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{{short description|11th-century Icelandic explorer}}
'''Snorri Þorfinnsson''' (likely born between [[1005]] and [[1013]]), was the son of [[Thorfinn Karlsefni|Þorfinnur Karlsefni]] and [[Gudrid Eiriksdottir|Guðríður Eiríksdóttir]]. He was purported to be born in [[Vinland]], possibly making him the first [[Europe|European]] to be born in the [[Americas]].
{{Icelandic name|Snorri|male}}
{{Infobox person
| birth_date = {{Circa}} 1004 - 1013
| birth_place = [[Vinland]]
| death_date = {{Circa}} 1090
| death_place = [[Iceland]]
| known_for = [[Christianisation of Iceland]]
| children = 2
| mother = [[Gudrid Thorbjarnardóttir]]
| father = [[Thorfinn Karlsefni]]
}}
'''Snorri Thorfinnsson''' ([[Old West Norse|Old Norse]] and [[Icelandic language|Icelandic]]: '''Snorri Þorfinnsson''' or '''Snorri Karlsefnisson''';<ref>{{sc|Snorri Karlsefinsson}} used in {{Harvnb|Magnusson|Pálsson|1965|loc=''List of Proper Names'', p.111}}</ref><ref>{{Citation|last = Thrapp|first = Dan|title = Encyclopedia of Frontier Biography: P-Z| publication-date = 1991| publisher = [[University of Nebraska Press]]| isbn = 0-8032-9420-4| year = 1991}}</ref> most likely born between 1004 and 1013, and died ''c.'' 1090) was the son of explorers [[Thorfinn Karlsefni]] and [[Gudrid Thorbjarnardóttir]]. He is considered to be the first child of European descent to be born in [[the Americas]], apart from [[Greenland]]. He became an important figure in the [[Christianisation of Iceland]].<ref name="chice">{{Citation| last = Vésteinsson| first = Orri| title = The Christianisation of Iceland: priests, power, and social change, 1000–1300| publication-date = 2000| publisher = [[Oxford University Press]]| isbn = 0-19-820799-9| year = 2000}}
</ref>


==Name==
== External links ==
''Snorri'' is an [[Old West Norse|Old Norse]] name derived from the word ''[[Wiktionary:snerra|snerra]]'', meaning "a fight." ''Þorfinnsson'' is a [[patronymic]], meaning "son of Þorfinnr", (see ''[[Icelandic naming conventions]]''). Snorri was named for his great-grandfather, [[Snorri Þórðarson]],<ref>{{Citation|last = Berry|first = Francis|title = I tell of Greenland: an edited translation of the Sauđarkrokur manuscripts|publication-date = 1977|publisher = University of Michigan|isbn = 0-7100-8591-5|year = 1977}}</ref> or after [[Snorri Þorbrandsson]] who was not a kinsman but a participant in [[Karlsefni's expedition]]<ref>{{Citation|last = Mowat|first = Farley|title = Westviking: the ancient Norse in Greenland and North America|date = 1965|publisher = University of Michigan|format=snippet|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Le91AAAAMAAJ|page=224|isbn = 978-0-7710-6579-8|quote=named Snorri, possibly in honor of Snorri Thorbrandsson, who seems not only to have been Karlsefni's closest comrade but to have also been the elder wise man of the expedition}}</ref>


== Family ==
*[http://www.biographi.ca/EN/ShowBio.asp?BioId=34659 Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online'']
There is speculation about the birth date of Snorri Thorfinnsson. Birth years such as 1005, 1009, and 1012 have been postulated, but all sources agree that he was born between 1004 and 1013. According to the [[Vinland sagas]], when Snorri was 3 years old, his family left [[Vinland]] because of hostilities with [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|indigenous peoples]] (called [[Skræling|''Skrælingar'']] by the settlers, meaning "barbarians"). The family returned to the [[Glaumbær]] farm in [[Seyluhreppur]].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.northwest.is/1sogulegirstadir2.asp#glaumbaer |title=Historical Places in Northwest Iceland: Glaumbær |website=Northwest Iceland |access-date=2011-02-26 |archive-date=2011-07-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110722021902/http://www.northwest.is/1sogulegirstadir2.asp#glaumbaer }}</ref><ref name="mallet261">{{Harvnb|Mallet|1847|p=261}}</ref>
<ref>{{Citation
| last = Magnússon
| first = Magnús
| title = Viking expansion westwards
| date = 1973
| publisher = Bodley Head
}}
</ref>


