Le Nord : revue internationale des Pays de Nord - 01.06.1943, Side 130

Le Nord : revue internationale des Pays de Nord - 01.06.1943, Side 130
124 LE NORD rather conflicting statements on the possibilities of the new coun- try, the first real settlement took place about 870. During the following 60 years it was followed by an unceasing stream of settlers until the country was colonized to the same, or even a somewhat greater extent than nowadays. This Icelandic coloni- zation besides others had a purely political background, Harald Fairhair’s hard proceedings towards the great families forcing many of them into exile, and the Icelandic settlements thus re- ceived an addition of the noblest Norwegian blood, which during the following centuries made itself felt by its pugnacity and magnanimity. The Icelandic Landnáma (‘Book of the First Settling’) contains a list of more than 400 settlers, and according to this list it seems that although most of them hailed from he Norwegian provinces, no less than one third came from the British Isles. These chiefly belonged to families formerly emi- grated from Norway, even though the Celtic element was con- siderable, partly because of connexions by marriage, partly be- cause of the Celtic thralls they carried with them. Therefore we may in Iceland expect to find recognizable features of Celtic culture. Whether the first settlers were satisfied or displeased by the new country, at any rate there was a possibility of existence for Scandinavian cattle breeders and the settlers organized them- selves as an independent free-state under the leadership of 3 6 priests and chiefs (“godar”), who combined their temporal office with that of presiding at the heathenish sacrificial feasts. In the year 1000 Christianity was adopted by law, and hence the com- paratively isolated position of Iceland in relation to European culture was over. Gradually the country came to be dependent on the Norwegian king, and this in connexion with a series of disasters, among which the gradual deterioration of the climate no doubt was the most serious one, introduced a period of decline for the country, from which it has only risen in modern times. Among the cataclysms in the Middle Ages the great volcanic eruptions are the most dramatic ones. Iceland is one of the most active volcanic areas of the world; we have accounts of about 150 eruptions since the colonization of the country. As for the Middle Ages our knowledge is especially derived from the Ice- landic annals, which give very brief accounts of the disasters and their consequences. Every eruption over a larger or smaller area leaves a layer of ashes, which is always recognizable, so that
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Le Nord : revue internationale des Pays de Nord

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