The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1971, Síða 30

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1971, Síða 30
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN WINTER 1971 Sveinbjorn S. Olafsson Eirik The Red Eirik the Red is a familiar, heroic name in history; few persons today know much more about this unusual and complex man of the 10th Century, other than that he discovered and colonized Greenland. Icelandic Sagas stress his deeds and accomplishments more than the man himself, but when the Sagas are searched, Eirik takes on flesh and blood, no myth or legend, but a hot-headed red head, a man of conflicting emotions — violence and peace. He died in 1002 A.D., in a manner not characteristic of a Viking. He died in bed, his sword by his side, a victim of old age. It wasn’t as if Eirik hadn’t tried for Valhalla. In the prime of his life, a matchless sailor, navigator extra- ordinary, fearless explorer, leader of men, he was also a man of violence. Eirik and his father, Thorvald, came to Iceland in about 960 A.D. from Jae- deren in southern Norway. They were outlawed from their native land for homicide, an event not unusual in Scandinavia in the 10th Century. Eirik hardly could have played a major role in 'the killing, for he was only ten or twelve years old at the time. The best land in Iceland was taken by them. Eirik and his father were forced to move from place to place, at first. Although his family was wealthy and powerful, Eirik’s father had been stripped of all his possessions when forced to leave his native land. Eirik solved this problem by marry- ing a maiden from a wealthy and in- fluential family in Iceland, Thjodhild. Eirik now purchased a farm in Haukadal, in Western Iceland, and named their farmstead Eiriksstadir. Here a son, Leif, was born. (The four walls of the house are still discernible —having been built of turf and stone. Some 900 years later, my father was born across the valley opposite Eiriks- stadir). Eirik’s life was never tranquil for long. His slaves caused a landslide fall upon a farm owned by a man named Vathjof, destroying it. The Sagas do not give a reason for 'this dastardly act. It is likely bad blood existed between Eirik and Valthjof. A kinsman of Val- thjof, Eyolf Saur by name, retaliated by killing Eirik’s slaves. Not waiting to count to ten, Eirik grabbed his axe and killed Eyolf Saur, and for good measure, also Hrafn the Duelist. Hrafn had fought many duels—successfully, but he met his match in Eirik the Red. Although Eirik did not start the quarrel nor the killing, he was banish- ed from Haukadal by -the local as- sembly. Once again, Eirik relocated and built a new home. He took possession of two islands in Breidafjord in wes- tern Iceland. While he was building, a friend, Thorgest, asked to borrow his bench- boards. (They are panels on which were carved figures of Norse deities, Odinn, Thor and others. They were nailed in front of the benches that ran down either side of the main room).

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The Icelandic Canadian

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