Into Marginal North Atlantic Environments

Abstract In the North Atlantic islands, the Norse—as the diasporic Viking Age Scandinavians in the North Atlantic are called—encountered no substantial populations and found pristine environments that were unaltered by humans. The motivations for Norse expansion onto the North Atlantic islands were...

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Main Author: Zori, Davide
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Oxford University PressNew York 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190916060.003.0006
https://academic.oup.com/book/chapter-pdf/58024395/oso-9780190916060-chapter-6.pdf
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spelling croxfordunivpr:10.1093/oso/9780190916060.003.0006 2024-06-23T07:53:58+00:00 Into Marginal North Atlantic Environments Viking Colonization of Iceland Zori, Davide 2024 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190916060.003.0006 https://academic.oup.com/book/chapter-pdf/58024395/oso-9780190916060-chapter-6.pdf en eng Oxford University PressNew York Age of Wolf and Wind page 309-351 ISBN 0190916060 9780190916060 9780197622773 book-chapter 2024 croxfordunivpr https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190916060.003.0006 2024-06-04T06:10:41Z Abstract In the North Atlantic islands, the Norse—as the diasporic Viking Age Scandinavians in the North Atlantic are called—encountered no substantial populations and found pristine environments that were unaltered by humans. The motivations for Norse expansion onto the North Atlantic islands were also different from those driving incursions into Europe and the British Isles; raiding and trading were absent, since there were no people there to raid or with which to trade. From the outset, the Norse came to the North Atlantic islands to settle and to farm. These remote and northerly unsettled landscapes imposed constraints on traditional Scandinavian subsistence and political economies, at the same time as they offered immense opportunities. Interacting with the local environment and with one another, the migrants colonizing the North Atlantic islands developed a new culture related to, but distinct from, the society of mainland Scandinavia. This new migrant society is visible above all in Iceland, where textual, archaeological, and scientific sources of information combine to offer a vivid picture of a transplanted Viking society. This chapter focuses on the motivations for migration, the social structure of the settlement, and the adaptation of Viking Age society to the Icelandic environment. In exploring these key issues, the chapter engages the themes of correspondence, complementarity, and contradiction in the available data sets that derive from written sources, archaeology, and the sciences of geology, botany, palynology, and genetics. Book Part Iceland North Atlantic Oxford University Press 309 351
institution Open Polar
collection Oxford University Press
op_collection_id croxfordunivpr
language English
description Abstract In the North Atlantic islands, the Norse—as the diasporic Viking Age Scandinavians in the North Atlantic are called—encountered no substantial populations and found pristine environments that were unaltered by humans. The motivations for Norse expansion onto the North Atlantic islands were also different from those driving incursions into Europe and the British Isles; raiding and trading were absent, since there were no people there to raid or with which to trade. From the outset, the Norse came to the North Atlantic islands to settle and to farm. These remote and northerly unsettled landscapes imposed constraints on traditional Scandinavian subsistence and political economies, at the same time as they offered immense opportunities. Interacting with the local environment and with one another, the migrants colonizing the North Atlantic islands developed a new culture related to, but distinct from, the society of mainland Scandinavia. This new migrant society is visible above all in Iceland, where textual, archaeological, and scientific sources of information combine to offer a vivid picture of a transplanted Viking society. This chapter focuses on the motivations for migration, the social structure of the settlement, and the adaptation of Viking Age society to the Icelandic environment. In exploring these key issues, the chapter engages the themes of correspondence, complementarity, and contradiction in the available data sets that derive from written sources, archaeology, and the sciences of geology, botany, palynology, and genetics.
format Book Part
author Zori, Davide
spellingShingle Zori, Davide
Into Marginal North Atlantic Environments
author_facet Zori, Davide
author_sort Zori, Davide
title Into Marginal North Atlantic Environments
title_short Into Marginal North Atlantic Environments
title_full Into Marginal North Atlantic Environments
title_fullStr Into Marginal North Atlantic Environments
title_full_unstemmed Into Marginal North Atlantic Environments
title_sort into marginal north atlantic environments
publisher Oxford University PressNew York
publishDate 2024
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190916060.003.0006
https://academic.oup.com/book/chapter-pdf/58024395/oso-9780190916060-chapter-6.pdf
genre Iceland
North Atlantic
genre_facet Iceland
North Atlantic
op_source Age of Wolf and Wind
page 309-351
ISBN 0190916060 9780190916060 9780197622773
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190916060.003.0006
container_start_page 309
op_container_end_page 351
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