Iceland review - 2014, Side 63

Iceland review - 2014, Side 63
ICELAND REVIEW 61 august. many, however, never returned to France. From 1828 to 1939, a total of 400 French ships carrying over 4,000 fisher- men were swallowed by icelandic waters. the ocean was the final resting place for most, but some ended up buried on mountain slopes or in graveyards like the one on the outskirts of Fáskrúðsfjörður. early beginnings the history of French seafarers in iceland spans more than three centuries. the first boat arrived in 1614 to hunt whale, both for the animal’s meat and for its oil, which was widely used in city lamps at the time, but when they discovered an abundance of cod, they shifted focus. at two to three weeks, the journey from France to iceland was only half that to newfoundland, which until then had been their primary base for cod fishing, allowing the fishermen to extend their fishing time. two years later, the first French boat arrived from dunkerque, northern France. With the border a mere 10 km (6 miles) away, many Belgians would go on to join them over the the french hospital ship Francois d’Assise docked in fáskrúðsfjörður in 1911. Hoffell mountain is in the background. hiStorY

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