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The Great Norse Exodus: The 874 Settlement of Iceland and the Flight from Harald Fairhair
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235423275
- EAN9798235423275
- Date de parution25/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
What drives a human being to pack everything they own into an open wooden boat and sail toward the edge of the known world?For the Norse chieftains of the late ninth century, the answer was not gold, glory, or the thrill of the raid. It was the suffocating weight of a crown. In The Great Norse Exodus: The Settlement of Iceland (c. 874) and the Flight from Harald Fairhair, historian Winston Maddox strips away the pop-culture caricature of the bloodthirsty Viking to reveal a far more compelling historical truth: an untold story of political defiance, brilliant maritime logistics, and the grueling birth of a stateless republic.
This is a narrative written explicitly for the seasoned history enthusiast who demands rigorous accuracy and deep systemic context over superficial tropes. Maddox masterfully reconstructs the geopolitical pressure cooker of 870s Norway, where King Harald Fairhair's brutal centralization of power shattered centuries of traditional autonomy. Rather than bow to a tyrant, thousands of proud families chose a perilous exile.
You will step directly into the holds of the knarrs-the heavy, broad-beamed merchant vessels that made this migration possible. Maddox details the agonizing calculus of the journey: how to balance vital livestock, heirloom timber, and precious freshwater supplies within a fragile hull, and how these ancient mariners read the flight of birds and the swell of the gray Atlantic to navigate a trackless ocean without a compass.
The book excels in its vivid, unsparing depiction of the settlement itself. Forget the myth of an instant paradise; Maddox exposes the brutal environmental realities of 930s Iceland. You will explore how these settlers adapted their legal customs to a raw, volcanic landscape, managing resource scarcity and bitter blood feuds through a complex web of shifting alliances. The narrative culminates in the birth of the Althing at the volcanic rift of Þingvellir-a revolutionary, kingless system of governance that balanced individual liberty with the rule of law, forming one of the oldest surviving parliaments in human history.
If you stood on the black sands of Iceland in the year 874, would you have possessed the sheer grit required to build a civilization out of ice and law?
This is a narrative written explicitly for the seasoned history enthusiast who demands rigorous accuracy and deep systemic context over superficial tropes. Maddox masterfully reconstructs the geopolitical pressure cooker of 870s Norway, where King Harald Fairhair's brutal centralization of power shattered centuries of traditional autonomy. Rather than bow to a tyrant, thousands of proud families chose a perilous exile.
You will step directly into the holds of the knarrs-the heavy, broad-beamed merchant vessels that made this migration possible. Maddox details the agonizing calculus of the journey: how to balance vital livestock, heirloom timber, and precious freshwater supplies within a fragile hull, and how these ancient mariners read the flight of birds and the swell of the gray Atlantic to navigate a trackless ocean without a compass.
The book excels in its vivid, unsparing depiction of the settlement itself. Forget the myth of an instant paradise; Maddox exposes the brutal environmental realities of 930s Iceland. You will explore how these settlers adapted their legal customs to a raw, volcanic landscape, managing resource scarcity and bitter blood feuds through a complex web of shifting alliances. The narrative culminates in the birth of the Althing at the volcanic rift of Þingvellir-a revolutionary, kingless system of governance that balanced individual liberty with the rule of law, forming one of the oldest surviving parliaments in human history.
If you stood on the black sands of Iceland in the year 874, would you have possessed the sheer grit required to build a civilization out of ice and law?























