Reykjavík Grapevine - 27.06.2003, Qupperneq 28

Reykjavík Grapevine - 27.06.2003, Qupperneq 28
 - the reykjavík grapevine -28 june 27th - july 10th, 2003 - the reykjavík grapevine - 29june 27th - july 10th, 2003 Bertel Þorvaldssen Denmark gave Iceland its first constitution in 1874, but their generosity did not end there, for in the same year they also donated this statue of sculptor Þorvaldssen, made by the artist himself. It was the first statue in the country, and was placed on Austurvöllur. However, a year after the area was opened to the public in 1930, he w a s replaced by a statue of Jón S i gu rðs - son, who gets to keep a stern eye on parliament, whereas p o o r Bertel currently over- looks a pond. STATUES IN REYKJAVÍK SOME THINGS YOU PROBABLY DIDN´T KNOW ABOUT THE SIGHTS OF REYKJAVÍK W O N D E R I N G S Ingólfur Arnarsson If you need someone to blame for your being in Reykjavík at this very moment, and take causality back far enough, then this is the man you should be pelting. He is the first man to come here and actually decide to stay. Hence, he is the first true Iceland- er, probably in more than one sense. Legend has it that he threw columns from his boat into the sea, and decided to set up camp wherever it was they came ashore. The wind and the tides blew them ashore right here, and they’ve been battering his de- scendants ever since. Skúli might not be to blame for the wind and wayward columns, but for almost anything that’s happened in Reykjavík since, he can be, in a holistic sort of way, said to be the culprit, as he was the man pri- marily responsible for turning it into the megalopolis we know today. No portraits of him are preserved, but this artist’s impression might say something about the man. Skúli Fógeti Jón Sigurðsson Iceland’s national hero is a lawyer who spent most of his time in Copenhagen, but then, for a country with no army and the only person who sacrificed his life in the cause of independence a farmer who caught pneumonia and died after protesting outside the sheriff’s office, the list of war heroes is bound to be short. This statue was originally placed outside the seat of government (Stjórnarráðshúsið) in 1911, but moved here in 1931. Photos: Aldís French Statue Say what you will of the Americans, but at least they give good statue. What the hell is this? The Yanks get the Statue of Liberty, we get the finger. It’s enough to put you in the mood for a hamburger and liberty fries, and to turn you off all notions of the European Union. Well, almost. Leifur Eíríksson “Icelanders,” goes the saying, “are the smartest people in the world. They found America and had the good sense to loose it again.” Actu- ally, Leifur was going to visit his old man (Eric the Red) in Greenland, and couldn’t find it, discovering America instead. He was since known as Leif the Lucky, although whether this was because of the quality of his new continent or just because his dad really had it in for him goes unreported. The statue was given to the people of Iceland by the United States in 1930.

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Reykjavík Grapevine

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