Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Side 98

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Side 98
DR. TRYGGVI J. OLESON. F.R.S.C.: Anglo-Saxon England And lceland As is well known Iceland was settled between 870 and 930 chiefly by emigrants from Norway. These men were part of the great numbers who left that country after 800 and settled in the Hebrides, the Shet- lands, the Orkneys and the Faroes, as well as parts of Scotland and Ire- land. Most of them remained per- manently in these lands but a num- ber of them or their descendants joined after 870 the streams of mi- grants to that volcanic and glacier- studded outpost below the Arctic circle which was now to be brought into the orbit of European civiliza- tion and somewhat later into that of Christendom. Relations between Scandinavia and Ireland, Scotland and the Western Isles continued to be close for several centuries and after its settlement Iceland shared in this intercourse. The Irish ele- ment in the racial composition of the Icelanders is very considerable and no doubt this is true also in the realm of the literature which was produced in what is often called the Saga Island. Much has been writ- ten on this.1 Less well known is the extent of relations between Iceland and An- glo-Saxon England. These were no doubt considerable. Nor is this strange. Contacts between Anglo- Saxon England and western Norway antedate the settlement of Iceland and some of the settlers or their forbears had been wont to trade with the Anglo-Saxons. One need only cite the case of Þórólfr, the uncle of Egill Skallagrímsson, who carried on trade with England. Snorri Sturluson tells us2 that Þór- ólfr sent dried fish, hides, wadmal and furs to England where he pur- chased cloth and other goods, such as, one may presume, wheat, honey, woollen cloth, weapons, jewelry and ornaments. In the tenth and eleventh centuries Norway’s trade was chief- ly with England. It is not therefore surprising that the Icelanders should trade with the Anglo-Saxons either directly or through Norwegian mer- chants, for the export wares of Ice- land were to a great extent the same if more limited than those of Nor- way, that is to say fish, hides, pel- tries and wadmal. They would wish to import wheat and barley, honey, fine cloth, weapons and ornaments. The Icelandic sagas record many voyages by Icelanders direct to Eng- land and the visits of merchants from England to Iceland. A few ex- amples may be given. The saga of Gísli Súrsson records three voyages to England about the middle of the tenth century and the names of at least two of the merchants who engaged in this trade.3 Kjartan
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