Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Qupperneq 101

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Qupperneq 101
anglo-saxon england and iceland 83 great export from Greenland, tusks °f walrus and ropes made from its hide, reached Anglo-Saxon England where walrus ivory was used ex- tensively in the carving of various artifacts. Of course, walrus tusks ^night be obtained from Norway, but after 1000 A.D. most of them Probably came through Norway from Iceland and Greenland. The Icelanders early began to carve in Walrus ivory and Bishop Páll Jóns- son of Skálholt (1195-1211) gave the archbishop of Trondhjem a crozier carved from a walrus tusk by a woman known as Margrét the “skil- ful”.16 j may mention here as an oddity that in 1276 King Magnús Hákonarson of Norway sent King Edward I of England a walrus head compiete with teeth.1'? If was not however trading alone fhat attracted Icelanders to England. Many 0f them, such as the poet Kormákr around 975,18 took part in Viking raids on that country but We do not know from our sources fhat any settled there permanently when the Scandinavians began to settle as well as raid England. It is, owever, possible that during the Period 0f Danish rule (1016-1042) a number my have joined the stand- lng army or Þingamannalið, but our sources explicitly mention only one, yjolfr Þorsteinsson, who is said to ave gone to England and joined f^e force some time after 1018.19 thers, however, served with the anes there in one or another ca- Pacity sucx^ as Björn Hítdælakappi ^ca> 1011-1013);20 a certain Gísli f'orsteinsson (ca. 1020):21 and Steinn fca. 1025), the son of the famous Icelandic law-sayer (lög-sögumaður), Skafti Þórddsson.22 It was, however, in the fields of historical writing, literature and re- ligion that the ties were closest be- tween the two countries. Let us turn to this. The first vernacular history to be written in Iceland was the íslend- ingabók (Book of ihe Icelanders). It was written in 1122 or 1123 by one of Iceland’s earliest scholars, Ari Þorgilsson the Learned (1068-1148), who is sometimes called the father of Icelandic historiography. Its open- ing paragraph is as follows: Iceland was first settled from Norway in the days of Harald the Fairhaired, son of Halfdan the Black, at the time—according to the opinion and calculation of Teit my foster-father, the wisest man I have known, son of Bishop Isleif, and of my paternal uncle Thorkel Gellisson who remembered far back, and of Thurid daughter of Snorri Godi who was both learned in many things and trustworthy— when Ivar, son of Ragnar Lod- brok, caused Edmund the Saint, king of the English, to be slain; and that was 870 years after the birth of Christ.23 Another work which may in part be ascribed to Ari Þorgilsson is Landnámabók (Book of the Setlle- ments). It was, however, put into its present form by the Lawman Haukr Erlendsson during the years 1130- 1334. The opening paragraph of Landnámabók reads as follows: In the book of the Course of the Ages24 which the holy priest Bede wrote there is mention of an
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