The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1984, Side 46

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1984, Side 46
44 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SUMMER, 1984 finding of the stone in its peculiar position planted the idea of carving the text. There is practically no weathering at all of the inscription. The runes are remark- ably fresh and sharp. The cuts are angular and keen. They were made with chisels and awls, a fact in itself remarkable for runes were rarely chisel-cut in the Middle Ages. More remarkable yet, they were cut with a chisel with a regular one-inch bit, a variety commonly sold in American hardware stores. The term ‘island’ for the knoll where the runestone was found, although incorrect in English, is the correct term in Swedish, even if the ‘island’ is surrounded by fields rather than water. In the case of the rune- stone knoll, this term is doubly appropriate since it rises out of swamps which in the nineteenth century were often flooded, making the knoll a real ‘island’. A historical document cited in support of the inscription’s veracity is an order by King Magnus Ericson of Norway-Sweden dated 1354 for a vessel of armed and spiritual support to the Greenland Norse colonies. However, the order concerns Greenland, not Vinland or countries west of Greenland. It is adventuresome to speculate that after a 3,000-mile long journey from Norway, the ship ventured another 1,000 miles into Hudson Bay and from there followed an erratic course for an additional 1,000 miles into Minnesota. After all, these Norsemen were not search- ing for the Northwest Passage but their own settlements. King Magnus, the hapless ruler of a united Norway and Sweden from 1319 to 1356 and of Sweden alone from 1356 to 1363, is a legendary figure in Swedish history, and even today children sing nursery rhymes about his fair queen, Blanche of Namur. To the nineteenth century, the era of Magnus Ericson offered special attractions: romance, chivalry, and grandeur as well as incomparable tragedy with the hardships of the Black Death, the dissolution of the union, and bloody family feuds, all events which singled out this epoch for special attention in schools and in popular romance. Sweden and Norway were again under joint rule in the nineteenth century, with Sweden as the dominating nation. By the 1890s the political situation was tense, with Norway demanding her independence one way or the other. It is tempting to see this political situation reflected in the Ken- sington inscription which rather con- temptuously gives ‘8 Goths’ precedence over ‘22 Norwegians’. Other historical sources cited in support for the authenticity of the inscription concern Nicholas of Lynn, an English monk who made several exploratoiy voyages northwards. The theory is that Nicholas sailed with the Norwegian expedition and that together they reached Hudson Bay. But the evidence at hand shows that on the contrary, Nicholas’s expedition was an English enterprise, originating in and returning to northern England in 1360, and that it aimed for Iceland from where it con- tinued northwards. Here Nicholas observed the magnetic influence of the pole and whirlpools in the Greenland Sea, the same phenomena that had been described a hundred and fifty years earlier by Giraldus Cambrensis. There is nothing to show that Nicholas ever saw Hudson Bay. Because no one has ever confessed to carving it, the authenticity of the Ken- sington stone still has its fervent prota- gonists. The person most often suspected to have carved the inscription is the finder, Olof Ohman. Ohman has unfairly been portrayed as a dull-witted farmer, honest but poor, uneducated and simple-minded. Contemporary records do not confirm this simplicity. He was on the contrary said to be a ‘queer genius, a man who ‘talked little but thought much’. He was reasonably successful financially and could afford to

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