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Opening of the sea route in the White Sea.

Opening of Greenland and America.

The journey to the White Sea significantly facilitated the fact that it was possible to hold on all the time along the coast. Nevertheless, the storms often attributed navigators in the open sea, and then they got to the mysterious islands that cannot be determined accurately. From the conversation with the faces who visited the White Sea, I made an impression that the descriptions of Icelandic Saga, mainly Sagi Orel-Odde, closest to Solovkov. But this is contrary to the fact that the islands, to which Normanians stick, are not in the White Sea, but in the ocean, and the nearest parking lot from them is in Finmark. From here it is that Normans knew and visited, although, maybe against their will, persecuted by bad weather, and the islands lying in the Arctic Ocean, the KGUEV and, perhaps, a new land. If such an island was subsequently attributed to nature, characteristic of actually more southern shore, then the error is quite understandable with the oral transmission of our sources.

Undoubtedly, the norms of Normanov to Northwest were much greater dangers, since in this direction there was no mainland shore, along which it was possible to swim. We see how normal moves are moving to the West carefully, individual stages, move from the island to the island. Even before the settlement of Iceland, they established themselves on the Shetland, Orcadian and Ferra Islands. At one time it seemed that this desire to the West would be limited to Iceland and would not go further. But stormy winds and then knocked down travelers from a fashionable path. In 920, a certain Gunbiorne was attributed to the beard to the West and saw unknown to the island. To our surprise and until this day failed to find these islands on the map. Therefore, the Moge thinks that these islands were finally destroyed by volcanic eruptions. In any case, in Iceland, Solve spread about newly open land in the West. He remembered Eikon Red, when he was sent from Iceland for murder. He really managed to open a new country. Three years he studied her and finally decided to settle in it. To this end, he returned to Iceland to recruit with him comrades. He called Greenland, as it seems to me, as opposed to Iceland. If his homeland rejected by his "country of ice", then how promisingly sounded the name - "green country!" This name suggested to him not only the well-known feeling of revenge, but also the desire to bother with them as many comrades. In addition, in some places of the Greenland coastal, green pastures are really visible. This colonization of Greenland applies to about 985 and was quite successful, so, as far as we can now judge, the population of norms reached up to 5,000 souls.

In 999, Leif, the son of Eica Red, makes the first journey from Greenland to Norway. On the way back, he wanders for a long time in the sea and finally sticks to an unknown coast. Here it is striking three things: grape vines, wildly growing wheat and large maple trees. From all of these rarities, he takes himself along the sample and sails to the northeability, to Greenland. It is clear, the news about the new opening excited everyone. But some evil rock pursued further enterprises. Eico Red himself was going on the road, but on the way to the ship fell from the horse, broke his rib and damaged his shoulder. In general, this trip was extremely unsuccessful: travelers were held in the sea for months and, without reaching their goal, tired returned to Greenland. Among them were the eldest to take Leif, Torstain; He soon died soon after this trip. But in 1002, two Icelandic ships arrive in Greenland. Torre, one of the visits of merchants, married Goodrid, widow Torstain. Probably, now Greenlandians gave them a secret about their opening. And then the whole expedition from many ships is equipped. On its way, they open three countries: the first because of the abundance of the rocks they call Helluland, the second, where they were hit by dense forests - Markland, and, finally, Vinland Hin Goda \u003d country of grapes. It is likely to assume that Helluland is Labrador, Markland - Newfundland, and Vinland is a new Scotland (or area near New Iorka). An attempt to settle in this last country was not crowned with success. They were persistent attacks from the natives, and soon they began to quarrel together. Torrech reached Greenland safely, but another Icelandic ship died during a storm. This trip continued, probably more than three years: on the way, Gudrid gives birth to a son who has been fulfilled for three years when they return to their homeland. Up to 140 people participated in this expedition. But its outcome was not particularly encouraged to repetition. It was too risky to swim in the open water space. So from 35 vessels sailing with Eyric Red to Greenland, only 14 reached their new homeland. Such misfortunes sufficiently show us how dangerously there were similar swimming in unknown waters, without a compass, without shore.

In addition to the saga about Eyric Red, from which we draw all the news about the opening of the North American shore, only fragmentary mention of these lands reached us. There is a note that Bishop Eric in 1121 went to look for Wellands, but whether he reached his goal, whether he returned, in general, we do not know much from this trip. At the most promotion of Normanov's intercourse with America applies to 1347 Icelandic chronicles noted that the Greenland ship on the way back from Marcland was abandoned by a storm in Iceland. Nevertheless, Normanians hardly founded some colony in these parts. Not only the complete silence of Norman sources speaks against such an assumption. From the dead colonies in Greenland, the ruins were left, for which we can restore, both the residence of the norms settled here and the number of their yards. North America has no such trace found. On the rocks, however, mysterious inscriptions were found; At one time they went for the Runic, but more thoroughly their research showed that these designs are obliged to their origin to the Indians. In vain also turned to Mexican manuscripts, hoping to find news about the first openers of America or even the impact of Christianity entered by Normanians. All these attempts were in vain, and we must be content with the conclusion that Normans were only occasionally run to the American shores with the purpose of fishing or for other products of the country.

Despite the fragility of intercourse, new discoveries left their traces in cartographic performances. Let's go back to the initial value of ganvik. The belief that the Arctic Ocean in the north from Europe is a big bay, it happened because normal at their trips from Norway, Finmarock or Biarmaland north, constantly pushed to the earth. Then Greenlandians were engaged in the study of their country, more northern its parts and the impregnable Eastern shore. Finally, they reached the island of Svalbardr, which Storm found it possible to identify with Spitsbergen. So they began to think that only the West and the passage is possible, and then the Earth. After all, for a long time, then they thought that the Kara Sea was not available for swimming, and then again they believed that a little further, Asia bends on the extreme north until Nordeceld destroyed this legend. The question of the northeastern travel (NordostPassage) actually only an account with the old delusion of ganvik. Adam Bremensky did not know the path past the Nordkapa. Therefore, he does not have an idea of \u200b\u200bNorway northern shore, about Biarmaland and ganvik. But he has an exa of cartographic construction: Greenland is located against Swedish (that is, Norwegian) or Rhyphic Mountains. So entry into ganvik was between Greenland and Northskap. Sakson puts a large desert in the north of Ganwick, without calling it by name. Neither the location of it is unknown; It is completely withdrawn from the human settlement, only wild extraordinary beasts are there in a variety. Very few visited these edges. We find more specific instructions in the so-called, Breve Chronicon, the manuscript of the XV century, although the original rises, probably by the XIII century. The author of the Chronicles tells such a case that ships heading from Iceland to Norway met the opposite wind and were attributed to the sea, located between Greenland and Biarmalands, and stuck to the shore, where people inevitably live (even to riceland) and to the ground Amazons. From their edge, Gangland is separated only by the Ice Mountains. It is clear, since the author perfectly clearly imagined the map of the European North, he could not put the Amazons near the Scandinavian Peninsula, as his predecessors, Tacit, Adam Bremensky and others did. Therefore, he moved them to the north of Ganvik, where they were alone, but In general, could still fit - MONSTRA VARIA. Greenland, according to the presentation, the author lies against Biarmaland and is associated with it. So, all the polar lands, ranging from Greenland and ending in Norway, constitute a solid mainland shore without a break and form a semicircle, inside of which ganvik is located.

Next, in the same chronicle, we find the definition of the extreme West. This is all the same Greenland - Viridis Terra, which thus acquired monstrous sizes. It is located near the African Islands, where the waters of the World Ocean are flowing. The Atlantic Ocean should somehow eat the waters of the World Ocean. But with this question, the idea of \u200b\u200bAmerican lands was closely related. So far, Norman was considered with America necessary for the coating of the oceans, the Strait could be placed either between Greenland and America or between America and Africa. Once America disappears from sight, only one place for a given strait between Greenland and Africa remains. It could happen the easier that Normans imagined America not in the form of a large mainland, but as a number of major islands. Of these, the southernmost - Winland, which was considered even associated with Africa. This idea of \u200b\u200bWINLAND was distributed to the other "Islands", and in this way the famous "African Islands" turned out. They appeared as a memory of the American lands, which the author is extremely curious about us! - does not mention at all. So, the memory of their existence is still preserved, while the names have already been forgotten. But were they really forgotten?

