Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1962, Side 82

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1962, Side 82
PROFESSOR TRYGGVI J. OLESON: Inventio Fortunata In recent years a good deal of at- tention has been re-directed to a geographical treatise which, among other things dealt with the Arctic regions of Canada.1 No copy of this work exists but its title was Inveniio Foriunaia and it was written about 1360. Its author is unkown, and much ink has been spent in specu- lating as to his identity. Many com- mentators2 have confidently identi- fied him as Nicholas of Lynn, a Carmelite who was a mathematician and spent some time at Oxford. He flourished in the latter half of the fourteenth centry. This man, or whoever the true author was, has now emerged in recent writings on the Inveniio Foriunaia as one of the most remarkable men of the day. He has been called “the outstanding figure” of the fourteenth century in geographical research.3 One writer has called him an Eng- lish scientist who travelled widely in the Arctic as a member of a sup- posed royal Norwegian expedition about 1360.4 The same writer calls this “one of the world’s greatest ex- ploration expeditions,” and adds that to Nicholas it was “a grand achievement in the fields of naviga- tion, magnetic attraction and geog- raphy.”5 On it Nicholas is said to have spent most of his time on Hud- son Bay where he found the mag- netic mountain.6 Nicholas has also been made the leader of the earliest 1. Attention has been centred on the Arctic references and not on the part that dealt with floating islands in the Atlantic. 2. E.g. Fridtjof Nansen, In Norlhern Mists, London, 1911, II, 151; B. F. de Costa, “Arctic Exploration”, Journal of the American Geographical Society of New York, XII (1880); H. R. Holand, “An English Scientist in America 130 years before Columbus,” "Transaclions of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Leiiers, XLVIII (1959); ibid., A Holy Mission to Minnesota 600 Years Ago. Alexandria, Minnesota, 1959; H. Ingstad, Landet under Leidarstjernen, Oslo, 1959. Cf. Asgaut Steinnes,” Ein Nordpolsekspedisjon ar 1360”, Syn og Segn, LXIV (1958) Steinnes says Nicholas sailed from Hull in 1360 on a ship with an English crew (p. 417), but there is no evidence for this statement. Most recently a Russian geographer, Dr. Samuel Varshavsky, has, according to newspaper reports, credited Nicholas with the discovery of America 130 years before Columbus (Winnipeg Tribune, 22. Dec. 1962). 3. E. G. R. Taylor, Tudor Geography 1485-1583. London, 1930, p. 3. Professor Taylor says here that he is perhaps the author of the Invenlio, but in a later work (“A Letter dated 1577 from Mercator to John Dee”, Imago Mundi, XIII (1956) she points out that Nicholas was a Carmelite and thus could hardly be the author. 4. Holand, “An English Scientist”; ibid. A Holy Mission. The expedition is the so-called Knutsson one for which there is no trustworthey evidence. The Kensington runes which have been attributed to it have been shown to be a nineteenth century concoction (Erik Wahlgren, The Kensington Slone, Madison, 1958). 5. Holand “An English Scientist”, p. 219. 6. Ibid. p. 209.
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