norms of society, to overcome opposition, and to demonstrate the acquisition of virtue by the way they live... at the same time, heroic leaders are exemplars for their followers and receive much of their power by personifying the virtues to which both they and their followers are committed. (503)
Napierkowski adds relationship to the list. The relationship is between the follower and leader – how they rely on each other. To attain a heroic title as a leader, the followers must obey the codes of nobility put upon society and successfully put it into play, as well as build a strong bond with the fellow leader.
Every Hero was a leader once, and every leader was once a follower. I am a great Heroic figure, but I was also a follower. I followed and performed duties for the second child of Healfdene, Hrothgar; head of operations in Denmark and the...

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...es. In the Company of Predators: Beowulf and the monstrous descendants of cain. Angelaki Journal of the Theoretical Humanities. Vol. 13, No. 3, 2008. 41-51. Web. 16 Apr. 2014.

Works Cited

“Beowulf.” Trans. Suzanne Akbari. The Norton Anthology of World Literature. 3rd ed. Vol. B. New York: W.W. Norton, 2012. 112-82. Print.
Cooke, William. “Who Cursed Whom, and When? The Cursing of the Hoard and Beowulf’s Fate.” Medium Aevum 76.2 (2007): 207-224. Literary Reference Center. Web. 16 Apr. 2014.
Napierkowski, Thomas J. Beowulf: The Heroic, The Monstrous, and Anglo-Saxon Concepts of Leadership. International Journal of Public Administration, Volume 28, 2005. 503-16. Web. 16 Apr. 2014.
Phillips, James. In the Company of Predators: Beowulf and the monstrous descendants of cain. Angelaki Journal of the Theoretical Humanities. Vol. 13, No. 3, 2008. 41-51. Web. 16 Apr. 2014.

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