In the interpolation of Orvaro Odssagi, which, in any case, arose no later than the beginning of the XV century, describes a female ODDU with a flamund. For a long time, Odda has to find her enemy. Finally, he learns that the flamund retired to the Desert - I Hellulands Ubygdum. There he stopped in Skuggi's fioard. The last name means actually a shadow, darkness, but is also used in the sense of the trait or monsters, ghosts, in general. According to this indication, ODD goes to the "Greenland Sea" and looking for his enemy in the south and in the West along the coast. In addition to various monsters, ODD does not see anyone. Then ODD raises sail again and only now reaches Helluland. The described route leaves no doubt that this country is located in America and corresponds to the lands that normatons opened in the XI century.

Careful studies of Fisher found that Greenland was first recorded on a map of Danish scientists Claudius Clavus in the XV century, but American lands were left to them. So these Norman discoveries have never been registered by cardographs. Nevertheless, some memories could be transmitted to orally and then accidentally get to the card. In this, I convinces one name not maps of the XV century. On the same Catalan map, a long rectangle is drawn with the designation of ILLA Verde and near Round Island - ILLA de Brazil. On the map of 1507 and on the others we find Viridis Insula. Obviously, ILLA VERDE and Viridis Insula is the same Greenland. But Carta Marina has an island called Obrazill instead of Greenland. Then this is the name under different options, like that: brazir or Brezir, is repeated on the XV, XVI cards and even the XVII centuries. On the map of 1367 we find such a prescription: novus Cotus de Brazir. In 1498, the Spanish ambassador at the English courtyard comes that residents of the city of Bristol began to equip the expedition to the Unknown Island Brazil. Finally, after Columbus, the discovery of the land was followed, to which the name of Brazil was timed up to this day. Storm argued that the Spanish navigaters under Brazil generally understood the terrain that had a rich forest. But then Brazil would respond to the Norman Markland, and the Mysterious Island Brazil would be a direct memory of the discoveries of the XI century. If Markland fell into Spanish maps called ILLA de Brazil, there is nothing surprising in this. On the one hand, the intercourse with Marcland was not entirely interrupted until the middle of the XVI century, on the other, the news even about the most remote edges of the North was undoubtedly uniform and south, as the Fisher indicated a number of examples.

While the memory of Helluland is preserved in some sagas, and Marcland was even listed on Spanish cards, Winland disappeared without a trace of subsequent literature. But this is the oblivion of Winland, we can explain to ourselves. Even who had to read the old essays and the chronicles, I understood the strange spelling of Finland - Vinland. Even on the maps, we sometimes clearly disassemble the Vinland where we expect Finland. Already Rudbek in his "Atlantis" notes this strange mixing: Vocabulum Finlandiae Provinciae Ad Regnum Nostrum Pertinentis Pro Quo Apud Snorrem ET in Historia Regum Nonel Occurit Vinlandiae Nomen. With this complete coincidence of the names, the differentiation of both areas was maintained only until time. Once an idea of \u200b\u200bAmerican WINLAND has become flexible, then European (or even Scandinavian) Winland \u003d Finland departed a completely memory of the first edge. Will not forget that Winland lay much further than other American locations, known to Normanam; Recall that just in Winland the Normans suffered from the attack of Eskimos, and we will understand why the intercourse with Winlands stopped before all.

Despite the fact that the Norman discoveries disappeared not at all without a trace, strong results in the sense of familiarization with the globe gave only the settlement of Greenland with normal. But the strange idea of \u200b\u200bganvik one time prevented the correct design of Greenland on the map. Fisher in applications V and VI to its essay reproduces such cards on which Greenland is drawn east of Iceland and north of the Scandinavian Peninsula. On the other cards, Greenland is placed correctly - west of Iceland. But the first delusion, I think, should have caused an exaggerated idea of \u200b\u200bthe magnitude of Greenland. The consequence of such an error was another circumstance that the navigators took different lands for the Greenland coast, which were in the direction of north, but nothing to do with Greenland. I noted this case.

Riddles of history. Facts. Discoveries. People Zgur Maria Pavlovna

Who opened Greenland?

Who opened Greenland?

At the turn of the XV-XVI centuries, Portuguese Savior Brothers Miguel and Gushpar Cortyrians on three Karavellah went searching for the North-West way to Asia. In one day they came across the island lying on the "intersection" of the Arctic Ocean and Atlantic Oceans. So the Europeans opened Greenland. second time. And in 1721, the colonization of this exotic piece of sushi began. Scandinavians, however, this time Danes, re-mastered the lands that Vikings opened long before them. Who belongs to the glory of the lapper of the largest island in the world?

If you believe Sagam, it was Norwegian Gunbierne. Somewhere between the 870s and 920s, he sailed to Iceland, but the storm dropped it to the West to the small islands in 65 ° 30? with. sh. 36 ° C. D. For them was a high, covered with snow and ice Earth, to which sailors could not be suitable due to heavy ice. Today, the highest point of the Arctic, which is located in Greenland, is named in honor of the brave Morleod Mountain Gunbierne.

About 980, a group of Icelanders, floating to the West, wanted on the ski, which took the islands open by Gongbierne. Returning to their homeland, Icelanders also told about the big land behind the schoras. And in the summer of 982, the Lentaries of Eric Torvaldson had already loomel at the local shores, who entered the story under the nickname Eric Redhead.

Eric was born in Norway, but his father is Torvald - along with his family expelled from there for murder. So Eric found himself in Iceland, but he had to be removed from there: this time he expelled him for two murders. If you believe the sources, the anger of Erica was fair: one of the victims fell his neighbor who did not return the boat, which was borrowed. Erik committed the second crime from Vesti - he shook the Viking, who killed his slaves. However, even cruel laws of the time of the Samosood did not approve, and now Ryulya Buyan had to spend three years on a foreign land. Eric did not lose: he decided to get to the mysterious land, which was visible in clear weather from the mountain peaks of Western Iceland. Eric decided to try his happiness: he bought the ship, gathered to Vataga friends and rushed towards adventure. He took with him a family and servants. Even his cattle Erik plunged on the ship. The island, most of which today is covered with ice, oddly enough, it seemed to the Vikings suitable for life. The thickness of the ice cover reaches in some places of three kilometers, and therefore only the most unpretentious plants and animals are able to survive on the border of the Earth and Ice. There are practically no summer in the local edges - it ends, and did not have time to begin, and summer days in Greenland rigorously warmer winter. Why did this island like Eric and his companions so much? Why did he get such an absurd name - "Green Earth"? The fact is that at the end of the 15th century, the climate of Greenland was much softer than in our days, and, having encouraged the southern tip of the island, the sailors landed around Julianhob (cocaton), where the grasslands and air were resolved with flavors of the flowers near the fjords. There is, however, another version: Some researchers believe that the name "Greenland" was primarily advertised - Eric wanted to attract as many settlers as possible. However, the name, which Eric gave these lands, was originally applied only to the friendly corners of the south-west coast and spread to the whole island only in the XV century.

For those three years, which Eric had to spend in Greenland at least, was the term of his expulsion, the settlers have treated enough land to feed themselves, and spread cattle. They hunted firing, greased fat, walruss and talnia narrovalov.

One day, he tells the legend, Eric climbed into one of the coastal vertices and saw high mountains in the West. Modern researchers suggest that it was Buffhin Earth: on a clear day it can be seen for the Devisian Strait. According to Canadian writer F. Moweet, Eric was the first one who crossed the strait and fell to Cumberland. He explored all the mountainous eastern coast of this peninsula and went to the bay of Cumberland.

