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By Octavia Randolph, 2002
In the Saga Country – Sunday 23 June Sunday was reserved for a ten hour guided "Viking" tour
up the Snæfellsnes Peninsula. Our driver/guide was a charming Icelandic
young woman, Soffia Alice Sigurðardottir of IcelandExcursions. We headed
North from Reykjavik via the new 6 km. tunnel under the mouth of Hvalfjörður
(Whale Fjord) to the town of Akranes. Across the narrow Borgarfjörður
we came to the town of Borgarnes. Nearby at Borg we saw the burial place
where Egill Skallagrimsson, a particularly bloodthirsty and interesting
10th century character who was not only brutally violent but
a tremendously gifted poet, laid his beloved son, in the burial mound in
which his own father lay. The son of a berserker,
Egill killed his first victim in a dispute over a ball
game when he was only eight years old, an act which led his mother
to fortell a rich and interesting career as a Viking ahead of him. He is
the central character in Egills Saga, one of the most important and entertaining
of all Sagas, thought to have been composed by his descendant the great
Snorri
Sturluson.
From there we headed though the dale country of Snaefellsnes
and along the beautifully soaring coast of the Hvammsfjordur to Eirik the
Red's farmstead in Haukadal (Hawk Valley). In Eirik's lifetime the water
level
is supposed to have been higher, so that he could have sailed his long
boat nearly to his front door; today it would make a very long portage
between the end of the Hvammsfjordur and the narrow lake that fronts Eirik's
property. Eirik was repeatedly outlawed for the crime of murder, first
in Norway, which drove him to Iceland, and then twice again in Iceland,
which prompted him to sail West and found the Icelandic colony on Greenland.
It is important to understand just how serious being "outlawed" was; an
outlaw lost all his property and his children were declared illegitimate.
Such a decree forbade any law-abiding folk from assisting the outlaw, and
rendered anyone who killed him immune from prosecution. It was in effect,
a death sentence, but few have turned it to so much advantage as Eirik
did, for it fueled his wanderlust and spurred him to discovery. He remained
heathen all his life but his wife Þjoðhilður not only became
Christian but had the first church built in Greenland. It is their son
Leifur the Lucky who was the first European known to land on North American
shores.
We next visited a number of the sights connected to the greatest figure in Icelandic history, Snorri Sturluson (1179-1241), a chieftain and scholar/poet who wrote down many of the Sagas for the first time and also composed a unique book of instructions for skalds (Norse bards) known as the Skaldskaparmal as he realised the old oral traditions were fast disappearing. We visited several of the farmsteads he lived at, the church in which he was wed, his famous geo thermal hot pool at Reykholt in which he bathed. I stuck my hand in it; it was deliciously warm. Nearby is a boiling one in which he cooked his meat. Needless
to say I did not test the temperature of that one.
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