Posted on 09/16/2002 8:27:11 AM PDT by SteveH
Archaeologists find legendary Icelandic home
By Times Wire Services
A UCLA team has found the Iceland home of Snorri Thorfinnsson, the first person of European descent born in the New World.
Icelandic sagas from the 13th century tell the story of how Snorris parents led the first Scandinavian group that attempted to settle in Vinland on the Canadian coast around A.D. 1000.
The attempt failed, and the family moved to Iceland, but Snorri was born while they were there.
The Vinland Sagas, which also tell the story of Leif Ericson, are the earliest recorded history of the Scandinavian people, but there has long been a debate over whether they represent real events or are simply an allegorical tale meant to deliver a moral message.
The 1960 discovery of Viking settlements at LAnse aux Meadows in Newfoundland provided some confirmation of the sagas. The apparent discovery of Snorris home provides more.
These sagas were written in Iceland, and they must have been thinking about this site, said UCLA archaeologist John Steinberg, who led the expedition. Could this specific story (in the saga) be true? This site may well hold the answers.
Archaeologist Kevin P. Smith of Hunter College in New York City added: This is a fairly large, fairly well-appointed house. Its in the right place, from the right time. It may well be (Snorris home).
The sagas tell the story of four Viking voyages to the New World. The second saga recounts the story of the pagan Thorfinn Karlsefni, who married the converted Christian woman Gudrid Thorbjarnardottir. With three boats containing 60 to 70 people, livestock, seeds and other supplies, they left for the New World around A.D. 1000 to establish a colony.
According to the sagas: Karlsefnis son Snorri was born (in Vinland) the first autumn and was 3 years old when they left.
Conflict with the native population made the settlement impossible, Smith said, and they returned to Iceland, where they established a farm. Thorfinn sailed to Norway and sold a boatload of goods from Vinland, which made him relatively rich.
Gudrid, described in the sagas as the most attractive of women and one to be reckoned with in all her dealings, made one or more trips between Iceland and Greenland and eventually traveled to Rome to meet the pope. She became a nun and returned to Iceland, where she established a church. She was probably one of the most well-traveled women of the period and all of it in an open boat, said historian Elisabeth Ward of the Smithsonian Institutions Museum of Natural History.
Steinbergs continuing project in Iceland is a survey of 26 farms in five areas of the Skagafjordur fjord valley in northern Iceland. This region, he said, is one of the few documented chiefdoms that are known. His ultimate goal is to understand how the chiefdoms, in which private properties rights were enforced without a central government, eventually gave way to regional rule. His approach is to determine how settlement patterns changed.
But archaeology is difficult in Iceland, an island about the size of Kentucky. There are virtually no trees, so buildings were constructed from turf. The inhabitants also severely abused their environment. They put way too many sheep on the land, and all the soil from the highlands eventually blew onto the coastal regions, Steinberg said. As a result, the archaeology is invisible, especially in the most important areas.
The UCLA team has been surveying the region with sophisticated equipment that measures the electrical conductivity and resistance of soil. The turf used in construction has a much lower conductivity, so electrical patterns reveal where walls are located.
They found what they believe to be Snorris home about 150 yards east of the Glaumbaer Folk Museum, just outside the seaside village of Saudarkrokur. The museum, which documents 18th-century rural Icelandic life, was once thought to have been built on the site of Snorris home.
We had always assumed that the original house must be under the standing modern turf house, in the very same spot and therefore mostly destroyed, said Sigridur Sigurardottir, the museums director. But now we have found out that it was in our museum hay field all along, just under the surface.
The building is a classic German fortress longhouse like the Great Hall of Beowulf, Steinberg said. It is 95 feet long about 50 percent longer than Viking longhouses in Newfoundland and Trelleborg, Denmark, indicating prosperity and about 30 feet wide, with 5-foot-thick walls.
A thin layer of volcanic ash from the 1104 eruption of Mount Hekla covers the remains, indicating that the structure was abandoned about 1100, when residents moved up the hill to what is now the site of the museum.
Copyright © 2002 The Quad-City Times
Of course the PC left has a new scapegoat, it's all Snorri's fault.
Time for reparations?
It has always been my understanding that Iceland if it had to categorized was part of Europe not North America.
Beo, don't look now, but I think you're in trouble. :)
The attempt failed, and the family moved to Iceland, but Snorri was born while they were there.
It's a poorly written sentence but it says that Snorry was born in Vinland [Canada]
Obviously these guys have never had a house built. Usually you don't tear down the house you live in before you build the new one....
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