In the summer of 983, Eric passed from the northern polar circle to the north, discovered the disco Bay, the island of Disco, Peninsula Nugssuak, Wedenkhuk, and may have reached Melville's bay, in 76 ° Northern latitude. He studied another 1200 km of the west coast of Greenland. The viking admired the abundance of animals and birds, on which you can hunt: white bears, sands, northern deer, whales, narwalov, walrus, Gag and Kretch. But there were also different breeds of fish.

After two-year searches, Eric looked after several places - flat, but well-protected from cold winds. In 985, he returned to Iceland, but not in order to stay there forever, but to recruit future colonists. There are many wishing to find a lot - about 700 people. They went out into the sea on 25 ships, but a storm began, and 11 of them went to the bottom. Only 400 brave travelers got to Greenland. They founded on the southern coast of the island the so-called Eastern settlement. For ten years, another settlement appeared - West. He was built new colonists who sailed later.

Eric Ginger

Of course, the migrants had difficult to: very harshs were winter. Nevertheless, the Wiking Colony in Greenland flourished. As archaeologists say, the number of colonists has steadily growing and reached in the end of the peak - three thousand people.

Viking settlements stretched along fjords. Build a house on the island was not so simple - there were no big trees here. I had to be content with fins or turf. Scientists were calculated that the construction of one of the large buildings went near the square kilometer of the turne - how much did the Vikings invested, while they were lying on him! There were stone structures. To keep the building heat, the walls were made very thick - sometimes more than two meters.

Since the summer was very short, the grain grew badly, and in fact, in the traditional diet of Vikings there were bread and porridge. The grain was added and in chowers - fish and meat. Meat domestic animals - goats, sheep and cows appreciated very high. Cattle scored extremely rarely, pleaseing milk. Settlers caught fish nets, hunted on seals and deer.

In the XIV century in Greenland began cooling. Glaciers turned to the lands of Vikings, gradually depriving them pastures. Trading with Scandinavia, who brought a consonant income, fell into decay - in Norway and Iceland rampated a plague. I had to adapt to new conditions: scientists argue that Vikings saved the sea, namely seafood. Their share in the diet was now more than 80%.

Around 1350, all residents of the Western settlement disappeared somewhere - about 1000 people. It became known about this, since the priest from the Eastern settlement, coming to the neighbors, did not find anyone. Only the wild cattle wandered between empty houses. He did not see the dead - as if the Vikings suddenly evaporated. There are no rapids yet. Sit down to settle the pirates, there would be the bodies of the dead. It would be, to get to the colonists of the plague. We could not move somewhere people: no one would throw their belongings and animals.

Eastern settlement survived to the beginning of the XVI century. But in 1540, Icelandic naval, attached to the shores of Greenland, did not find any colonist. They discovered only the body of a man in a raincoat with a hood. Who was this man? And where are the rest? Historians believe that people sailed back to Iceland - after all, the climate became much colder, and there was no possibilities to engage in agriculture and cattle breeding. If you believe the legends of Eskimos, pirates attacked the inhabitants of the Eastern settlement. Archaeological excavations in Greenland do not confirm this version, but curious why Eskimos were so interested in the fate of Vikings?

At first, the island seemed uninhabited by the Vikings. But was it so? The fact is that the first Greenland "mastered" not Vikings, but the Eskimos. Scientists argue that the history of ancient Greenland is the history of repeating migrations of Paleo Eskimos. They sailed here from the Arctic Islands of North America. Paleo-Eskimos adapted to an extremely unfavorable climate and survived at the very border of the range suitable for human existence. But even very small climatic changes could destroy the adapted culture.

Scientists allocate in Greenland four ancient Paleo-Eskimo cultures, whose representatives lived on the island long before the appearance of Vikings. This is a Sakkak culture, culture of Independence I, the culture of Independence II and early Dorset culture. Later, the last one disappeared, it existed approximately 200 of our era.

But who caught Vikings in Greenland, if the last Eskimo left this land for seven hundred years before their appearance? The opinions of researchers are divergent. Some believe that all the cultural representatives dosset. This culture (the beginning of the I millennium BC. E. - Start I Millennium N. E.) was opened in 1925 at Cape Dorset (Baphinova Earth). It was widespread in the Far North-East of Canada, the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and in Western and Northeast Greenland. Tribes Dorset were hunters. Their prey was seals, walruses and northern deer.

Perhaps the Scandinavian colonists who arrived with Eric's redheads turned out to be not the only inhabitants of the island. The new migration of Eskimosov - representatives of the late Dorset culture - allegedly took place shortly before their appearance. But Eskimos settled on the distant north-west of the island, at a very long distance from Viking settlements. And indeed, in the excavations of the parking lot of culture, Dorset did not find any subjects of Scandinavian production. Nevertheless, there are indirect evidence of contacts, the so-called "exotic elements", which are not typical for this culture: a screw carving on bone labor instruments and carved figures of people with a beard.

Another culture, with the representatives of which Vikings collided completely exactly, called Tula. It existed between the 900s and 1700s on both shores

Bering Strait, the Arctic coast and on Canada Islands. Some researchers believe that in Greenland Dorset and Tula for some time adjacent. It was between the 800 and 1200 ms, after which Tula changed Dorset. Tula tribes well adpedired to local conditions, they were fed the hunt for animals, both marine and ground. In the central part of the American Arctic, Tulians built rounded dwellings from whale bones and stone, traveled on dog sledding. The same representatives of Tula, who lived in the field of Bering Strait, lived in the houses from the fin. Archaeologists find sinewings, stone lamps, knives, figures of people, animal and waterfowl. Tuly basically lived settled. They copied food reserves, and thanks to them they could survive the hungry winter months.

How was the Eskimos of Tula with their neighbors and Vikings? There is no unambiguous answer to this question. Archaeologists have found in the excavations of the Eskimo parking lots a lot of items of Norwegian work. But how did they get to Tuly?

In connection with the cooling, Eskimos migrated closer to the territories that belonged to the Vikings. A number of researchers believe that the Vikings not only met with Eskimos, but even lived among them. But supporters of this version are a bit. According to the legends of Eskimos, the Scandinavians conflicted with Tuly. On armed clashes with Eskimos are also told by Sagi. It is possible that Tulians prevented the Vikings, pushing them from the hunting territories of the central part of the west coast.

Fragment of Carta Marina (XVI century). Tula is indicated as tile

Was these so different peoples among themselves? Unknown. Things made by scandinals could get to Toviyam and another: from the settlements left by Vikings. Oddly enough, the colonists did not use the experience of their neighbors whose clothing was more adapted to the conditions of the North, and did not even adopt the individual elements of their costume. It surprises scientists, but the history of Greenland times of Vikings is generally full of riddles, and who knows whether the science will find the answer.

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There is no doubt that Greenland exists and existed always, but it does not exist and never existed in those borders that are indicated on some ancient maps. In addition, it is very likely that that real Greenland, which we know today received your name from the name of the mythical island.

The names of "Iceland" and "Greenland" have always caused the desire to think about them. How could it happen that the place is usually not covered with ice, called Iceland (ice earth), and the harsh fruitless Arctic desert-Greenland (green land)? As for Iceland, two theories are most likely: one of them is that Viking Flocks, which opened this island (or maybe re-discovery) in the 870s, drew attention to the north shore (rare, but possible case); The second comes from the assumption that the ancient Scandinavian settlers deliberately gave their new homeland an unattractive name to lean those who committed pirated raids.

The name "Greenland" traditionally explain this way: Eric Redhead gave it to him open to them to attract promising colonists. But it sounds not very convincing. Whatever Eric is a fraudster, it is difficult to believe that he wanted so unless and frankly to fool the group of Scandinavian warriors devotees to him, among whom he was going to live, remaining their leader. The source of this version served the work of Ari Wise, Icelandic chronicist of the XI century. However, the earliest copy of his work, known to us, was made in the XIII century, and suggest that it was complemented by other authors who could make their interpretation into it. In any case, this explanation of the name "Greenland" is very similar to the fiction and should be treated with great caution.

