Mímir. Icelandic institutions with adresses - 15.12.1903, Page 87

Mímir. Icelandic institutions with adresses  - 15.12.1903, Page 87
NOTES ON ICELANDIC MATTERS 77 currency, which must be secured by one half gold (kept in its vaults at Reykjavik) and one half shares or values of the national banks of certain countries (England, Germany, Denmark, Nor- way and so on) to be so placed as to be readily available for the redemption of its notes. The minimum amount of the capital for the new undertaking has now been subscribed by | banking institutions in Copenhagen and Christiania, and the j bank is to begin its operations next year. — The total amount of exports and imports of Iceland is estimated to exceed, for the present year, 18,000,000 crowns (over 1,000,000 pounds) - a remarkable exhibit considering that the population is still a little less than 80,000. The inhabitants numbered in 1801 only | 47,270; in 1901 the exact figures were 78,740, nothwithstanding a very' large emigration, especially since 1880, to north-western Canada, where there are now many Icelandic institutions, churches and journals, supported by an Icelandic-speaking population of some 25,000. At the existing rate of increase, the number of souls in Iceland will reach 100,000 not far from the middle of the century', but the rate is likely to rise rather than fall, j The great improvements made and making in dwellings, the superior style of living which prosperity has developed, and the better and more easily' obtainable medical service have greatly' reduced the former prevalent infant mortality throughout the island, and have prolonged the average duration of life, between the periods 1801—70 and 1871 — 1900, by nearly ten years. The rapid construction of carriage roads, now in progress everywhere, is both aiding public health and promoting the extension of trade. There can, therefore, no longer be any doubt that a time of high prosperity is before Iceland. Its admirable national government, its great coast and inland fisheries, hardly excelled in any part of the globe, its immense herds of sheep and pomes (fed by its large extent of excellent summer pasturage), amounting to nearly twelve head of sheep to each inhabitant and one horse to every two inhabitants, and its various minor resources

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Mímir. Icelandic institutions with adresses

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