
Maps showing the different cultures in Greenland, Labrador, Newfoundland and the Canadian arctic islands in the years 900, 1100, 1300 and 1500. The green colour shows the Dorset Culture, blue the Thule Culture, red Norse Culture, yellow Innu and orange Beothuk
'Skræling' (plural 'skrælingjar') is the name the
Norse Greenlanders gave to the
Thule people they encountered in Greenland, and perhaps to the late
Dorset people; they used the same name for the inhabitants (possibly the ancestors of the later
Beothuk) of
North America, specifically present-day
Newfoundland ("
Vinland"), when they voyaged there.
The word ''skræling'' is the only word surviving into modern times from the
Old Norse dialect spoken by the medieval Norse Greenlanders. In modern
Icelandic, 'skrælingi' means a ''barbarian''. The origin of the word is not certain but it is probably based on the Old Norse word "'skrá'" which meant "skin" and also (as a verb) "to put in writing" (which was done on dried skin in
Iceland for example in the case of the
Icelandic Sagas). This would refer to the fact that the
Inuit (both Dorset and Thule) as well as the other indigenous people the Norse Greenlanders met wore clothes made of animal skins, in contrast to the woven
wool clothes worn by the Norse.
There have also been guesses that the word comes from the Scandinavian word ''skral'' or the Icelandic word ''skrælna''. The word ''skral'' connotes "thin" or "scrawny". In the
Scandinavian languages it is often used as a synonym for feeling sick or weak. This is probably a case of
folk etymology or linguistic "
false friend"; the word skral does not exist in medieval Norse texts (for example the
Icelandic sagas) nor in modern
Icelandic. It is a 17th century
loanword from
Low German into the Scandinavian languages (
Danish,
Norwegian and
Swedish). Skrælna refers to shrinking or drying (plants for example). But nothing in the written medieval texts mentioning ''skræling'' uses the term in an adverse sense.
The Greenlandic
ethnonym ''
Kalaalleq'' may be based on the Norse ''Skræling'' (the combination ''skr'' is unknown in the
Inuit language) or on the Norse ''klæði'' (meaning cloth).
References
★ Grønlands Forhistorie, editor Hans Christian Gulløv, Gyldendal, Copehagen, 2005. ISBN 87-02-017245-5
Further reading
★ "Skraeling: First Peoples of Helluland, Markland, and Vinland.” Odess, Daniel; Stephen Loring; and William W. Fitzhugh. From ''Vikings: The North Atlantic Saga.'' Fitzhugh, William W. and Elisabeth I. Ward, editors. Copyright 2000 Smithsonian Institution. Pages 193-205. ISBN 15-60-98995-5.
External links
★
Online etymology dictionary
★
Native Languages of the Americas