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| For teaching purposes;  Quote cited references when available   Ancient Emigrations To America   | 
 
| OTTAR
  FROM Hålogaland  RECOUNTS A VOYAGE   TO
  THE WHITE SEA AROUND 880 AD   (Contact)          "Ohthere told
  his lord, King Alfred, that he lived farthest to the north of all the
  Norwegians.  He said that he lived by
  the western sea in the north part of the land.  However, that the land extends very much further north; but it
  is all waste, except that Lapps camp in a few places here and there, hunting
  in winter and fishing in the sea in summer. 
  On one occasion he wished to find out how far that land extended due
  north, or whether anyone lived north of the waste.  So he traveled close to the land, due north; he left the waste
  land on the starboard and the open sea on the port all the way for three days
  to be as far north as the whale-hunters ever travel.          He traveled still due north as far as he could sail for
  the next three days.  The land turned
  due east, or the sea in on the land, he did not know which.  He knew only that there he waited for a
  wind from the west and a little from the north, and then sailed east, close
  to the land, for as far as he could sail in four days.  He had to wait there for a wind directly
  from the north, for at that point the land turned due south , or the sea in
  on the land,  he did not know which.  From there he sailed due south, close to
  the land, for as far as he could sail in five days.  There a great river extended up into the land, which they
  turned up into because they dare not sail beyond the river for fear of
  hostility, as on the other side of the river the land was all inhabited.          Previously he had not met with any inhabited land since he
  left his own home.  But to the
  starboard there was wasteland all the way, except for fishers and fowlers and
  hunters, and they were all Lapps, and there was always open sea on his port.
  The Permians had cultivated their land very well; but they dare not put in
  there.  The land of the Terfinns was
  all waste, except where hunters or fishers or fowlers lived.  The Permians told him many stories both of
  their own land and of the lands that were round about them; but he did not
  know what the truth of it was, since he did not see it for himself.  The Lapps and the Permians, it seemed to
  him, spoke almost the same language.          He traveled there chiefly, in addition to observing the
  land, for the walruses, because they have very fine bone in their teeth (they
  brought some of those teeth to the king), and their hides are very good for
  ship's ropes.  This whale is much
  smaller than other whales: it is no longer than seven ells long.  But the best whale hunting is in his own
  land where they are forty-eight ells long, and the largest fifty ells
  long.  He said that he once slew sixty
  of those in two days.  He was a very
  wealthy man in that property in which their wealth consists, that is, in wild
  animals.  When he visited the king he
  still had six hundred tame animals unbought. 
  They call those 'reindeer of which six were decoy reindeer.  They are very valuable among the Lapps
  because with them they capture the wild reindeer. He was among the most
  prosperous men in the land. 
  Nevertheless, he had no more than twenty cattle, twenty sheep and
  twenty swine.  The little that he
  ploughed, he ploughed with horses. 
  Their income is mainly in the tribute that the Lapps pay them.  That tribute consists in animal skins,
  bird feathers, whalebone and in ship's ropes made from the hide of whales and
  seals.  Each one pays according to his
  rank.  The noblest must pay fifteen
  marten skins, and five reindeer, and one bear skin, and ten ambers of feathers,
  and a bear, or otter-skin coat, and two ship's ropes, both to be sixty ells
  long, one to be made of whale's hide, the other of seal's.          He said that the land of the Norwegians was very long and
  very narrow.  All that they can either
  graze or plough lies by the sea; and even that is very rocky in some places.  To the east, and alongside the cultivated
  land, lie wild mountains.  In those
  mountains live Lapps.  The cultivated
  land is broadest to the south, and increasingly narrower the further north.  To the south it may be sixty miles broad,
  or a little broader; and in the middle thirty or broader;, while to the north
  where it was narrowest, it might be three miles broad to the mountains.  The mountains in some places are as broad
  as one might cross in two weeks, and in some places as broad as one might
  cross in six days.  Then alongside
  that land to the south, on the other side of the mountains, is the land of
  the Swedes, extending northwards. 
  Alongside that land to the north is the land of the Finns.  Sometimes the Finns make war on the
  Norwegians across the mountains; sometimes the Norwegians on them.  There are very large freshwater lakes
  throughout the mountains; and the Finns carry their boats overland to the
  lakes, and make war on the Norwegians from there.  They have very small and very light boats.  Ohthere said that the district in which he
  lived was called Halogaland, and no one lived to the north of him.  In the south of the land there is a
  trading-town, which they call Sciringesheal. 
  He said that a man could sail there in a month if he camped at night
  and had a favorable wind every day. 
  But all the time he must sail close to the land.  On the starboard appears first Ireland,
  and then the islands which are between Ireland and this country, which
  continues until he comes to Sciringesheal and Norway all the way on the port
  side.  To the south of Sciringesheal a
  very great sea extends up into the land; it is broader than any man can see
  across.  And Jutland is opposite on
  one side, and then Zealand. The sea extends many hundred miles up into the
  land.          And from Sciringesheal, he said that he sailed in five
  days to the trading-town that they call Hedeby, which stands between the
  Wends and the Saxons and the Angles, and belongs to the Danes.  When he sailed there from Sciringesheal,
  Denmark was to the port and open sea to the starboard for three days.  For two days before he came to Hedeby
  there lay to his starboard, Jutland, and Zealand and many islands. The Angles
  dwelt in those lands before they came here to this country.  And for those two days there lay to his
  port those islands which belong to Denmark."   |