The
Vikings, or
Norsemen, explored and settled areas of the North Atlantic, including the northeast fringes of
North America, beginning in the 10th century. While this settlement process did not have the lasting effects that later settlements and conquests would have, it can be seen as a prelude to wide-scale European settlement in the Americas.
The Viking activities are often erroneously described as the Viking colonization of North America, but there are few findings that support this idea. Their settlements only grew to a small size and never fully developed into permanent colonies, partly because of hostile relations with Native Americans, whom the Norse referred to as ''
Skrælings''. The situation is better described as Viking exploitation of natural resources such as furs and lumber. Lumber, in particular, was in short supply in Norse
Greenland, due to deforestation.
[1]
The
Norse sagas are the first written sources in Europe that refer to North America. Some scholars believe that
South American
petroglyphs are
rune-like symbols and thus offer proof of Norse contact (e.g.
Nazca urn in
Peru,
Brazil,
Paraguay), but this assertion has never found support among Scandinavian runologists.
There are also runestones found in North America (e.g. the
Kensington Runestone,
Newport Tower and
Heavener Runestone) that are thought by some to descend from the Viking Age. There is a map describing North America, the
Vinland map, the age of which is subject to some debate.
Greenland
According to
Sagas of Icelanders, Vikings from
Iceland first discovered Greenland in the 980s.
Erik the Red led a settlement expedition there in 982. At its peak, the colony consisted of two settlements with a total population of between 3,000 and 5,000; at least 400 farms have been identified by archaeologists.
At its height, Viking Greenland had a
bishopric (at
Garðar) and exported walrus ivory, furs, rope, sheep, whale and seal
blubber, live animals such as
polar bears and cattle hides. In 1261, the population accepted the overlordship of the
Norwegian King, although it continued to have its own law. In 1380 this kingdom entered into a personal union with the Kingdom of Denmark.
The colony began to decline in the 1300s. The
Western Settlement was abandoned around 1350. By 1378, there was no longer a bishop at Garðar. After a marriage was recorded in 1408, no written records mention the settlers. It is probable that the
Eastern Settlement was defunct by the late 1400s, although no exact date has been established. The most recent radiocarbon date found in Norse settlements as of 2002 was 1430 A.D. +/- 15 years. Several theories have been advanced about the reasons for the decline. The
Little Ice Age of this period would have made it harder to travel between Greenland and Europe, and more difficult for Greenlanders to farm for subsistence; in addition, Greenlandic
ivory may have been supplanted in European markets by cheaper ivory from Africa.
Helge Ingstad believed that the Norsemen emigrated to
North America.
Despite the loss of contact with the Greenlanders, the
Danish government continued to consider Greenland a possession, and the existence of the island was never forgotten by European geographers. European
whalers made occasional landfalls on the island in the 17th century. In 1721 a joint merchant-clerical expedition led by Norwegian missionary
Hans Egede was sent to Greenland, not knowing whether Norwegian civilization remained there, and worried that if it did, it might still be
Catholic 200 years after the rest of
Scandinavia had experienced the
Reformation. Though this expedition found no surviving Europeans, it marked the beginning of Denmark's assertion of sovereignty over the island, a story that belongs to the
Danish colonization of the Americas.
Vinland
According to the
Icelandic sagas ("
Eirik the Red's Saga" and the "
Saga of the Greenlanders" — chapters of the
Hauksbók and the
Flatey Book), the Vikings started to explore lands to the west of Greenland only a few years after the Greenland settlements were established.
Bjarni Herjólfsson, a merchant, while sailing from Iceland to Greenland, was blown off course and sighted land west of the latter. He described his discovery to
Leif Ericson, who explored the area in more detail and planted a small settlement.
The sagas describe three separate areas discovered during this exploration:
Helluland, which means "land of the flat stones";
Markland, which was covered with forest (something of definite interest to the settlers in Greenland, which had few trees); and
Vinland, which was somewhere farther south of Markland. It was in Vinland where the settlement described in the sagas was planted.
Leif's settlement did not prosper; the settlers fought over the few women who accompanied the expedition, and also had conflicts with the local
Native Americans. The settlement was abandoned after a few years. The Greenland Norse remembered the existence of land to the west, though, and continued to travel to Markland for wood. The final voyage may have occurred as late as the 14th century.
For some centuries after
Christopher Columbus's voyages opened the Americas to large-scale colonization by Europeans, it was unclear whether these stories represented real voyages by Vikings to North America. The sagas were first taken seriously after the Danish archaeologist
Carl Christian Rafn in 1837 pointed out the possibility for a Norse settlement or voyages to North America.
The question was definitively settled in the 1960s, when a Viking settlement was excavated at
L'Anse aux Meadows in
Newfoundland by
Helge Ingstad and his wife. The location of the various lands described in the sagas is still unclear, however. Many historians identify Helluland with
Baffin Island and Markland with
Labrador. The location of Vinland is a thornier question. Some believe that the L'Anse aux Meadows settlement is the Vinland settlement described in the sagas; others, based on elements in the sagas that depict Vinland as being warmer than Newfoundland, believe that it lay further south. For more on the debate, see the article on
Vinland. There are still many questions remaining, and only new archaeological findings can supply more information.
See also
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Helge Ingstad
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Inventio Fortunata
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Danish American
★
Norwegian American
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Pathfinder (2007 film) - a fictional movie based on Vikings encountering Native Americans
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Pre-Columbian Islamic contact theories
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Newport Tower (Rhode Island) - possible medieval Norse ruin in America
References
1. Irwin, Constance; Strange Footprints on the Land; Harper&Row, New York, 1980; ISBN: 0-06-022772-9