"The
country which is called Greenland was discovered and settled from Iceland.
Eric the Red was the name of a man from Breidafjord who went there from
here and took possession of land in the place which has since been called
Ericsfjord. He named the country Greenland, and said it would make people
want to go there if the country had a good name. There, both in the East
and the West, they found human habitations and fragments of skin boats
and stone implements, from which it was evident that the same kind of people
had been there as lived in Wineland and whom the Greenlanders call Skraelingjar.
He began settlement in the country 14 or 15 years before Christianity came
to Iceland, according to what a man who himself had gone there with Eric
the Red told Thorkell Gellisson in Greenland."
This extract from the Book of the Icelanders by Ari the Learned (1067-1148)
is completely reliable, though tantalizingly brief. He could be sure that
his readers knew about Wineland, and so wasted no words on the story of
its discovery and the early attempts that were made to settle there.
The Book of Settlements contains more about Eric the Red, the father
of Leif Ericsson. Eric’s father had fled from Norway because he had slain
men, and settled in Iceland. Eric established a farm at Erisstadir in the
west of Iceland and also lived for a short time on Oexney and Sudurey,
two of the islands off the West coast. Like his father, he also became
involved in slayings, and was eventually sentenced to three years’ outlawry
and exile. Eric sailed to Greenland and spent the three years exploring
both the East and West coasts. After a year in Iceland, he then moved permanently
to Greenland in either 985 or 986. The same summer, 25 ships set out for
Greenland, of which only 14 made the crossing. This was the beginning of
the Icelandic settlement of the country, a settlement which flourished
for some centuries.
The discovery of Wineland the Good and other lands on the eastern coast
of North America is recorded at greater length in two mediaeval Iceland
sagas, the Saga of Eric the Red and the Saga of the Greenlanders. These
were probably written around or soon after the year 1200, just over two
centuries after the events they record. Of course it is likely that many
details in them were distorted or altered in the time during which they
were handed down orally, but these two sagas contain a central body of
facts in common, including most of the characters, the new lands in the
west, and many of the main events.
Leif was Eric’s eldest child, probably born at Ericsstadir about 970-980.
As a child he moved with his parents to Greenland and grew up on the farm
at Brattahlid. Following the custom common among the sons of prominent
Icelandic families of the time, he made a voyage to Norway as a young man.
According to the account in the Saga of Eric the Red, his ship was blown
to the Hebrides and he spent most of a summer there, during which time
he begot a child with a woman named Thorgunna. He arrived in Norway in
the autumn. The king of Norway at the time was Olafur Tryggvason (who ruled
995-1000), and he made great efforts to convert Norway and the countries
which had been settled from it to Christianity. Leif met the king, was
converted, and spent the winter with him. In the spring the king sent him
to Greenland to spread Christianity, and sent two men to Iceland for the
same purpose, who succeeded in getting the Icelanders to adopt Christianity
at the Althingi in the summer.
Leif was driven off course in this voyage, and found lands whose existence
he had not previously known of. In one place there were fields of self-sown
wheat and grapevines. Leif named the country Wineland. On the way back
to Greenland he found men on a wrecked ship and rescued them, after which
he made his way to his father’s home in Brattahlid. This took place in
the year 1000 according to Snorri Sturluson’s Heimskringla.
Leif brought a priest with him from Norway, and set about spreading
the new religion in Greenland. The saga says that Eric was reluctant to
have anything to do with it, but his wife Thjodhildur was converted immediately
and had a church built at some distance from the farm buildings. The settlers
in Greenland were probably all converted very quickly, since no heathen
graves have been found there. A cathedral and bishopric were built later
in Gardar in the next fjord.
Soon after Leif’s return to Greenland, an expedition was mounted to
explore the lands he had found. The explorers came first to a flat and
stony land which they named Flat-Stone Land. Then they sailed further south
and found another piece of land which was level and wooded, and they named
this Forest Land. Then they sailed a long way south and reached a country
where there were grapevines and self-won wheat. Flat-Stone Land was probably
Baffin Island, while Forest Land was possibly part of Labrador. Archeological
remains left by Norsemen in the Viking Age have been discovered on the
northern tip of Newfoundland. They are probably the remains of wintering
quarters, a staging-point on the way between Greenland and Wineland. From
the descriptions in the sagas and from the objects found in Newfoundland
it seems plain that Wineland was considerably further south, probably to
the south of Gulf of St. Lawrence in what is now New Brunswick.
The Saga of Greenlanders tells how Bjarni Herjolfsson, the son of a
settler in Greenland, was the first to see the new countries when he lost
his course in fog while sailing to Greenland, and how Leif Ericsson later
explored them and gave them their names. It is impossible to say now which
version is correct, but if the two sagas are given equal weight then the
conclusion is that both men were the discoverers, but Leif retains the
credit for exploring the new lands and giving them their names according
to their characteristics.
Attempts were later made to settle in Wineland. A man from Skagafjord
in northern Iceland, Thorfinnur Karlsefni, led a large expedition in the
early 11th century. According to the Saga of Greenlanders, there were sixty
men and five women on his ship, including his wife Gudridur. Thorfinnur
had all sorts of livestock with him, since he intended to settle in the
new country. He got Leif’s permission to use the houses Leif had built
in Wineland and stayed there with his men for three years, but was driven
away following violent clashed with the Skraelingjar. During the
first autumn in Leif’s house in Wineland, Snorri, the son of Thorfinnur
and Gudridur was born, and he is the first European recorded in history
as being born on the American continent. After a short time in Greenland,
Thorfinnur and Gudridur went back to Iceland and settled at Reynines in
the North.
"Gudridur was a very exceptional woman" says the Saga of Eric
the Red, and the Saga of the Greenlanders says that after Thorfinnur’s
death she made a pilgrimage to Rome, returned to Iceland to live with her
son, finally becoming a nun and a recluse in her old age.
Very little is known about Leif’s later life. He was the most prominent
person in Greenland after the death of his father, and he lived at Brattahlid.
It is not known when he died, but his son Thorkell is on record as the
master of Brattahlid in about 1025, so that he presumably died before then.
Leif’s determination and nobility of spirit are well attested in the
two Wineland sagas, albeit in tersely-worded passages. "Leif became
wealthy and well respected" says the Saga of the Greenlanders. After
the rescue of the shipwrecked men, the Saga of Eric the Red reads: "In
this, as in many other things, he showed the greatest nobility and goodness
... and after this he was always called Leif the Lucky".
By Mr. Jonas Kristjansson,
Director of Arni Magnusson Institute in Reykjavik.
(Manuscript Institute)
Translation: Jeffrey Cosser.
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