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| For teaching purposes;  Quote cited references when available   Ancient Emigrations To America   | 
 
| Greenlander Viking Exodus   Maalan Aarum = "Engraved Years"   (Contact)          Many of the Vikings in Greenland,
  often referred to as the "Lenape Norse", immigrated 4,000 miles to
  North America over a period of more about 600 years. They started in
  Greenland, walked through the Dakotas, and ended along 1,200 miles of the Atlantic           The history is recorded
  in the Maalan Aarum, which means “Engraved Years.” The Maalan
  Aarum defines the route of the emigration that began in 1346, lasted for 150
  years and involved thousands of emigrants. 
  The record of past events ceases about 1585.  There are still four groups of Lenape still living in New
  Jersey and New York.            The Maalan
  Aarum is a collection of 184 drawings that aid in deciphering versus, which
  reveal a history of the early immigrants.  
  Roman Catholic Bishop Gnuppson in the 14th Century became aware of
  Viking history from the drawings.  
  Gnuppson spoke Old Norse and is believed by some to have been in James Bay, Canada about 880 years before
  2017.  The drawings were subsequently
  studied through following generations, and Lenape historians used the
  drawings to recite the verses. They also added more drawings and verses to the
  Engraved Years.  A painting by Hal
  Sherman, an adopted Shawnee native, depicts a probable scene in 1820 when an
  old Lenape historian gives the 184 sticks to Dr. Ward. The historian told the
  doctor that a verse or a song went with each stick (Hubbard-Brown ).          The ability to decipher
  the Maalan Aarum into Old Norse syllables reveals a lot of Viking
  history.  The discoveries of a student
  at Kean University resolved more details of the Lenape story. The discoveries
  were: 1) that decipherment of oral sounds for the Maalan
  Aarum could be evaluated by the Drottkvaett format and 2) the 1720 Carte du Canada that describes America at the end of the 17th
  Century had more details of the route taken by Lenape immigrants (Guilliaume 1720).          The Greenland Vikings in
  1350 spoke Old Norse.  The Norse in
  Greenland called themselves "LENAPE,"which means to "Abide
  With The Pure."  Thousands of
  them emigrated from Greenland to New Jersey via the Dakotas before the Little
  Ice Age.  They may have lived in four
  large areas seen on the map, the Christinaux, the Asslenipolls, the Ilinois, and Pennsylvania. The sum of these areas was about twenty times
  the area occupied later by the first Europeans.  The yellow stripe on the map is the journey of nearly four
  thousand Lenape, who lived on Greenland until the start of the Little
  Ice Age.   
   “On the wonderful, slippery water, on the stone hard water, all went on the great tidal sea, all went” over the puckered pack ice. I tell you it was a big mob. “In the darkness, all in one darkness to the other side, to the west, in the darkness they walk and walk, all of them.”          The Maalan
  Aarum does not reveal how many “All of them” were.  Modern evidence is that they left behind houses for about 5,000
  people.  Also a reporter on the spot,
  Professor Lyons, recorded that nearly four thousand people walked into Hudson Strait and never returned. So
  “all of them” probably meant “nearly four thousand Lenape.”  Professor Lyons had other collaborators:
  Icelandic Bishop Oddson who thought the Greenland people abandoned their
  faith and turned to their friends in America and Ivar Bardsson who was the
  King’s and Church’s agent in Greenland during the time that nearly 4 out of 5
  people vanished.  Bardsson reported in
  writing about the disappearance of the people in the Northern Settlement
  (Brinton  1960).          The first two chapters of
  the Maalan Aarum had been created about 220 years earlier as
  Bible lessons.  Those two chapters
  tell the same Genesis story as
  the first eight chapters in the King James Bible. But the Maalan
  Aarum was created 500 years earlier!          The Greenland Lenape were
  Christians for nearly 350 years, 1,000-1350, before they were forced to leave
  home by the extreme cold. Christian beliefs arrived in Greenland before the
  Roman Catholic Church. Eric the Red’s wife built her own chapel.  There was an Island and a Fjord named
  “Hrein”          It is now apparent that
  the next stage of the Lenape migration began in James Bay.   1. Wulamo linapioken manup shinaking. = 1. Long ago the fathers of the
  Lenape were at the land of spruce pine.”        "Before the pure
  people certainly came to look where there was an abundance of rivers."   