To establish the true origin of this name, we may have to return to the times of ancient Rome. The Roman Writer of the I century of our era of Plutarch is mostly famous for its "book biographies", but he wrote other works, among whom the book entitled "face on the moon," is one of those collection of eccentric information that, apparently, loved Romans. In this book, he cites a statement of a certain dememetrus, one Roman employee who has lived several years in Britain. Demetrius allegedly told him that the British is known is the island lying in the West, which they in their own language called somehow like "Kronos".

This word requires a comment. It cannot be British, since the Britons spoke on the so-called "R-Gaelle" branch of the Celtic language, where the gentle sounds were replaced by the lips, unlike the "Q-Gaelskaya". So, for example, the word "son" on Q-Gaelsky (modern Scottish and Irish languages) - Mac, on P-Gaelsky (modern Wales and Breton Languages) - AR, originally tar. Thus, the word Cronos would sound in ancient Kit, somehow like PRONOS.

Professor California University Arthur Huton expressed the opinion that the most likely source of this name would be the word Cruidhne - the ancient Irish name of Britain Island - and that this association with the island in the West (Ireland) led him to the wrong interpretation of him as the name of the Western Island. If it were so, then Britain's initial Greenland would be.

This is the idea of \u200b\u200bthe island, called the "Kronos", would well combine with the traditional religious Greek-Roman concepts, consisting in the fact that the crowns, the widespread father of Zeus, lies, compounded by the eternal sleep, somewhere on one of the Western Islands. Probably the authority of Plutarha, which quoted Demetrius, was enough to enrich the Roman geography of the Island of Cronia in the Atlantic.

The final part of the theory is that scientists of the early Middle Ages, who owned the language of Teutons, replaced the Teutonic suffix Latin and changed the initial letter, substituting instead of "with" the letter G "more characteristic of them; It turned out Cronia - Cronland - Gronland. To that this new form of word meant in their Green Land (Green Earth) language, was a clean coincidence, and gradually the idea that somewhere in the Atlantic there is an island called Greenland, entered the tradition. And when Eric Redhead opened a new land, he simply suggested that it was Greenland, which he had already heard, so he called it.

There are evidence that the Scandinavians who lived in Iceland knew about the existence of Greenland until 982, but only in 982, Eric Ryzhiy took the first serious studies of this country. Being another young man, Eric went with his father from Norway to Iceland, the country, which at that time was considered promising. But when they arrived there, it turned out that all fertile land is dismantled, and at the head of the company there are old settlers who are looking at the newcomers. Eric's father soon died, and in the end, Erica himself eventually managed to get a plot of land, but he did not recognize the neighbors. The lifestyle of the Iceland of that time was rude and cruel, and the best friend of each of them was their own sword. Twice Eric grabbed a man in a duel. In both cases, this, apparently, was self-defense, but he had no influential friends, and both times sentenced him to expulsion: for the first time for one year, in the second - three.

When the second incident occurred, his all wealth was a ship and loyal servants, and he decided to sail to the West to explore the islands in this direction, perhaps "Schhers Gunbierne", now non-existent. Efforts did not disappear for nothing. He opened the extensive island of Greenland and created a colony on it. When the three years of expulsion passed, he returned to Iceland to recruit new colonists.

An even more than a century, Greenland information was transmitted from mouth to mouth, finding their reflection in Icelandic sagas. The first written testimony about this island, which has spread in circles of European geographers, is approximately 1070.

At this time, the German priest, known as Adam from Bremen, finished his work "History of the Hamburg Diocese". This title will seem uninteresting, if not to take into account the circumstance that all Scandinavia also included in the Hamburg diocese and all overseas countries, colonized by Scandinavia, and that this book is a valuable source of information about the life of the ancient Scandins and their research. Adam had a conversation with the King of Denmark Sinai II on these districts, and his mention of Greenland and Winland is the first reliable information about America in all European literature.

He said about Greenland: "... in the north ocean flows past the Orkna Islands, then endlessly far from the earthly circle, leaving the left Ibernia [now called Ireland], the birthplace of cattle, on the right of Norwegian schhers, and then Island Island and Greenland."

And below, in another paragraph: "... In addition, there are many other islands in the distant ocean, of which Greenland is not the smallest; it is located on, opposite the Swedish, or Rhypsian, mountains. Distance to it is such that the path on the ship from Norway Before this island continues, as they say, from five to seven days, as much as I and Iceland. People living there, bluish green from salt water, and therefore these places were called "Greenland". The way of their life is the same What is Icelanders, but they are savage and make pirated raids on navigators. They report that Christianity reached them recently. "

Here we have a fair confusion, which was destined to leave his mark in cartography. In the first of the above quotes of Greenland, there is definitely a place somewhere far in the ocean, whereas in the second one, one way or another, they are associated with the Swedish mountains ("Riper Mountains" - the mythical themselves, they will be discussed in chapter 11). In medieval geography, the situation "opposite" meant something "on the same latitude", which means Adam Bremensky correctly told that then it was known about Greenland. But such free terminology was a serious source of misunderstanding, and, obviously, these two incompatible assertions of Adam Bremensky led to the late Middle Ages to the thought that Greenland is the Peninsula of Europe or the area associated with Europe's long sushi bridge.

I was informed that in the library of Florence, there is, or, in any case, there existed to the destructive flood of 1966, the map, dated 1417, on which Groinlandia is depicted at almost the right place and is associated with Europe. But I did not have the opportunity to see this card or get it a copy. If it exists, then this is the earliest of famous maps with the image of Greenland.

As far as I managed to trace the cartographic sources, the earliest image of Greenland on the map appeared ten years after the Florentine map mentioned above. It is performed by the Danish cartographer clawdine Schwarz, according to a voluntary reason more famous in history under the name of Claudia Clavus. Obviously, Adam Bremen's influence was influenced by him, but it is unlikely to be doubt that he had other, more modern sources of information. On the first map of Clavus 1427, only the eastern shore of Greenland is depicted. The location is correct, and the drawing of the coastline is amazingly accurate; But his Greenland is the western end of a long, rounded sushi bridge loop, which extends far to the north of Iceland and connects with the shores of Northern Europe to the east of the White Sea. This incorrect idea of \u200b\u200bGreenland was further reflected in many later maps.

Clavus lived most of his conscious life in Italy and had a great influence on Mediterranean cartographers. He created another card in 1467, on which both shores of Greenland were shown, this card accurately reproduces the location of Greenland and her form, but the connection of Greenland with the Northern Coast of Europe is still preserved.

Attempt by claws to reconcile contradictory evidence of Adam Bremensky was not adopted by everyone. On the famous "Map of Winland" about 1440, the discovery of which in 1965 made a sensation, shown properly placed Greenland, with the correct outlines, however, quite small and non-associated with Europe. However, some scientists consider this edition later. Even earlier, three years after the appearance of the first Clavus card in 1427, one of the representatives of the French clergy, Gyloma de Philaster, released a new Ptolemy's publication in which he argued, based only on the names that Greenland should be south of Iceland , "Despite the fact that Clavus described these northern areas and made them a map on which they are shown connected with Europe."

It is difficult to illustrate all the movements of Greenland on the map before the period of serious travels in order to research it than by describing the various configurations on the XV century maps.

The 1447 Genoese Map Following Claudia Clavus, depicts Greenland, connected to Europe. The map of Fra-Mauro is 1459 (the first European card, which shows Japan and are very accurately depicted by the outlines of Africa) depicts Greenland in the form of an elongated Cape Northern Scandinavia stretched to the west.

The card attached to Ptolemy 1467 repeats Claws, but this apparently the first of the cards created under its influence on which Greenland is shown, not related to Europe.

Catalan card of about 1480 (mentioned already in chapter 4) depicting an elongated Ilia Verde (literal translation: "Green Earth") on the latitude of Ireland, which is associated with the Island Brazil.

Map of Nikolai Denis 1482 approximately correctly shows Greenland, not related to Europe, but next to it is a different island called Engronelant. This confusion of two names belonging to the same island will still be repeated.

