Lögberg-Heimskringla - 26.09.1963, Blaðsíða 2

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 26.09.1963, Blaðsíða 2
2 LÖGBERG-HEIMSKRINGLA, FIMMTUDAGINN 26. SEPTEMBER 1963 Dr. Tryggvi J. Oleson: Myfrhs and More Myfrhs The Pre-Columbian history of America abounds in le- gends and myths. The Vikings, for example, are by many be- lieved to have in 1362 pene- trated into the interior of North America. This opinion is based on the so-called dis- covery of a runic stone near Kensington, Minnesota in 1898. The inscription record- ed an exploration joumey to Minnesota by Norwegians and Swedes. But the inscription is a concoction of the 1890’s. Again the Vikings were sup- posed to have been in the re- gion of the Great Lakes in the eleventh century. Here the evidence consists of a Viking sword and other articles pur- porting to have been found at Beardmore in northem Ontario in the 1930’s. The articles seem, however, to have been brought over by a Norwegian in the 1920’s. The location of Vinland continues to exercise the ingenuity of scholars. It has recently on the basis of evidence in the Icelandic sagas been located in the region of the Great Lakes, with Niagara Falls fig- uring prominently in this ac- count. In the summer of 1961 the Norwegian journalist- explorer, Helge Ingstad, found what he claimed were Norse ruins on the northern penin- sula of Newfoundland and located Vinland there near L’Ance aux Meadows, in spite of the fact that this region has none of the features— grapes, self-sown wheat, and a practically frost free winter climate—mentioned in the sa- gas as characteristics of Vin- land. It cannot, of course, be denied that it is quite likely that the Icelanders who set- tled in Greenland in the years after 986 visited Newfound- land, but it is hard to believe that Vinland was located there. Ingstad has not made a final report but preliminary reports suggest that the houses may be Norse. It is not these myths, how- ever, that will be discussed here, but rather three others which have recently received considerable attention. The first of these concerns Nichol- as of Lynne, a monk of Ox- ford who lived in the four- teenth century, and is said to have written a book called Inventio fortunata about his voyages to the Canadian Arc- tic. The evidence for this con- sists principally of certain passages in the sixteenth century writings of the carto- grapher Gerhardt Mercator, Hakluyt and John Dee. Ac^ cording to them, a certain priest at the court of the King of Norway, who was descend- ed from men whom King Arthur had sent to the Arctic regions of Canada, reported that a Franciscan friar, visit- ed Greenland and neighboring islands around 1360. He tra- velled alone further north by his magical arts and described the places he saw and deter- mined their latitude with his astrolobe. On his return he wrote a book called Inventio fortunata and delivered it to King Edward III of England. He then made five more jour- neys to the Arctic. Dr. Tryggvi J. Oleson On the basis of these fan- tastic—what other word ap- plies— aceounts, recent writ- ings have made Nicholas of Lynne, who was likely a Car- melite and not a Franciscan, one of the first Arctic explor- ers and the discoverer of the magnetic pole. In one version he travelled to Greenland as the astronomer and navigator of the mythical expedition which r e a c h e d Greenland from Norway in 1355 and eventually carved the inscrip- tion on the Kensington Stone. He is supposed to have left the expedition in Greenland and with eight men pene- trated the Arctic. In another recent book he is represented as the leader of an English Arctic expedition. What then is the truth? First it must be said that the Inventio fortunata (no copy of which now exists but ex- tracts in later writings are to be found) was written about 1360; that it seems to have been an accurate description of parts of the Canadian Arc- tic north of Baffin Bay; and that it may have been known to Columbus and may have influenced him. Nicholas may have written it, although the author is said to have been a Franciscan, and another four- teenth century Franciscan mathematician of O x f o r d could equally well have done so. That the author visited the Arctic is, however, open to the gravest doubts. Whence, then, did he get his inform- ation? The most likely source is a priest, Ivar Bardarsson, who was administrator of the church in Greenland from 1340 to 1360 and who return- ed to Norway about 1360, where he himself wrote a Description of Greenland. This work was later trans- lated for Henry Hudson who carried it with him on his voyages. The author of the Inventio fortunata may have met Ivar at the court of the King of Norway and there written the book from the in- formation supplied by Ivar. In other words, like another great traveller of the Middle Ages, John Mandeville, he travelled through the Arctic by magical arts while sitting in his chair at home, seeing all its marvels through the eyes of others. It is interest- ing, too, that none of those who believe Nicholas did make a voyage to the Arctic, care to discuss his other five voyages there. The second myth deals with the Irish discovery of Am- erica. Now there is no doubt that the Irish were making voyages in the North Atlantic as early as, if not earlier than, the seventh century. Irish hermits were in Iceland when the Norwegians discovered it about 870. Earlier, in the sixth century, St. Brendan, who died in 584, is by many be- lieved to have visited Iceland, Greenland and even America, although it is more probable that the account of his voy- ages, The Navigatio Brendani is a summary of various Irish sailings and of reports of Ice- land and Greenland given by Norsemen. Many have claim- ed that there was an Irish colony in America before its discovery by the Norsemen and ruins of Great Ireland have purportedly been found in New England, although these