Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Side 99

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Side 99
anglo-saxon england and iceland 81 Ölafsson, the great hero of Laxdæla Sa9a, proposed ca. 998 a merchant voyage to England where, he said, oonditions for trading were excel- lent. His partner, Kálfr Árnason, brought the merchant ship back to Iceland from this venture in the fol- lowing year.4 Around 1015 one Hallr Guðmundsson gave a certain Kol- skeggr his merchant ship on which ^he latter then sailed away to Eng- land.5 A great merchant named £*órir (fl. ca. 1050) was known by the nickname of “England-farer”.6 Such instances might be multiplied endlessly and it should be noticed that the sagas mention ventures of this kind only when some other oc- casion demands a recording of them and not because of any interest in the venture as such. The impression cne gains is that voyages of this kind were commonplace. The Ice- anders possessed their own ocean- S°tng merchant ships not only throughout the period of Anglo- a^on rule in England but certainly as late as the thirteenth century, after which they became more de- Pendant on Norwegian shipping. With the establishment of an Ice- andic colony in Greenland in the year 986 certain wares were added t° the list of export articles— ^ares that were extremely sought a ter in Europe. These included the White falcon of Baffin Island, (falco rusticolus candicans) which was the most highly prized bird used in that ^st popular of mediaeval sports, a conry, although the native Ice- andic falcon (falco rusticolus is- ^ndicus) which is sometimes diffi- Cu t to distinguish from the white falcon was almost equal in popu- larity. By the ninth century fal- conry had become a very popular pastime in western Europe and especially in England and Wales. No doubt Norwegian, Icelandic and Greenland falcons early became sought after in these countries. We do not know, however, when the Icelanders first began to train fal- cons for hunting but we do know that the Icelanders early became acquainted with the English passion for falconry. This passion dates probably from the time of the con- quest of England by the Anglo- Saxons and certainly from the eighth century. About 750 we find King Ethelbert of Kent writing to Saint Boniface and asking him to procure two falcons which could be used for the hunting of cranes.7 Again in the tenth century the in- terest in falconry is shown in the terms of peace made ca. 927 between King Athelstan and the Welsh kings. The latter are required to pay an annual tribute of, among other things, sixty hawks to the English king.8 It may well be that the settlers of Iceland were well acquainted with falconry. Allusions to falconry occur in the Eddic poems and al- though it does not appear that the Norwegians, unlike the Swedes and possibly the Danes, practiced fal- conry yet they must have been ac- quainted with it and even captured falcons for export. Towards the end of the tenth century Earl Hákon of Norway promised to pay an annual tribute which included sixty falcons to King Haraldr Gormsson of Den-
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