          Out of the twenty-one
  rivers flowing into James Bay, Canada,
  only six are major rivers.  Three
  major rivers were on each side of James
  Bay.  Most of the rivers
  flow into James Bay from the
  southeast or southwest.  The six marks
  of the "spruce-pine" may represent the six major rivers depicted as
  if the verse maker was trying to draw what a high flying wild goose would
  see.          The sounds imply that the
  original verse maker knew that a location of many rivers was a special place,
  which was located only at James Bay.  But as generations passed the Lenape forgot
  the meaning. The drawing does look like a spruce or pine.  Somewhere through the generations the
  Lenape historians may have lost the meaning    “The hunters, about to depart, met together.”   
          After the passage over
  the Ice, the Lenape at James Bay
  held a conference, which was called a "thing."  Apparently the people south of James Bay attended. For whatever reason,
  the Lenape decided not to move en masse to the south.   Instead they stayed along the shore of Hudson Bay, where the geese and large
  fish allowed their population to increase.          Another result of the
  "Thing" may have been a decision to record the Ice crossing
  episode.  The vital element was the
  creation of the oral verse, a self-verifying memory verse.          A verse has eight lines,
  but each pair of lines usually provided an understandable thought.  A Lenape historian taught the verses to
  young children similar to the way children learn nursery rhymes. So the
  verses stayed in the Lenape collective knowledge for life.          The long lasting memories learned in childhood and the ability
  to recreate the drawings for memory cues enabled the Lenape to sustain their
  Bible lessons for 880 years and their migration history for 660 years.          The first big event
  recorded after the "Thing" was the proposed rescue by a fleet of
  Norwegian ships under the command of Paul Knudson.  The Maalan Aarum contains a drawing of a Norse prince straddling
  two countries (Reman 1949)..          "No one went from
  here to there. No deserter went to the home of the Norse Gods."   
          The drawing and the verse
  say that no Lenape wanted to be rescued. 
  There is evidence further in the Maalan Aarum that the Norwegian rescue boats stayed with the
  Lenape as support transportation up the Nelson,
  through Lake Winnipeg, and on
  up the Red River of the North.  The probable migration pattern of the
  major group of Lenape may have been a cluster of camps within a larger area
  of thousands of Lenape.  There might
  have been camps on both sides of a river.          Young hunters could have
  patrolled the fringes of the large area where they hunted for food such as
  bison, seals, etc.  The main group is
  believed to have moved by at the rate of 20 miles a year.  Meanwhile, small clusters of  Lenape might have branched out to form new
  tribes.          At Sisilaki  “In Buffalo land, to the east was fish
  land, toward the lakes.”  In a drawing
  made near Big Stone Lake the
  verse maker made an effort to tell where the main Lenape group was. At
  equinox with the evening shadow lying straight east he looked over fish
  country to the two great lakes that touch. 
  The Lenape name indicates the verse maker was in "Sisilaki"
  “Sisil” means “Buffalo.” "Aki" means "Land," Sisseton, SD
  may mean Buffalo Town (Brinton  1960, Paine 2007 & 2008).          The Maalan
  Aarum reports that the Lenape were getting along very well with all the
  surrounding tribes.  Then suddenly ten
  men of the Norwegian support crew were beaten to death.  The Maalan
  Aarum records fishing and ten companions. A Swedish rune maker carved this
  same episode into a tombstone for ten of the crew.  Today the Kensington Rune Stone
  has been moved from Illinois to the Alexandria
  Museum in Minnesota. The rune maker carved the date, 1362, into
  the tombstone with Arabic letters. “Corn-Breaker was Chief.  Who brought about The planting of corn.”          The immigration slowed
  down when they reached the eastern Dakotas where buffalo and deer could be
  hunted through the winter. They may have journeyed down the Big Sioux River Valley to Minnie Ha Ha County at Sioux Falls. Minnie Ha Ha translates to "Little Water
  Fall" in Old Norse.  A
  small waterfall, The Palisades, lies northeast of Sioux Falls.  There they began to grow corn.  In the Maalan
  Aarum the translation is “There was no rain, and no corn, so we moved further
  seaward,”  The word "corn"
  was used by Europeans to mean grasses they were familiar with, such as oats,
  barley, rye and wheat.  They did not
  find maize, which has become known as "corn" in America.          Following a severe
  drought the immigrants headed to the east where they may have found the Lake of the Ilinois or Lake
  Michigan:  “At the place of
  caves, in the buffalo land, they at last had food, on a pleasant plain.”