An anonymous map of the same time depicts Gronland almost at the right place, but duplicates her to another island, EngRoneland, north of Norway, and north puts Pillappelanth (Lapland) - "the last of the inhabited lands."

On the globe of Martin Behaimim, 1492, Greenland is again represented in the form of the Arctic Peninsula north of Norway.

On the map of Johann Ruysh around 1495, the Gruenlant Little Earth is placed to the west southwest of Iceland.

Huang de la Spit on his map of 1500 introduced Greenland in the form of a cluster of small islands north of Iceland.

In this chaos, it is impossible to imagine any system. The fact is that geographers of the XV century, obviously, simply did not know where Greenland is and what it is; Sources of information with which they used were confused and contradictory, and everything depended on how one or another cartographer preferred to use. The Norman Colony in Greenland ceased to exist by the middle of the century; The last entry testifying to contact with it is contained in one of the papal messages of 1418, from which it is clear that the church services are still produced. If we consider the possible ways of communication of that time, it will not be surprising that in the circles of the main geographers of the Mediterranean Greenland in the fifty years of the absence of any contact could turn into an almost forgotten "something" on the edge of the most advanced "nothing."

But although Greenland went out of control, she was not forgotten. At least two dads, Nikolai V in 1448 and Alexander VI in 1492, expressed their concern about this very far outpost of the Christian world. Traveling to re-open this country were inevitable, and it was clear that the initiator would be the Danish-Norwegian kingdom, from where the first Greenland settlers came out.

The first of these travels, about which there are only vague written certificates is the most foggy of all the journeys ever done to research; It is known only by the meager links that appear here, then there after many years after the event itself, mainly on the XVI century cards. It is not for sure that this journey took place in 1472 or 1476, and it is unclear who headed him. Modern historians believe that Didrik Pingik and Hans Pothorst, two famous Norwegian captain, but most of the ancient cards attribute to this swimming with some kind of John Solvus, who, according to the Danish Giograph of Cornell Vitflit, was Pole. In Portugal, at that time there was the height of the Great Era of discoveries, when the path to India was found around the southern tip of Africa, but the Portuguese did not lose interest and to the northern ways. Heinrich Mauchepher conducted a policy of developing good relations with Danes in order to take advantage of their extensive swimming experience in the northern seas, and it is possible that the expedition of the 70s of the XV century is largely stimulated by the Portuguese. Many Danes participated in the Portuguese studies of the African coast, two Portuguese took part in the Arctic swimming of the 1470s: Yuan Your Cortyral and Alvaru Martinsh Omen.

But this expedition was sent exactly, it remained unclear. There is no doubt that she visited Greenland; It is very likely that it went further, stopping in other areas of Arctic America. Frieze on his globe 1537 to the north of the Bay of St. Lawrence places the land of the people of Kvi (Quij) and attributes her discovery to John Slovus. It is assumed that this name is one of the options for the name of the Indian tribe, which, in those days, apparently, dwells significantly east than at present.

Upon returning Cortiraal to Portugal, King Affonsu I satisfied his request and complained to him the domestic on the earth, which he opened. But no further steps for the development of these lands did not take. He became old years old, and he preferred the post of governor in the Azores, demanding a smaller voltage of the forces. There, he met the rich imagination of a young German geographer from Bohemia, known as Martin Behahima (Martin from Bohemia), who married his wife's relative and learned a lot to a lot. At its famous globe of 1492, Behaimim does not avoid the mistakes of the predecessors and depicts Greenland in the form of the Peninsula of the Arctic Europe, but to the west of it, he places several islands, strikingly similar to the islands, framing the mouth of the Bay of St. Lawrence.

In 1493, a certain monetary from Nuremberg, a friend of Behaun, wrote a letter to the king of Portugal Zhuan, in which he mentioned that "a few years ago" Expedition sent by the Moscow Prince, opened Greenland and that in Greenland is still a significant Russian colony. This message can only be applied to Spitsbergen, which Russians obviously achieved back in 1435 and where they founded the colony near the modern Bay of Belsun. Later Svalbard will appear again in connection with the confusing history of Greenland to confuse it even more.

Donating to open lands, complained to Cortyrial, remained the property of his family, and when the Spaniards began to explore and exploit the West India and the area adjacent to it, the sons of Cortyrian turned to the king with a request to take something until it's late to preserve the integrity of Portuguese possessions in new light. In accordance with the famous demarcation line conducted by Dad Alexander VI in 1493, the entire open world was divided between Spain and Portugal, and Greenland clearly fell into the Spanish sector. Even the revision of this line a year later in Tordesillas actually did not change the provisions: all inhabited promising areas were transferred to Spain. But at that time, this contract was not implemented. And besides, since the definition of longitude was in those times the procedure is very unreliable, there could be a controversial situation regarding the premises of Greenland to the east of this line.

Three sons of Cortyrian I spent the whole state of the family in search of the Earth, which their father visited. In 1500, the younger son, Gushpar, headed the journey, which turned out to be unsuccessful; Then in 1501, another, worthy of his life. But this time two of his ships returned with the news on the re-opening of Greenland and about the "land Labrador". That is why this northern district of America is wearing the Portuguese name. Gasparu Cortyrial must pay tribute to his genuine second opening of Greenland. His older brother, Miguel, went into swim in 1502, in order to enter the actual possession of these lands, but also disappeared.

The opening of the Cortyrian immediately led to geographical consequences. From the cards, the former estimated Greenland north was immediately eliminated from Norway, she was returned to an old place, and she ranked the right position in Western Atlantic. On the map of Kantino, 1502, it is placed on the eastern (Portuguese) side of the demarcation line and is shown too small and too far to the south, but this card at least reflected real for the time of the presentation of Greenland.

The further history of the "Wearing" Greenland refers mainly to the field of cartography, so we briefly list the expeditions that it was wanted. The main result of the journey of Cortyrian was that Greenland was taken away from the Danes and handed over to the Portuguese, but the Portuguese did not bring the case to the end, and Greenland remained without a host. King Denmark Christian II designed a trip to Greenland in 1513, but circumstances prevented him to implement his plan; The same thing happened in 1522, when Frederick I King planned a similar journey. In 1578, Frederick II finally sent an expedition under the command of some Magnus Henningsen, who saw the shore of Greenland, but did not sit on him. It was at the same time at the same time when Martin Frobisher (as mentioned in Chapter 3) landed in South Greenland, accepted her for Friesland and seized her as Western England.

From this time, Greenland became a territory, quite well known worldwide. Various English expeditions in search of the North-West Passage studied her shores at least 75 northern latitudes. At the beginning of the XVII century, the Danes were swaming several times; Four of these travels led James Hall, the Englishman, whose in 1612 was a navigator on the ship William Buffin. Hall was killed in a minor skirmish with Greenland Eskimos. During the XVII and XVIII centuries, Greenland was a hunting venue for walrus and seals, famous to the vocabulary of all nationalities. But only in 1721, as a result of the Swimming of the Missionar of Hans, Egieda's right to Denmark in Greenland was restored. Egieda went on a trip with the hope of finding the remnants of the lost and by that time half the legendary Scandinavian colony, to preach the Christianity of the Protestant sense there, but without finding it, he remained preaching among the Eskimos. This in 1832 followed the journey of Wilhelm Graya, a representative of the Danish fleet; During this trip, traces of the ancient Scandinavian settlements were discovered and the right to claim Denmark, which has continued to remain in force since then.

So, we summarized data on practical research. Cartography data is not so easy to sum up.

Greenland was turned into part of Europe, and now in a short time it had to be represented as part of Asia. We have already mentioned that immediately after the opening of America, Columbus South America, which has been known everywhere as a new land, was universally recognized as such, and North America was considered as a very likely continuation of the East of the Old World. This concept led to the creation of the famous map of the contamini of 1506. On it, South America is connected to Asia Panama Crest; There is no North American continent, but on those latitudes where it should be, sticking out like a deformed thumb, a huge elongated peninsula. The names of his extreme points in the East are identical to the names that gave the land open to them - Greenland and Labrador.

