Leif Ericson

From New World Encyclopedia
File:Leif Eiriksson Trondheim Norway.jpg
Statue of Leif Ericson in the harbor at Trondheim Norway

Leif Ericson (Old Norse: Leifr Eiríksson)[1] (c. 970 – c. 1020) was a Norse/Icelandic explorer known to be the first European to have landed in North America (presumably in Newfoundland, Canada).

Although Christopher Columbus is commonly accepted as being the first European to discover the New World, he didn't reach it until 1492, some 500 years after Leif Ericson's arrival. Although the Vikings only made a few voyages to the New World after Ericson, his remarkable discovery to what is now North America remained virtually unknown to most of Europe, which had been caught up in the Crusades during this period.

Born around 970, Leif Ericson was the son of Eric the Red, who started the first European settlement of Greenland in 985. He sailed from Norway with his father to Greenland and lived there until 1000, when he returned to his homeland. While he was in Norway, Ericson may have become a Christian, at which point King Olaf I of Norway asked him to return to Greenland and teach the Vikings there about Christianity.

As Ericson was sailing back to Greenland, he was blown off course and instead ended up in North America. A different version of the saga cites another Viking, Bjarni Herjolfsson, reaching North America in 985 or 986. Ericson may have bought his boat wanting to retrace Herjolfsson's route, sailing to North America not by mistake, but by design.

Regardless of his motivation, Ericson ended up in a place he called Vinland, which was probably the part of Canada now referred to as Newfoundland. Surprisingly, few people ever returned to Vinland, only Ericson's sister and a small group of settlers who were killed by Indians. Lief Ericson died around 1020. while Europe remained almost totally in the dark about the discovery of this new world, Norse sagas recorded his exploits.

A statue near the Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul dedicated on October 9, 1949.
File:Leifr Eiriksson.jpg
A statue of Leif outside Hallgrímskirkja in Reykjavík, Iceland. It was a gift from the United States government.

Early life in Iceland

It is believed that Ericson was born about 970 in Iceland. His father was Erik the Red, a Norwegian well-known explorer and outlaw, and his mother was named Thjodhild. Erik the Red had founded two Norse colonies in Greenland, known as the Western Settlement and the Eastern Settlement. Leif Ericson reportedly had two brothers, Thorvald and Thorstein, and one sister, Freydís. Leif married a woman named Thorgunna, and they had one son, Thorgills Leifsson.

Settlement in Vinland

Exploring west of Greenland

During a stay in Norway, Leif Erikson converted to Christianity, like many Norse of that time. He also went to Norway to serve the King of Norway, Olaf Tryggvason. When Ericson returned to Greenland, he bought the boat of of man named Bjarni Herjólfsson and set out to explore the land that Herjólfsson claimed to have found to the west of Greenland.

Herjólfsson set sail from Iceland to Greenland to visit his father, a new settler in Greenland. His ship was blown off course by a storm and thus accidentally discovered the east coast of America in 985 or 986. 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, Ericoson and his settlers were eager to explore the riches of this new land. Some years later, Ericson explored this coast, and established a short-lived, coastal colony that he called Vinland. They found the area pleasant: there were plenty of large salmon in the river and the climate was mild, with little frost in the winter and green grass year-round. They remained at this place over the winter.

The Saga of the Greenlanders says that Leif set out around the year 1000 to follow Herjólfsson's route with 15 crew members, but going north. Another saga, The Saga of Eric the Red, relates that Ericson discovered the American mainland while attempting to return from Norway to Greenland around 1000 B.C.E., but does not mention any attempts to settle there.

According to the stories, Helluland ("flatstone land"), the first discovery made by Ericson was possibly Baffin Island. Markland ("wood land") - which is now Labrador - was discovered next (there is some evidence that the tree line in northern Labrador has been diminished or eroded since circa 1000), and lastly Vinland (commonly interpreted as "wine land", but interpreted as "pasture land" by others. "Wine land" is now what we call L'Anse aux Meadows.

(Research done in the 1950s and 1960s by explorer Helge Ingstad and his wife, archaeologist Anne Stine, strongly suggests that the settlement of Leif Ericson and his party in Vínland was located at the northern tip of Newfoundland, later known as L'Anse aux Meadows).

The expedition included both families and livestocks, with the aim of beginning new settlements. Straumfjörðr was the name of the northern settlement and Hóp was the name for the southern settlement. Only two Viking leaders actually overwintered in Vinland, the second being Thorvald Eiríksson, Ericson's brother, who was killed the second summer. However, according to the stories, the idea was soon abandoned due to conflicts with the skrælingar (possibly the later Beothuks, or Dorset people). New voyages for woodcutting, etc., seem to have been discussed even as late as the 1300s.

Aboriginal conflict, diverse economy

File:LeifurEriksonInFrontOfHalgrimmsKirkja.jpg
Statue of Leif in front of Hallgríms church

However, when the Vikings settled, they did not have good relationships with the aboriginal people. The Vikings raided nearby villages and killed whoever failed to escape into the woods, but despite hostilities, furs, cloth and other goods were traded between the Vikings and aboriginals. When war was finally settled, the Vikings built houses out of sod with clay floors, since the sod provided good insulation and stopped rainwater going into the home.

The Vikings caught fish, hunted game animals, picked berries, and had brought meat, cattle, and poultry from Iceland. The cattle not only provided food, but some also produced milk (and eventually dairy products). The chickens not only provided meat but also eggs, and their chicks maintained the poultry system.