  “They settled again on the Yellow River,
  and had much corn on stone-free soil. 
  Then they traveled about 20 miles a year southward through Iowa and
  Missouri  until they settled at the Yellow River, which may actually be the Missouri River (Paine 2007 & 2008)..           “They separated at
  ‘mixtisipi’ river; the lazy ones remained there.”          The Maalan
  Aarum drawings appear to show increasing warfare with tribes from the
  west.  Then about 1450 the main group
  crossed the Mississippi, going
  east.  They encountered a
  "torn" people.  East of the Mississippi they began to call
  themselves Ilini.          The tribal stories of the
  Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Illinois, and Shawnee all tell of their fore
  fathers coming over a salty sea in the east. 
  The Lenape now located in New Jersey have tribal stories that their
  fore fathers came from the west. The tribal stories are coherent when the
  route of the earlier immigrants is considered.  When the French found the Ilini around 1650, they reported that
  the Ilini lived on the "River of the Divine."  “The Fire-Builder was chief; they all gave
  to him many towns.’ Many towns came to the Lenape leaders.  Many events are recorded for many
  generations in the Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio areas.  “The Nanticokes and the Shawnees going to
  the south.”          The main Greenland group
  kept migrating up the Ohio until they reached a decision point.  To get to the Atlantic Ocean, which appeared to be a cherished goal for
  six generations, they had to go east up the smaller streams and over the
  Alleghenies or go south. So they divided into the northern group who went
  over the Alleghenies and the
  Southern group that went south.          One of the southern
  groups, known as Shawnee today, might have recorded the fifth chapter of the
  immigrants' history.  There are
  several verses about going south and southwest.  There is one verse about fighting all the enemies on the west
  side of the Mississippi.  “White-Body was chief on the sea
  shore.”  Then the Maalan
  Aarum shows drawings of men, who watched toward the east.  This verse was made
  before 1472 (Marx & Marx 1992, Paine 2007 & 2008).          “At this time whites came
  on the Eastern sea.”  In 1472 a ship
  with big sails appeared.  This ship
  was probably the Pining and Pothorse’s ship from Norway on a voyage with
  representatives from Portugal as reported in Norwegian records.  The people on the ship did show a cross.
  But the dot in the circle may indicate that they did carry smallpox disease.          Then the Lenape main
  group arrived at the Atlantic
  Coast and spread 1,200 miles north and south along the coast.  Drawings show many chiefs looking east out
  to sea.  Then a drawing shows a chief
  going south to battle.  The time frame
  indicates that the enemy was De Soto. 
  After stopping the De Soto the Shawnee returned to the Ohio area and
  infected many in the Midwest.  Then a
  ship, possibly the second English voyage to America, is shown, and that is
  where the Maalan Aarum ends.   Conclusions          
  The Greenland Norse emigration involved thousands of emigrants that
  came to America several centuries before Columbus.  They journeyed en masse over the greater part of Midwestern
  North America via Canada and the Dakotas, some by an ancient waterway that
  was transformed by Europeans centuries before the Christian Era. 
  However, Dr. Paine (2007, 2008)
  implies also that there were many converted Christians among the later
  Greenland immigrants, and Roman Catholic at that.   It is doubtful that in the long absence of contact with Rome
  native Americans would have retained their faith into the time after
  Columbus.  Also, Dr. Paine's
  indictment of English colonists exterminating native Americans goes contrary
  to historical evidence.  Although
  initially conflicts arose with certain Northeastern tribes, for the most part
  the relationship was rather more amenable and mutually beneficial.  Formal trade in 1609 is known with tribes
  along the Hudson River.  There is also some evidence of a treaty
  with the Lenape Indians known as The Penn Treaty that
  allowed colonists land on which to farm. 
  But the treaty was never recorded and with time was broken.  Land guaranteed to native Americans has
  been regularly overrun with development up to the present 2017 government
  expansion of mining interests in Utah.     |