Vinland
Vinland or Winland (vin-land, "wine-land;" the land where wine and wheat grows) was the name given to part of North America when it was discovered by the Norseman Leifur EirÃÂÃÂksson on October 9, 1000. After the settlement of Greenland by the Vikings, a merchant by the name of Bjarni HerjÃÂólfsson, who was on his way to Iceland from Greenland, strayed off course and thus accidentally discovered the east coast of America. It was late in the summer, and he did not want to stay over winter in this new land, which he noted was covered with forests, so he did not land and managed to reach Greenland before winter fell. With wood being in very short supply in Greenland, the settlers there were eager to explore the riches of this new land. Some years later Leif Eriksson explored this coast, and established a short-lived colony on a part of the coast that he called Vinland.
The first discovery made by Leifur was Helluland (Hellu-land, "Rock-land", possible Baffin Island), thereafter Markland (Mark-land, "Wood-land", possible Labrador) and lastly Vinland, possible Newfoundland. The expedition included both families and livestocks and the aims was to begin new settlements. However, it was cancelled soon due to conflicts with the indigenous people or Indians. The Norsemens called them "Skraelingar" (=Icelandic "eskimo"). New voyages for woodcutting etc. seem to have been discussed even as late as the 1300s.
Until the 19th century, the idea of Viking settlement in North America was considered by historians to be the product of mere folk tales. The first scholarly theory for the idea was put forth in 1837 by Danish archaeologist Carl Christian Rafn in his book Antiquitates AmericanÃÂæ. Rafn had made an exhaustive examination of the sagas, as well as potential settlement sites on the North American coast and concluded that Vinland was a real place in North America that had been settled by the Norse. An old Norwegian coin from the 1100s has afterwards been found in an old Indian settlement in Maine, USA.
Historians do not agree on the location of Vinland. Rafn believed that Vinland was probably in New England. In the 1960s a Viking settlement was discovered and excavated at L'Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland, and many historians believe that this was Leifur's settlement, thus connecting Vinland to Newfoundland. Others have followed Rafn in sharing the belief that Vinland was farther to the south. In this view, L'Anse aux Meadows was perhaps part of an undocumented later attempt at settlement.
Vinland was first recorded by Adam of Bremen, a geographer and historian. In 1072 he wrote the Gesta Hammaburgensis Ecclesiae Pontificum, a history of Hamburg and the Christian missions in the north, starting with AD 788. This is the chief source of knowledge of the north until the 13th century. In 1068 Adam came, at the invitation of Archbishop Adalbert of Bremen, to write a detailed history. Adam took a trip to personally interview king Svend Estridson, who had knowledge of the history and geography of the northern lands.
Another source of information about the Viking voyages to Vinland can be derived from two Icelandic sagas, Eirik the Red's Saga and the Saga of the Greenlanders. These sagas were written approximately 250 years after the settlement of Greenland and are open to significant interpretation. Combining those two, it seems that there were a few separate attempts to establish a Norse settlement in Vinland, none of which lasted for more than two years. The disbandment of the small Viking colony probably had several causes. Disagreements among the men about the few women that followed on the trip, and fighting with the Indians already living on the land (called "SkrÃÂælingjar" by the Vikings), are both indicated in the written sources.
The name may well be an early marketing effort (something like the naming of Greenland). Adam of Bremen in his Descriptio insularum Aquilonis wrote that the name Vinland comes from huge amounts of grapes growing there (Praeterea unam adhuc insulam recitavit a multis in eo repertam occeano, quae dicitur Winland, eo quod ibi vites sponte nascantur, vinum optimum ferentes). However, grapes do not grow in any of the areas possible as a site of Vinland.
Besides Vinland there were other areas recorded as Markland, Helluland, and HÃÂóp.
Vinland is also the name for the cultural landscape of Canada (Upper Vinland) and America (Lower Vinland) which modern Germanic Heathens and ÃÂÃÂsatrÃÂúar use to distinguish themselves from other ethno-cultural groups who share the same geographical areas of North America.
See also: Vinland map, Kensington Stone, Helge Ingstad
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