Actually the indigenous Beothuks were a very violent and territorial people who basically chased the Norsemen away. They were the Skraelings of the Sagas. That and the winters there are miserable. Miserable I tells ya.
All the evidence I need:
http://antre.atspace.com/valkyries_files/val.jpg
What if two of them carried it between them?
Marc
I have not read the Sagas, do they say anything about this? I have never heard that the Vikings were chased away.
It is one possibility of course but there are several others as well.
The legend that that Vikings made it inland as far as Minnesota...
Not a viking chance.
The Vikings (in those days) fought mainly on foot. Their weapons were uniquely suited for both-feet-on-the-ground-bashing-heads-chopping-arms-legs-and-heads combat.
ETA: Good source here.
There are really only two possibilities:
1. They died in situ;
2. They left.
The Beothuks were doing quite well, so the area itself wasn't inhospitable. OTOH, we do know that the Beothuks were inhospitable as hell.
The Norse were chased away.
Why are Americans so keen on making remakes of movies? I just don't get it, the original Pathfinder is an amazing movie, certainly the best Norwegian movie ever made.
The American version seems silly and not very historically correct. Yeah, the Vikings had horses, but they were pretty small.
Yeah but by that point, they really weren't vikings anymore. They'd adopted much of the Frankish culture along with the language and mounted warfare.During the invasion if England from Normandy, launched by descendents of early viking settlers, horse-back fighting had been developed, if we are to judge from the Bayoux Tapestry.
I'd like to see Vikings vs. Mayans in bloody combat. It would be really, really cool to have a scene where Mayan jaguar-rider priests charge a Viking encampment, but they're suprised when the Viking leader reveals himself to be a dragon. The war would end when the Welsh Prince Madoc shows up to aid his Viking friends, leading the Army of the Dead from Dunharrow.
I'd like to see Vikings vs. Mayans in bloody combat.
I
I ask those who know more history than me: In 892 A.D., could Scandinavians haul big live horses across the Atlantic?
It seems to me that, despite the same titles, the movies are unrelated.
Pathfinder is a remake of Veiviseren, (Norwegian for The Pathfinder), a 1987 Norwegian film directed by Nils Gaup. Gaup had also written the screenplay for the original movie, and Laeta Kalogridis adapted the screenplay for the 2006 remake.
Yeah but by that point, they really weren't vikings anymore. They'd adopted much of the Frankish culture along with the language and mounted warfare.
Horses were also present at the Greenland settlements