But strangely different. Displacements and separation of Greenland usually attracted one of two errors: duplication or restoration of the sushi bridge.

Duplication is easy to explain. After Greenland was open to Cortyrial and again ranked on the map not as a romantic object, to the existence of which they just believed, but as all of the well-known reality, in the Cartographer's environment, it became generally accepted to translate the name "Greenland" in the languages \u200b\u200bon which they worked, words Green Land (Green Earth), no matter how it is written (Greenland, Gronland, Engroenland or somehow otherwise). Thus, almost unfamiliar green island hit the map under this name (on many languages) and as a result of this quickly dissociated from Greenland.

The Coppo Cap of 1528 depicts Isola Verde (Green Island) almost at the right place. But as Greenland became more famous, and its Scandinavian name is increasingly stereotypical, the cartographers began to make a mistake, assuming that two islands are hidden behind two duplicate names of each other.

It is unlikely to make sense to list all the cards of that time here. Throughout XVI and almost the XVII centuries on maps showing genuine Greenland, also a green island (Isla Verde or Insula Viridis) is also depicted somewhere in American waters, usually in North Atlantic, - undoubted proof that the name "Green Island" They associated with this area.

But not all green islands - the result of this error. In 1503, Rodrigo Bastidas sailed from Seville to West India and opened a small island near the Guadeloupe, which he called Isla Verde, and he is on the map of Pedro Martyr 1511. Obviously, in this case, the name was associated with the vegetation of the island and had nothing to do with Greenland.

The imaginary North Atlantic Green Island was long-life, but during the events another reduced double Greenland appeared. At the end of the XVI century, Greenland begins to appear on the maps, accompanied from the west side a significantly smaller island called Groland.

From the fact that this island was constantly placed to the west of Greenland, apparently, it can be concluded that the island of Buffhin Earth was known for a long time.

The name of GROCLAND undoubtedly happened from the antiquity of writing the word Greenland as a Groe-Land with Tilda, that is, as a result of the same cut, which, apparently, was misleading Nikolo Zeno, who read the name Sinclair (Sinclair) as Zichmni, what is already Mentioned in the third chapter. It is not difficult to imagine that Tilda could not notice, and "E" read as "C". In addition, at this time it was customary to put so many islands on the map as names.

But I can not say that much ahead of the preceding researchers in the question of who from the cartographers the first mistakenly placed the Groland Island on his map and what exactly was the reason for the disappearance from the cards of this island. The earliest card known to me, on which the GRAKLAND appears is the Mercator Map of 1569, the very Later - Matthias map of Kuadus 1608. On the map of Hessel Gerina, 1612, dedicated to the discovery of Henry Hudzon, Greenland is well shown quite well, and to the west of it there is still an earth, but the Glocland is not available on it. In essence, the Grocland would relatively long lasted on the maps, but because he appeared at the moment when the great classics of ancient cartography worked, and was included in the maps made by them, he gained great fame than he deserved.

Some curiosities of this time are curious. Ortaliy in 1571 reduced mighty Greenland to a tiny stitch, which in the West eclipsed by the mythical island of EstoLoundandia, and Groland he placed further to the north, directly under the imaginary unknown northern continent (Chapter 6).

On the map of Michael Loca, published by Clepute in 1582, showing little Greenland directly to the north of the mythical frisland. And west of it, approximately on the site of the island of Buffhin, the land is depicted a significantly large territory called Jac. Scolvus GROCLAND. This placement is curious. Michael Lok was a man very educated and many travels. He was vividly interested in geography and, undoubtedly, was familiar with the most reliable sources of that time. It is very likely that the information that served as the basis for this card, he received from a report currently lost or not yet detected, in which the Danish Expedition of the 1470s was mentioned, headed, as estimated, regardless of who was Its genuine boss, a kind of long, which is usually called John, not Jacob. This card can be viewed as evidence that the expedition penetrated the territory of North America outside of Greenland, but no convincing evidence confirming this fact does not exist.

Meanwhile, it turned out that some misconceptions are peculiar and the Danes themselves. The Copenhagen's Royal Library is kept by Icelander Sigurd Stephensson in 1590 and, obviously, intended to illustrate the ancient discoveries made by Scandinavians in America. Here, Greenland has almost the right form and sizes, but is a large peninsula of the American continent. She was already part of Europe and Asia, and now became part of North America. All other names are borrowed from the Scandinavian Saga dedicated to the opening of Leif Erikson: Awerke and Herulfsnesses in Greenland and South, along the Eastern Coast of North America, Hellouland, Markland, Promontoria, Winland and Squareland.

But even more interesting is the map created in 1605 by Johannes with a revenue, the rector of the Danish Royal University. On it, Greenland is also depicted in the form of the North America Peninsula and repeated all the names used by Stefansson. The outlines of the coast are repeated, but something has been added from more modern sources. Friesland and EstoLoundandia are designated in accordance with the narrative of Zeno (and EstoLoundandia is equivalent to Hellüland Stefansson), and south of Winland there is a small bay, as suggested by the Bay of St. Lawrence, called Portus Jacob! Carterii Anno 1525 (Port of Jacques Cartier, year 1525 [more correctly 1535]). The simplest explanation of this would be that the Redean simply copied Stephensson with some glitters. But among the marks on the fields, there is a recording of a servn, which says that this card has several hundred years. It is possible that he did a copy from the original, which relates to the time of the actual contacts of Scandinavians with North America. It is possible that one day a happy discovery will be made, like the famous "Map of Wilanandia", which will confirm this assumption, but at the moment the source of borrowing the servn is not known to us.

In 1596, the Danish navigator Bill Barents, heading east in search of the Northern Maritime Passage, saw the shores of the Earth, which he called Spitsbard and accepted for part of Greenland. The Barents himself did not live to the end of the trip, but the members of his crew brought with them a report, which was the result of the next movement of Greenland.

As already mentioned, the report on the opening and colonization of Spitsberegin Russian penetrated into Europe over a hundred years before the travel of the Barents, and then they believed that Svalbard is Greenland. But since at that time it was assumed everywhere that Greenland is part of Northern Europe, adjacent to Russia, then this did not affect geographical concept.

Since the 1520s, almost all European maps of Greenland is shown separated from Europe. By this time, no actual data was obtained, which would confirm the existence of the sushi bridge between them. In addition, I wanted to believe in the existence of the open sea in the north, as this allowed in turn the possibility of the existence of northeast or northwestern passages. The map attached to the narrative of Zeno in 1558 is an exception: it shows Greenland in the form of a strongly elongated Europe Peninsula. But it is likely that Nikolo Zeno II copied this feature with a very damaged time of the card, which he had to restore and which undoubtedly reflected the concepts of their era. Greenland, connected to Europe, was, as far as I know, first depicted on the map of Claudius Clavus in 1427, but the very idea of \u200b\u200bthis connection was rooted, perhaps much earlier, otherwise he could not apply Greenland to the card in such a form.

By the time of the Barents, as a result of Arctic travel north of Europe, the theory of Sushi bridge has lost its popularity, but the possibility that Greenland extends far to the East and that Spitsbergen is part of its territory, has not yet been excluded. If this concept was confirmed, the ancient sushi bridge could get the actual substantiation.

Perch in his book describes many travels to Greenland, having in mind Spitsbergen, as well as some travels in that Greenland, which we know now. That is, both of these areas he considers as one territory.

When the rich hunting places for walru and seals became known, as well as the abundant places of fishing in Svalbard, this island turned into a tailed piece, which immediately found many hunters. First, the right to this territory belonged to the Dutch men, because they opened it and gave her the name. During the English expedition of 1613, part of Spitsbengen was captured by the British and named "New Earth King Yakov", but this name could not be consolidated. In addition, some of the British began to express unreasonable statements that the archipelago was allegedly opened in 1553, long before the Barents, Hugh Willoughby during his journey in search of the northeast passage. Many persistently insisted that Svalbard was renamed to the "Earth Willoughubi", but most often they themselves called him Greenland.

