The Viking Deception | Top
Documentary Films |
History Documentary
Please Subscribe my
Channel:
http://bit.ly/1ycTtXa
Facebook Page:http://on.fb.me/1CnU03I
Google Plus:http://bit.ly/1Fla5sI
Website :http://www.documentaryshow.com/
Ever since its sensational unveiling by
Yale University scholars in
October 1965, the
Vinland Map has been a lightning rod for passionate debate. Most reviews of the arguments, including
NOVA's program, have focused on scientific tests designed to gauge the authenticity of the map's ink. The opinions of experts in cartography and historical manuscripts have commanded much less attention, yet from the outset scholars in these disciplines pointed out glaring anomalies in the case for the Vinland Map's authenticity. (To inspect the map, see
The Map in
Question.)
Most striking of all, the coasts of
Greenland and
Iceland are suspiciously close to their outlines in a modern atlas. Yet none of the
Icelandic sagas identifies Greenland as an island, and archeological discoveries indicate that
Viking colonists, hunters, and traders explored Greenland's west coast perhaps as far north as
Thule and
Cape York, but no farther. Even a century or two after the supposed date of the Vinland Map,
European mapmakers were still divided about how to draw Greenland—as an island, part of an arctic landmass, or a peninsula dangling down from northern
Europe. The precision of the outlines of Greenland and
Iceland is all the more surprising when compared to the Vinland Map's depiction of the Viking homelands in
Scandinavia, which are barely recognizable:
Sweden has migrated to the wrong side of the
Baltic while
Norway has been flipped to match the map's overall egg-shaped design.
Did the
Vikings make maps?
Could the accuracy of the Vinland Map be testimony to the Vikings' extraordinary seamanship and mapmaking skills? Did the alleged medieval author of the map use an earlier Viking map as a source of information? Unquestionably, the Vikings were the most audacious and accomplished voyagers of the medieval world. Their sleek, clinker-built longships and bulkier cargo boats had reached Iceland during the
9th century A.D. and Greenland during the 10th, leading to permanent colonies and regular trade with the Scandinavian homelands.
Beginning in
1961, the excavation of longhouses and typical Norse artifacts at
L'Anse aux Meadows in
Newfoundland proved that Greenland settlers had reached
North America, ju
Such far-flung voyages of discovery demanded special navigation skills. An
Icelandic codex known as Hauksbok details signs such as the appearance of whales, seabirds, and distant mountain peaks that voyagers would watch for as they crossed the open ocean. Viking sailors may also have developed simple astronomical aids, such as steering by the sun or the
Pole Star, although there is no firm evidence for these practices. But however accomplished their seamanship, the Vikings never seem to have charted the coastlines they explored.
Despite the detailed navigational texts and abundant geographical references in the sagas, no Norse cartographic drawing or engraving has survived. They don't appear to have been mapmakers at all.
The colorful Icelandic tales of
Leif Eriksson and his followers did inspire European mapmakers to create
North American charts identifying features mentioned in the stories, such as Markland, Helluland, and Vinland. But this interest in the sagas only took off during the
16th and
17th centuries—long after the purported mid-15th-century date of the Vinland Map. Beginning around 1570,
Protestant mapmakers began incorporating new knowledge of the
Americas based on pioneering
Portuguese and
English voyages of discovery. A strong motive for documenting the earlier Norse traditions of settlement was to repudiate
Catholic maps and territorial claims defined by papal treaties. But even the most detailed of these maps, such as the
Resen Map of 1605, appears to have been mainly an exercise in fantasy.
Watch more video for
Ancient Discoveries:
-
Civilisation (
1969) Full Part 1 to 13 : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDZY8vtVCE4KT51KTBsU1UGAb2Ex8AHW7
-
The Ancient Greeks:
Crucible of
Civilization Full
Episode : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDZY8vtVCE4IT290Z73Ru1sE2DV_41PsQ
-
The Roman Empire Full Episode : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDZY8vtVCE4ITanUwoRbwQwtAmkRyEwpX
-
Ancient Rome:
The Rise and Fall of an
Empire full Episode: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDZY8vtVCE4JnTTBcTrFth9HPGWXswpjT
More Documentary
Links:
http://www.documentarytv168.weebly.com/
http://www.ancienthistory007.wordpress.com
http://www.thebesthistory168.blogspot.com/
http://www.historytv168.blogspot.com/
http://www.dt1681.blogspot.com/
http://www.ngm168.blogspot.com/
http://www.history168.blogspot.com/
- published: 30 Mar 2015
- views: 78314