Disbandment

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 skrælingar (Native Americans) already living in the area, are both indicated in the written sources.

These sagas were written down approximately 250 years after the settlement of Greenland and are open to considerable breadth of 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. However, the Saga of the Greenlanders is usually considered the more reliable of the two.

Return, later voyages

On the return voyage, Ericson rescued an Icelandic castaway named Þórir and his crew — an incident that earned him the nickname Leif the Lucky (Old Norse: Leifr hinn heppni).

In 1008 C.E., Thorfinn Karlsefni brought sixty people (including five women) to Vinland. He continued the practice of bringing cattle and sheep from Europe, and traded furs, skins, etc. with the aboriginal people.

Vinland's obscure history

Vinland was first recorded by Adam of Bremen, a geographer and historian, in his book Descriptio insularum Aquilonis, c. 1075. To write it, he visited Danish king Svend Estridson, who had knowledge of the northern lands.

Until the nineteenth 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 literary historian and antiquarian Carl Christian Rafn in his book Antiquitates Americanæ. 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.

Leif Erikson Day

The Congress of the United States of America, by joint resolution (Public Law 88-566) approved on September 2, 1964, authorized and requested the President to proclaim October 9 of each year as "Leif Erikson Day."

Since then, Presidents have accordingly proceeded to call upon "all Americans to observe this day with appropriate ceremonies, activities, and programs to honor our rich Nordic-American heritage".

Map

Archaeological evidence

In 1960 archaeological evidence of Norse settlement in North America was found at L'Anse aux Meadows on the island of Newfoundland, in what is now the Canadian Province of Newfoundland and Labrador. Although this proved conclusively the Vikings' pre-Columbian discovery of North America, whether this exact site is the Vinland of the Norse accounts is still a subject of debate. It must be recognised that the Vikings did not perceive the exploration and settlement of Greenland and Vinland as any different from that of founding Iceland. It was merely an extension of their homeland, and notions of a different world only surfaced upon meeting the natives, noticeably different from the Irish monks in Iceland, its first inhabitants. There is a consensus among scholars that the Vikings were the first Europeans to reach North America, centuries before Christopher Columbus.

Localization debate

Historians do not agree on the location of Vinland. Rafn and Erik Wahlgren 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 some historians believe that this was Leif'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. Those who believe Newfoundland is the location of Vinland generally think that settlements farther south are unlikely, because maintaining such a distant lifestyle from the Norse homelands would have been far too difficult for the Vikings of the time. Iron and other convenient resources would have been too difficult to sustain on any workable level, as the later English settlers in New England would find. Costly fights with native populations so far from supply lines would have been another deterrent. An argument for placing Vinland farther south is presented in Adam of Bremen's account. In his Descriptio insularum Aquilonis he 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). He received this information from king Svend Estridson. However, grapes do not grow in the sites commonly seen as possible locations of Vinland. While the theory that Vinland was further south is a legitimate line of inquiry, for some the motivation to search Vinland further south could have been more personal to justify or romanticize the Scandinavian colonization of areas in the present-day United States. There have been several instances where evidence of pre-Columbian Norse explorers in the United States has become a source of controversial debate, for example, the Kensington Runestone. However, the Maine Penny is regarded as a legitimate artifact. Runestones found throughout America are often used to show proof of pre-Columbian Norse settlement, but this is not thought to represent Vinland.

Further speculation

  • A few have speculated that Norsemen may have penetrated as far as Minnesota, either coming down from Hudson Bay or going west through the Great Lakes. Some suggested that the Mandan showed evidence of pre-Columbian explorers from Europe, A runestone with carvings of a Scandanavian nature was discovered near Kensington, Minnesota, aptly titled the Kensington Runestone, this stone dates back to aproximately 1030.
  • In the nineteenth century, the theory that Ericson and his men visited New England gained in popularity. The statue of Ericson on Commonwealth Ave. in Boston, Massachusetts and the Norumbega Tower in Weston, Massachusetts were both created as monuments to this supposed Viking presence.
  • There is only one piece of hard evidence that suggests Vikings may have visited the area now called the United States: an eleventh-century Norse coin, the Maine Penny, found in Brooklin, Maine along with thousands of other artifacts during an excavation of a former Native American trading center. However, it is noted that this coin may have made it from Newfoundland via trade or may have even been brought to North America centuries later by the English or Portuguese.
  • Although there have been numerous attempts over the decades to show Viking presence in United States, such as fanciful translations of mysterious stone carvings, there has been no evidence accepted by the professional archaeological community.

Notes

  1. In modern Icelandic the first name is Leifur and in modern Norwegian Leiv. The patronym is Anglicized in various ways, such as Ericson, Eriksson, Ericsson, Erickson, Erikson and Eiriksson.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Burgan, Michael. Leif Eriksson (Groundbreakers, Explorers), Heinemann, 2002. ISBN 978-1588105967
  • Kimmel, Elizabeth Cody. Before Columbus: The Leif Eriksson Expedition, Random House Books for Young Readers, 2003. ISBN 978-0375813474
  • Sanderson, Jeanette. Explorers, Teaching Resources/Scholastic, 2002. ISBN 0-439-25181-8
  • Steele, William O. The Life of Leif Ericson, Grosset & Dunlap, 1954. ASIN B000JFAN8U
  • Weir, Ruth Cromer. Leif Ericson, explorer, Abingdon Press, 1951. B0007DW32U

Outside links

Commons
Wikimedia Commons has media related to::

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.