The rivalry of the British and the Dutch, who claimed Spitzbard, led to intricate diplomatic maneuvering, but when the Dutch was gradually established effective control over the harbors, the British were completed. By the 1640s, the Dutch fully controlled the waters of Spitsberegin and mercilessly exploited them. On the coast, extensive enterprises for salting fish and the development of burst were created and the famous Arctic city of Smrenburg appeared, where the workers were provided with housing and everything we need, where life was buried during the short summer season, and the money was treated by the river. Then during a long winter, he was empty and only a few, permanent service personnel remained in it, preparing everything for the next season. And in the spring court returned.

On the XVII century cards, Svalbergen was usually depicted shifted to the west, towards Greenland. It was assumed that they were one of the whole, but by this time was no longer taken to depict the binding their hypothetical coastline.

In Chapter, the sixth was already mentioned about the hydrograph Joseph Moxon and about his meeting in the 1650s with a Dutch sailor, who had just returned from the Fishing Places in Greenland and convicts that he was overpowering through the North Pole; It was also mentioned that Greenland Mokson was actually Spitsbergen. Now the reader is clear where such an error came from. On the map of 1675, published by Mokson, real Greenland is called Greenland, and Spitsbergen - Greenland. The area between them towards Europe is barely scheduled, but reminds a timid attempt to show the old, discredited sushi bridge, which, however, is unlikely to fit with the relationship of Mokson to the story of the Dutch Sailor, allegedly floating past "Greenland" to the North Pole. However, the fact remains: the inscription "Greenland" stretches on the map almost before the inscription "New Earth".

At the heart of Spitsberena's identification with Greenland lay an idea that the Greenland coast stretches far to the east. At one of the cards of this time, the same mistake is allowed, but having the opposite direction: the shore of Greenland is extended to the West. On the map of Nikolai Visher, who mentioned in the chapter of the Sixth, the West Coast of Greenland is about latitude 78 turns to the West, then the Island of Buffhin Land and makes a loop to the south, connecting with the Western shores of Hudson Bay. If this corresponded to reality, no northwestern pass could exist.

By the 1670s, before the richest fishing and hunting grounds began to be exhausted as a result of excessive operation. The Dutch began to visit the waters of Svalbard more and less often, and Svalbard lost the host for two and a half century, until Norway in 1925 consolidated his claims to this island. But this will be discussed below. Meanwhile, the Dutch Skipper Bill de Mooseing in search of new selence hunting places made swimming north around Svalbard. This swimming was proof that Svalbard is not connected with Greenland. The moistening accidentally managed to the latitude of 88 10, ", the highest of the northern latitudes reached by any of the Europeans until 1827, when the Expedition of William Parry in search of the North Pole reached 82 45.

By the beginning of the XVIII century, the difference between Spitsbard and Greenland, and Greenland, even though her shores were still poorly studied, took approximately the right place on the map. And yet she had a few more movements.

The mythical green island continued to exist as a result of the duplication of Greenland and continued to stay on the maps in the area of \u200b\u200bNorth Atlantic, usually in American waters, throughout the XVIII and almost only XIX centuries. By the middle of the XIX century, it decreased to an equally mythical green cliff.

As already mentioned, the American researcher Elisha Kent Kane reached the northern coast of Greenland in 1854 and reported that behind Greenland's open sea. German geographer August Petermann was one of the main supporters of the hypothesis about the open polar sea, theory, which was largely based on the Kane's report. But at the same time, in the opposite of this theory, Petermann, in the 1860s, suggested that the still not studied northern tip of Greenland may extend to the north-west, passes by the North Pole and ends with a cape located right north of Cape Barrow on Alaska. Greenland depicted in this way only on the maps of Peterman himself, but the thought of this was finally discarded only when in 1900, Peari studied her northern tip and Greenland appeared in the true light.

Greenland established himself in his place only in the XX century. But even after that, its situation was specified, and the old concepts were not quite popular yet. The Scottish researcher Rudos Brown in 1920 did not pay attention to the fact that seal hunters in his homeland are still called Spitsbergen "Greenland".

It disappeared from the cards and the "green rock", but whether it really existed, and remained a mystery. William X. Babokok, an expert on the mythical islands of the Atlantic, was so much confident in its existence, which even made a request about this island in the United States hydrographic service. Employees of this service responded that they did not believe in her existence, but they mentioned (referring to a certain captain Tulloca from New Hampshire) about the Kumbas story, Shkiper Ship "Pallas", published from Bata in Maine, who reported that he had seen green Rock. According to him, it was a big cliff covered with green moss, which he at first glance took over the bottom of an inverted vessel. The depth of the sea in accordance with the precursors carried out next to it was almost 3 kilometers.

Since Atlantic has not yet been studied with an accuracy of one inches, it is possible that there is something similar to the description with the "green rock" and coinciding with the mythical island. But its existence, apparently, has not been proven.

Finally, it remains to mention another two more or less modern wanders of Greenland.

In 1194, during one of the travels somewhere north of Iceland, the land was opened, which Svalbard called. It is very likely that it was some part of the eastern shore of Greenland or a formidable rocky island, now called Jan Mayen. But since the 1890s, seven centuries after its discovery, the Norwegian government officially insisted that Svalbard is Spitsbergen, and brought this argument as a thorough reason for the presentation of rights to own this island, referring to the fact that the first It was opened by Scandinavians. Such identification, gently expressing, is very doubtful. But in 1925, the League of Nations ratified the claims of Norway to Svalbard, and since that time this Arctic archipelago was officially called Svalbard, the name that was obviously part of Greenland was given for the first time.

While I wrote the first version of this chapter, I first heard about the report of the Expedition of David Chemphri, dedicated to the study of Greenland in 1966, which proved that in existing maps of Greenland, its territory was increased by approximately thirty thousand square miles. Is it possible to assume that the result of this newest study will be the stabilization of Greenland, in other words, is it the most recent of its movements? Undoubtedly, the time will give an answer to this question. But it still it seems that even in the space era, the romantic period in the geography of our Earth has not yet been completed.

Notes:

Not in our understanding of this word, but the word "carib" distorted by the Spaniards.).

Romans called silk "Serikum". - approx. ed.

In the first mention of America, the island in the ocean visited by many, which is called Winland because there is growing wild grapes, which gives the best wine in the world. Wild cereals grow in abundance, and we know that This is not fiction, since Danes confirm this in their messages.

Nikolai V called Greenland "Island to the North of Norway", and Yalmar Holland suggested that he had made a mistaken idea that Greenland was connected to Europe. I can not agree with this. In my opinion, the source of the error is the Clavus card of 1427, ahead of the father's dad twenty years, and in turn, an influence of Adam from Bremen.

According to this line, which was conducted from the Northern to the South Pole across the Atlantic Ocean at a distance equal to about two thousand kilometers from the islands of the Green Cape, all discoveries to the west belonged to the Spaniards, and to the East - Portuguese. - approx. ed.

For me, this is one of the most convincing reasons that give reason to consider the narrative of Zeno genuine. If Nikolo II was conceived by the hoax (taking into account that he lived in Venice, a serious cartographic center), he would use to confirm his messages with more modern cards, and would not operate the geographical concepts already outdated by then.

The story of the Babokka does not indicate the coordinates of the rock, as well as the date of the message and the date of the letter of the hydrographic service. His book was published in 1922.

On the western coast of the Caspian Sea, where the Caucasian spots approach the marine water area quite closely, in the seaside plains and the hills spread out an ancient Derbent. Nowadays, he is the second largest city of the Republic of Dagestan, after the capital - Makhachkala, lying 125 km north.

Derbent is one of the most ancient cities not only the Caucasus, but also of all Russia. His story, as archaeologists consider, has five millennia, - precisely then, in the bronze age, there was a small settlement in this place, then acquired and urban fortifications.