have subsequently been shown to date from the eight- eenth and nineteenth cen- furies. Recently it has been seriously argued that this early Irish colony in America was founded by the Irish her- mits who left Iceland in 870 when the Norwegians began to settle that country. The evidence for this is found in certain passages in Icelandic sagas, which describe a White Men’s Land or Ireland the Great, north or south of the St. Lawrence. No archaeo- logical remains of what is maintained to have been a flourishing colony around the year 1000 when the Norse- men first discovered America, have ever been found. There is little doubt that the authors of the Icelandic sagas, which contain references to White Men’s Land, confused the ter- ritories of America discovered by the Norsemen, which were known by that name, as well as the Latin one of Albania Magna, in mediaeval writings and maps, with a region in Ireland also known as White Men’s Land or Tir na-Fer Finn. The view that such a colony was established by Irish monks from Iceland can only be described as prepost- erous. Presumably t h e s e monks, who left Iceland in 870, were celibate. Yet either they themselves, which is hardly conceivable, or their descendants, which is equally inconceivable, or new recruits from Ireland, or pupils they had trained, were parading around in religious proces- sions in the Gaspe Peninsula or nearby regions around the year 1000 when the Norsemen first discovered America. The third myth may be dis- missed briefly. It is an old one, which, like so many others, refuses to die although it’s absurdity has long ago been^ demonstrated. In 1558 there was published in Venice a book purporting to record the voyages made by two native sons, the brothers Niccolo and Antonio Zeno, into the North Atlantic in the last two decades of the four- teenth century. Here they en- tered the service of a prince named Zichmni and made many voyages among the is- lands of the North Atlantic. In 1938 Zichmni and the two Zeno brothers even discovered Nova Scotia. And who was Zichmni? None other than Henry Sinclair, Earl of the Orkneys, who died in 1404. This fantastic tale, in which is encountered a Franciscan monastery on the east coast of Greenland blessed with central heat, still has its ad- herents in spite of the fact that both it and the map appended to it have been shown to be sixteenth century concoctions, and in spite of the fact that there is no evi- dence that the Zeno brothers were employed by Sinclair or that he undertook any trans-Atlantic voyages. In a recent book Sinclair has been identified as a legendary hero of the Micmacs who pro- nounced his name Glooscap. So one might go on. There is no end of myths. There is that of Madoc the Welshman, who in the twelfth century colonized the southern United States and even Mexico where he taught the Indians the Indians the Welsh language. There are numerous myths concerning the disappearance of the Icelandic colonies in Greenland. And the remark- able thing, as I have already said, is that many of these myths are not propagated by just cranks, but by respect- able, sober scholars. It woulc seem that the Pre-Columbian history of America has such a fascination for all those who study it that it beclouds their judgment and causes their imagination to run riot. Thus we have myths, and more myths. Höfuðlausn Almost as much has been written about Hofudlausn it- self as about Egil’s visit to York. It has been regarded as a drapa written in praise not of Eirik but of Athelstan, or as the reworking of an earlier poem — though these are both unlikely theories; as having been written with the pœt’s tongue in his cheek; and as a poem written earlier and held in readiness for a projected visit to Eirik. Scholars as not- able as Finnur Jonsson and Per Wiesélgren have seen in its general hyperbole and lack of minute particulars, and its hollow, conventional praise of the king’s unspecified cam- paigns and unillustrated gen- erosity, an exercise in irony at Eirik’s expense. But it is hard to believe that Egil would have composed an ironical poem about an enemy without the irony being more apparent. If it is objected that he composed it while in that enemy’s power and dared not be more explicit, the answer seems to be t'hat it is then unthinkable he should deal in irony at all. The “emptiness” of the poem, its rhetorical ring and lack of supporting detail, are more credibly explained by its be- ing the work of one night and by Egil’s unwillingness even in sore straits to dole out more praise than he must. There is no reason whatever for think- ing it beyond Egil’s powers to put together a twenty-verse drapa in so short a time; mod- ern Icelanders have not found it difficult to repeat the feat, and runhenda is a much easier meter to compose in than drottkvaedr hattr. Patently Hofudlausn is a poem much in- ferior to Sonatorrek and Arin- bjarnarkvida, and may proper- ly be regarded as a triumph of technique under difficulties. The theory that the poem was composed before Egil left Ice- land depends upon the ante- cedent theory that Egil sought Eirik of his own will. The phrases in Hofudlausn invoked to support the theory (they are to be found more espeéially in the first two and a half verses) are equally consistent with Arinbjorn’s plan to convince King Eirik that Egil did come freely into his presence. Unquestionably Hofudlausn impressed its royal hearer in the tenth century more than it seems to have impressed its critics of the nineteenth and twentieth. In return for its twenty verses Eirik gave Egil his head, let his enemy go in peace, despite his many and ample grievances. If we ask why, we are not likely to ans- wer that it was for the poem’s content, its empty praise and glitter. But when we consider the form of the poem a pos- sible explanation assaults the Framhald á bls. 3.

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