Lögberg-Heimskringla


Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.10.2018, Qupperneq 7

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.10.2018, Qupperneq 7
VISIT OUR WEBSITE LH-INC.CA Lögberg-Heimskringla • 1. október 2018 • 7 What were you doing on October 11, 1965? If you were around in Canada, you might have been preparing for Thanksgiving. If you were around in the United States, you might have been watching a Columbus Day parade. And then the news hit the media. The Vinland map was released. The Vikings might have come to North America before Columbus. What? This shocked the historical and scientific worlds, but also the cultural fibre that the U.S. was based on. The Mystic Seaport Museum in Mystic, Connecticut, is currently hosting this Vinland map. The map has a strong connection to Connecticut (through Yale University) and is rarely on display. This exhibit shows the map and explains the various opinions of the map, including very recent examinations. Did you know that the map is much smaller than you would expect? In hindsight, it makes sense. Material to write on was a hot commodity. There’s also a timeline showing where the map has been since first “discovery” and then into the hands of Yale. This exhibit is anything but boring. When you walk into the building, you are transported into a 1965 living room, complete with a TV sitting on the floor. What appears to be an ordinary program on TV is then broken into by news coverage of the Vinland map. You’re watching what people saw on TV back in 1965. This includes interviewing people on the street about what they thought. Since some of these interviews were conducted with Italians (Columbus’s heritage) during a Columbus Day parade in downtown Chicago, you can imagine what they thought. They also had a display of headlines from newspapers and magazines. Everyone was talking about this map. As you work your way through the exhibit, they talk about the theories of people who believe in the map and people who don’t. They talk about the different studies the map has gone through. They’re honest. Yale is currently working on some more tests of the map. Towards the end, you get to another fun piece entitled, “Meanwhile, in Canada.” As expected, this talks about the find of L’Anse aux Meadows in the 1960s. Whether people believed in the map or not, they had to think some more once that evidence turned up. Whether it was my age, growing up in Canada, or being of Icelandic descent, I thought it was just fact that the Vikings arrived before Columbus. However, I spoke to a friend who grew up in New Jersey and never heard anything contrary to the Columbus story until the 1990s. In hindsight, that was probably around the time we met! This was an American-focused exhibit, so I don’t know what people in Canada or other countries heard and thought at the time. Do any readers have memories of hearing about the Vinland map? A quick look online showed a tiny story in the lower left of the first page of the Winnipeg Free Press, dwarfed by a photo of a Thanksgiving dinner. The map is on display at the Mystic Seaport Museum in Mystic, Connecticut, until October 31. Merrill Albert Providence, RI THE VINLAND MAP SAGA PHOTOS COURTESY OF MERRILL ALBERT

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