However, the documented formation of the Derbent as a sufficiently large city is associated with the Persian king of the Sassanid dynasty - Jesdigre II (rules in 435-57. AD), who erect it on the northern border of its possessions, on an exalted and strategically important place - between the mountains And the sea (which is reflected in the title: Iranian "Derbend" means "Mountain Pass", or "Mining").

About the century, i.e. In the VI century, in the era of the board of another king of the same dynasty (Hosras i Anushirvan - Rules in 531-579)., On the ruins of former fortifications, the fortified top (old) city is erected, the center of which is the impregnable fortress of the Naryn Cala. Two stone fortress walls are erected (they are equipped with powerful towers and majestic entrance gates), which moved away from the citadel and walked parallel to each other towards the sea. These walls, now survived only partially, have once reached the shore, and even came into a shallow water, so that the city itself, which turned out to be in the enemy protected from the enemy, but also the harbor. In addition to the two main walls, there was also another fortress wall - Dag-bars (mountain wall), a thickness of 3 m and a height of up to 10 m, which was separated from the southwestern corner of the citadel and went toward the Caucasian mountains for as many as 40 km! (Now the mountain wall is almost completely destroyed, only individual fragments remained).

Subsequently, thanks to a favorable geographical position, Derbent turns into one of the largest and developed medieval cities of the East. True, his story is full of drama: it turns out to be in the epicenter of rapid events, it is experiencing a lot of assault and destruction, experiencing periods of heyday and decline. In the 630s. Derbent capture Khazara, from 652 g. - It is part of the Arab Caliphate, in the X century. becomes the center of independent emirate. Further, in 1071 the city capture Selzhuki Turks, in the XIII century. He is conquered by the Mongols, in the period from the XVI to the beginning of the XVIII centuries. Derbent - as part of Iran. From 1743 is the center of Derbent Khanate, and in 1813 Derbent joins Russia.

Citadel Naryn-Kala, which has been well preserved to our time, is limited to thick (2-4 m) and high (10-12 m) fortress walls, folded from two rows of well-treated stone blocks with filling out of debris and lime mortar. On its territory you can see the ruins of the Palace of Derbent Khan (2 half of the XVIII century), it is also a special underground structure - a "stone bag" (cellar or prison for the Khan Prisoners), Baths, Gaptwaht. The ruins of the palace structures of earlier periods are preserved (starting from the ancient time).

In the area adjacent to the Citadel - a typical Muslim medieval city with a network of narrow curves of streets, on which the deaf facades are 1-2-storey houses, with mosques, fountains, baths. In this part of the city there are: a complex of Juma Mosque, consisting of a mosque actually (VIII century), Madrasa (XV-XIX centuries) and 3 arched gates (XVII-XIX centuries), as well as a kyrocher-mosque (XVII century. ), Minaret-mosque (XVIII century, partially rebuilt in the XIX century) with the only one in Derbent a dilapidated minaret (XIV century), a damage-mosque (XVII-XIX centuries), former Khan Mausoleum (end of the XVIII century). Here you can see special reservoirs for water storage - underground tanks (XVII-XIX centuries), which for Derbent, like any other fortress city of those times, was almost paramount. Water was supplied here from mountain stennors - according to the numerous detected by the excavations of stone and ceramic waterways.

From 1926, a local history museum operates in the Upper City, and in 1989 the State Historical and Architectural and Art Museum-Reserve "Ancient Derbent" is organized.

Cultural criteria: III, IV
Turns on World Heritage List: 2003

This object on the UNESCO World Heritage Site website WhC.unesco.org/en/List/1070

Greenland

The robbery and military campaigns of Vikings in England and France, as well as expeditions to the Mediterranean Sea, during one of which, for example, 62 vessels under the guidance of the legendary Hahashtein in 895 reached Byzantium, far from fully characterize them to achieve them as navigators. The navigation arts of the Vikings and the seaworthiness of their vessels testify to the navigation, ended with the settlement of Iceland and Greenland and the discovery of America.

The first Norwegians appeared on the Hebrid Islands around 620. Almost 200 years later, in 800 g. They settled on Faroe ("Sheep") islands, and in 802 - on Orkney and Shetland. In 820 in Ireland, they created a state that was located in the area of \u200b\u200bmodern Dublin, and existed until 1170.

Information about Iceland Vikings delivered the Swede Gardar Swalfarson, who in 861 transported the inheritance of his wife from Hebrid Islands. During the transition, his ship was a storm to the northern coast of Iceland, where he overreed with the team. When in 872, Harald beautifully created a great kingdom in Norway, Iceland became the goal for those Norwegians who did not want to obey the king. It is believed that up to 930 in Iceland moved from 20,000 to 30,000 Norwegians. With you, they were brought homemade household items, seeds and domestic animals. Fishing, agriculture and cattle breeding were the main classes of Vikings in Iceland.

Icelandic sagas transmitted from generation to generation and recorded only in the XIII and XIV centuries recorded only in the XIII and XIV centuries are the most important sources of viking information. Sugi inform us about Viking settlements in Greenland and the opening of America, called Wellands.

So, in a saga about the Eirik Raud (Redhead), which was recorded about 1200 Hawuk Erlandssson, it was said that in 983, Eica, expelled from Iceland for three years for the murder, swam in search of the country, which Gunbonn saw when swimming in " West Sea. " Eica Redhead reached Greenland and settled there with a group of Icelanders. The settlement was named brutalid. There lived Bard Herulifson. In 986, his son Bjarni sailed from Iceland with the intention to get to Greenland. During swimming, he stumbled three times on an unfamiliar land, until finally found his father who lived in the southern tip of Greenland. Upon returning to Norway, Bjarni spoke about his swimming at the courtyard of King Eika. The son of Eika Red - Leif Ericsson - acquired the ship from Baryni and swam on it with 35 people in Brattalid. After careful preparation, they first repeated the journey of Baryni on the Labrador ps. Having reached it, they turned to the south and followed along the coast. According to the Greenland Saga, recorded in 1387 by Yon Todarsson from Flatheibuk, they reached the terrain called by them Winland - the country of grapes. There, the wild grapes are growing rapidly, Mais, salmon met in the rivers. South Salmon Spread Border approximately corresponded to 41 ° latitude. The northern border of wild grapes took place around the 42nd parallels. Thus, Leif with his team at about 1000 reached the places where Boston is currently located.

Brother Leif - Torvald - after his story on the same ship with 30 people, also reached Winland, where he lived for two years. During one of the skits with the locals, Torvald was mortally wounded, and Vikings left the settlement. Later, the second brother of Leif - Torstain - on the same ship wanted to reach Wilan, but could not find this land.

On the coast of Greenland in some places there were settlements of Icelanders, just 300 yards. Large difficulties for living there arose due to lack of forest. The forest grew on Labrador, located closer to Greenland than Iceland, but the swimming for the Labrador, the Labrador, due to the harsh climate, were dangerous. Therefore, Vikings who lived in Greenland had to carry everything they need from Europe on the courts, which were like ships from Skullayev. This is confirmed by the excavations of burials in Greenland, in which the remains of the courts are found. In the XIV century Viking settlements in Greenland ceased to exist.

Notes:

In the XI century Normans in addition to England captured Sicily and South Italy, founding here at the beginning of the XII century. "Kingdom of both Sicili." The author mentions exclusively the grip and military trips of Danov and Norwegians and says nothing about the Swedes, the expansion of which was directed mainly on Eastern Europe, including Rus.

The decisive battle between Harald and his opponents in Hafrsfid occurred shortly before 900 g. And, therefore, there was no direct connection between relocation in Iceland and political events in Norway.

Currently there are about forty hypotheses about the location of Winlands. Equally, the hypothesis of the Norwegian ethnologist X is not indisputable. Ingestad, who in 1964 opened the ruins of the settlement defined by him as Winland Normanov on Newfoundland. A number of scientists believe that this settlement belongs to Eskimo Dorset culture. In addition, in the sagas, the climate of Wilan is estimated as soft, which does not correspond to the harsh subarctic climate of Newfoundland.

The Bell.

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