Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 15

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 15
Approaches to the Greenlanders well-documented model for Greenland and the demise of the Eastem Settlement, in fact of all Norse Greenland. Remaining people may even have been adopted by the Inuit/Eskimos as a last resort. THE DEMISE Greenland provided, during the four hun- dred year-long period of Scandinavian shipping, luxury products for the European markets under the control of local elites, including the bishop at Gardar. However, with the arrival in Europe of ivory tusk in numbers, among other things, Greenland was marginal- ized and transatlantic shipping declined. Certainly, it did not help that Norway suffered a decline in the fourteenth cen- tury. Nevertheless, it is quite likely that Greenland in the fífteenth century, with its four hundred year old Norse popula- tion was exposed by the English/British to European mercantile capitalism. Among other things, the latter is manifest in the form of exceptionally strong, even transformative forces in the general mar- ket of foodstuffs, mass-produced goods, and man-power of an increasingly urban- ized and demanding Europe of which the rural castle is a strong symbol. In fact, without this internal expansion of Europe, the expansion after 1500, when Europe de facto conquered the world by its naval expansion, is unthinkable. Ultimately, Late Medieval capitalism may thus have been the main factor behind the "mysterious" demise of the Norse settlement in Greenland. Stated joumalistically, the Greenlanders ended as workers in Bristol or Hull, where their genes may now live on. The other genet- ic survival may be among the Inuit/Eskimos. In fact, a letter of September 20, 1448 from Pope Nicholas V to the Icelandic bishops mentions attacks on Greenland "thirty years" earlier (or, in ca. 1418, actually corresponding in time with the English attacks on Iceland, and perhaps even inspired or influenced by these). The attacks were "by ... barbaric pagans [who] came by the sea from the neigh- bouring coasts and invaded the country". However, the letter is weak on credible details; it has of course been seen in sup- port of the idea of Inuit/Eskimo attacks. A missive of 1492 from Pope Alexander VI to a new "bishop of Gardar" (never to see his see) mentions that no ship had called into Greenland for "eighty years" (i.e., since 1412), most likely based on a Scandinavian piece of information. An Inuit/Eskimo tale, recorded in the mid-eighteenth century and said to have been passed down from "the forefathers", of (English) pirates repeatedly attacking the Norse Greenlanders, is seemingly in confirmation of Pope Nicholas’s letter. Nevertheless, it may also have been an involuntary "plant" by the missionary Egede family, although doubt lingers, at least with the present author (Krogh 1967, 122f.; Ameborg 1996). Incidentally, the last ship recorded to have sailed directly from Iceland to Norway in the fifteenth century departed in 1427. After that time Copenhagen, the rising capital of the Danish kingdom, 13
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