Hrafna-Flóki Vilgerðarson

{{Short description|Viking explorer}}

{{Icelandic name|Flóki or Hrafna-Flóki|female}}

File:Settlement of Iceland.svg

Hrafna-Flóki Vilgerðarsson (Old Norse: {{IPA|non|ˈhrɑvnɑ-ˌfloːke ˈwilˌɡerðɑz̠ˌson|}}; Modern Icelandic: {{IPA|is|ˈr̥apna-ˌflouːcɪ ˈvɪlˌcɛrðarˌsɔːn|}}; born 9th century) was a Norseman who intentionally sailed to Iceland. His story is documented in the Landnámabók manuscript; however, the precise year of his arrival is not clear. He was of Norwegian origin.

Voyage to Iceland

In 868, Flóki left to search for the land found by Garðar Svavarsson way up in the north. He was accompanied by his family on his journey; his wife was named Gró and his children included Oddleifur and Thjódgerdur. From Western Norway he set sail to the Shetland Islands where it is said his daughter drowned. He continued his journey and landed in the Faroe Islands where another of his daughters was wed. There he took three ravens to help him find his way to Iceland, and thus, he was nicknamed Raven-Flóki (Old Norse and {{Langx|is|Hrafna-Flóki}}) and he is commonly remembered by that name.{{cite web|url=http://www.sagamuseum.is/overview/hrafna-floki|title=Hrafna-Flóki - The Exodus from Norway|publisher=The Saga Museum|access-date=October 31, 2015}}{{Cite book|url=http://heimskringla.no/wiki/Landn%C3%A1mab%C3%B3k_-_Fyrsti_hluti|title=Landnámabók|last=Jónsson|first=Guðni|date=2014-07-24|publisher=Heimskringla|chapter=Fyrsti hluti|author-link=Guðni Jónsson}}

Others making the trip included Thorolf (Þórólfr) and two men named Herjolf and Faxe ({{Lang|is|Herjólfr}} and {{Lang|is|Faxi}}). After sailing for a while from the Faroes, Flóki set the ravens free. The first raven flew back to the Faroes; later, the second flew up in the air and back on board, but the third flew northwest and did not return. Flóki now knew they were close to land, and so they followed the third raven. After sailing west past Reykjanes, they spotted a large bay. Faxe remarked that they seemed to have found great land. The bay facing Reykjavík was therefore known as Faxaflói ({{Literal translation|Faxe's bay}}).

Flóki set up a winter camp in Vatnsfjörður at Barðaströnd.{{Cite book|url=https://runeberg.org/nfbl/0506.html|title=Nordisk familjebok|editor-last=Leche|editor-first=V.|editor-last2=Nyström|editor-first2=J. F.|editor-last3=Warburg|editor-first3=K.|editor-last4=Westrin|editor-first4=Theodor |editor-link4=Theodor Westrin|publisher=Projekt Runeberg|year=1910|pages=935|language=sv|chapter=Uggleupplagan. 12. Hyperemi - Johan}} The summer was very good, so Flóki was ill-prepared for the cold winter that followed. Waiting for the spring, Flóki hiked up the highest mountain above his camp, now believed to be Nónfell in Westfjords. From there, he spotted a large fjord; Ísafjörður, then full of drift ice. Thus, he named the entire land {{Lang|is|Ísland}} (Iceland). When Flóki and the other men returned to Norway, they were asked about the newly found land. Flóki believed it to be worthless. Herjolf believed that the land had both good and bad qualities. Thorolf claimed that butter was smeared on every straw on the land that they had found. Thorolf was then nicknamed Thorolf Butter ({{Lang|is|Þórólfur smjör}}). Despite speaking ill of the land, Flóki later returned and settled to live there to his death.{{Cite book|url=https://runeberg.org/nfbh/|title=Nordisk familjebok|editor-last=Leche|editor-first=V.|editor-last2=Nyström|editor-first2=J. F.|editor-last3=Warburg|editor-first3=K.|editor-last4=Westrin|editor-first4=Theodor |editor-link4=Theodor Westrin |publisher=Projekt Runeberg|year=1908|pages=608–609|language=sv|chapter=Uggleupplagan. 8. Feiss - Fruktmögel}}

In fiction

Floki the boat builder, a character played by Swedish actor Gustaf Skarsgård in the History channel's Vikings television series, is loosely based on Hrafna-Flóki Vilgerðarson. In season 5 of the show he arrives in Iceland, believing he has found Asgard.{{Cite web|url=http://mythologian.net/real-floki-vikings-ravenhrafna-floki-vilgerdarson/|title=Real Floki (Vikings), Raven/Hrafna-Flóki Vilgerðarson|website=Mythologian NET|language=en-US|access-date=2017-12-04}}{{Cite news|url=http://icelandmag.visir.is/article/iceland-play-a-big-role-fifth-season-history-channel-tv-series-vikings|title=Iceland to play a big role in fifth season of the History channel TV series Vikings|date=2017-03-03|work=Iceland Magazine|access-date=2017-12-04|language=en|archive-date=2017-12-04|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171204061203/http://icelandmag.visir.is/article/iceland-play-a-big-role-fifth-season-history-channel-tv-series-vikings|url-status=dead}}

See also

References

{{reflist}}

Sources

  • {{owl}}

Further reading

  • Byock, Jesse (1988) Medieval Iceland: Society, Sagas and Power (University of California Press) {{ISBN|978-0520069541}}
  • Byock, Jesse (2001) Viking Age Iceland (Penguin Books) {{ISBN|978-0140291155}}
  • Hjalmarsson, Jon R. (1993) History of Iceland - From Settlement to the Present Day (Reykjavík: Iceland Review ) {{ISBN|978-9979510710}}
  • Jones, Gwyn (1986) The Norse Atlantic Saga: Being the Norse Voyages of Discovery and Settlement to Iceland, Greenland, and North America (Oxford University Press) {{ISBN|978-0192851604}}
  • Karlsson, Gunnar (2000) The History of Iceland (University of Minnesota Press) {{ISBN|978-0816635894}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Vilgerdarson, Hrafna-Floki}}

Category:Viking explorers

Hrafna-Floki Vilgerdarson

Category:9th-century Vikings