Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Side 102

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Side 102
84 TÍMARIT ÞJÓÐRÆKNISFÉLAGS ÍSLENDINGA island which is called Thule (Tili) and books say is located six days sailing north from Britain; he said that there were no days there in winter when the night is longest and no night in summer when the day is longest. Wise men believe that Iceland is here referred to as Thule because in many places in the country the sun shines at night when the day is longest and there are many places where for days the sun is not seen when the night is longest. The priest Bede died 735 years after the incarna- tion of our Lord according to written record i.e. more than 100 years before Iceland was settled from Norway.25 These two passages from the his- torical literature of Iceland attest to an early acquaintance with An- glo-Saxon scholarship and history, albeit both are historically some- what inaccurate. Saint Edmund al- though his sanctity is great is a rather obscure figure. He was king of East Anglia 855-870 and died at the hands of the Danes led by Hálf- dán and ívar the sons of Ragnar Loðbrók. The source of Ari’s infor- mation is the Passio sancii Ead- mundi of Abbo of Fleury (ob. 1004) who spent some time teaching at Ramsey in England.26 The main rea- son, however, for the interest of Ari in Saint Edmund is that Ari be- lieved that Edmund was the ances- tor of both his foster-father, Teitr, the son of Bishop ísleifr Gizurarson, the first bishop of Iceland (1056- 1080), and of Ari himself. It is not known from English or continental sources whether Edmund had any children but Icelandic sources credit him with a daughter whose name was, Úlfrún or úlfbrún,27 who was married to a King Oswald,28 some- times erroneously identified with Saint Oswald. Their daughter was Vilborg who had two daughters, Valgerdr and Helga. The latter is the ancestress of Bishop Isleifr.29 Thus the connection of Iceland with Anglo-Saxon England goes back to the early days of the settlement of Iceland. If a digression be permitted, it may not be without interest to men- tion that the present Queen of Eng- land is said to have as an ancestor one of the original settlers of Ice- land. Genealogists tell us that if we trace Elizabeth’s ancestry back thirty-four generations we come to Auðunn Bjarnarson whom the Landnámabók reports as having set- tled in the north of Iceland. It also adds that Auðunn was one of the finest and noblest of the settlers in the northern quarter of Iceland. One version adds that Auðunn was the great grandfather of the most fa- mous outlaw Iceland ever produced, Grettir the Strong.30 To return to Ari, it may be noticed that he again uses the year of the martyrdom of Saint Edmund to date events in Icelandic history. Thus when speaking of what happened in 1120 in Iceland he says that this occurred 250 years after the slaying of Edmund, King of the Angles, and 516 years after the death of Pope Gregory “who, as is told, brought Christianity into England”.31 Bede’s reference to Thule is based on clasasical writings and can hard-
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