Snorri Thorfinnsson had two children; a daughter named Hallfrid, and a son named Thorgeir. Hallfrid was the mother of Thorlak Runolfsson, bishop of [[Skálholt]] in the south of Iceland. One of the descendants of Snorri's brother Thorbjorn, Bjorn Gilsson, was also a bishop of [[Hólar]]. Thorgeir was the father of Yngvild who was the mother of Brand Sæmundarsson, bishop of Hólar.<ref name="Eir-ch014">{{Harvnb|Magnusson|Pálsson|1965|loc=''Eir.'' ch.14, p.91}} (1983 ed., p.71)</ref> The sculptor [[Bertel Thorvaldsen]] claimed descent from Snorri Thorfinnsson in the 19th century.<ref name="mallet">{{Citation
[[category:1010s births]]
| last = Mallet
[[category:Viking exploration of North America]]
| first = Paul Henri
| title = Northern Antiquities
| publisher = Harvard University Press
}}
</ref>


==Christianisation of Iceland==
{{Iceland-bio-stub}}
In the 13th century texts Snorri Thorfinnsson and Snorri Thorrgrimsson are considered the two main figures responsible for the early [[Christianisation of Iceland]]. Consequently, they were portrayed by various writers of the 13th and 14th century as "Christian chieftain models".<ref name="chice"/> According to ''[[Grœnlendinga saga]]'', Snorri had built the first church of Glaumbaer, which would later increase Christian influence in the area. His descendants became the first Bishops of Iceland, and published the first Christian Code of Iceland.<ref>{{Citation
| last = Waters
| first = Henry Fritz-Gilbert
| title = The New England Historical and Genealogical Register
| publication-date = 1992
| publisher = Heritage Books
| isbn= 1-55613-687-0
| year = 1992
}}
</ref>

==Legacy==
*Snorri Thorfinnsson was purported to be born in [[Vinland]] (North America), making him the first European child known to be born in the Americas, provided that [[Greenland]] is defined as being outside the Americas.<ref name="mallet257n">{{Harvnb|Mallet|1847|p=257n}}</ref><ref>{{Citation|last = Blum|first = Ralph|title = Rune Cards|date = 2004|publisher = Connections Book Publishing|isbn = 1-85906-138-9}}</ref>
*In 2002, American archaeologists discovered the remains of a thousand-year-old [[longhouse]] located on Iceland's northern coast. It is believed that it was Snorri Thorfinnsson's farmhouse.<ref>
{{Citation|title = Explorers and Exploration|publisher = Marshall Cavendish Corporation|isbn = 0-7614-7535-4|year = 2005|url-access = registration|url = https://archive.org/details/explorersexplora0000unse}}</ref> The longhouse was found near the Glaumbær Folk Museum, at the [[Skagafjörður Folk Museum|Skagafjörður Heritage Museum]] outside the coastal village of [[Sauðárkrókur]]. The museum was once thought to have been built on the site of Snorri's farmhouse. According to archaeologists it was "a classic Germanic fortress longhouse like the [[Heorot|Great Hall]] of [[Beowulf]]".<ref>{{Citation|url=http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2002/09/16/1032054758836.html|title=Archaeology team unlocks the saga of Snorri Thorfinnsson | location=Melbourne | work=The Age|date=17 September 2002}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
|url= http://www.glaumbaer.is/is/information/glaumbaer-farm/the-first-farmer
|title= Glaumbaer – The first farmer
|publisher= Skagafjordur Heritage Museum
|author=
|access-date= January 20, 2016}}</ref>

*There is a non-profit organisation called The Snorri Program that focuses on the history of Icelandic settlers in North America and regularly runs exchange programs for youth and adults.<ref>[http://www.snorri.is/ "The Snorri Program"]</ref>

==Genealogy==
{{Sidebar
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| contentstyle = background-color:#F8F9FA;
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{{Infobox
|bodystyle = background-color:#fff;
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|captionstyle =
| image = {{Tree chart/start |summary=<!--Karlsefni's great-grandfather Thord traces ancestry to Ragnar Lothbrok; his great-grandmother descends from a king of Ireland-->}}
{{Tree chart |RAGNAR|RAGNAR=[[Ragnar Lodbrok]]<!--(Ragnar loðbrók)--><ref group="†">Ragnar Hairy-Breeks &mdash; Björn Ironside &mdash; Aslak &mdash; Thorvald Backbone (hryggr) &mdash; Björn Butterbox, etc. is the patrilineal lineage given in the ''Hauksbók''</ref>
|boxstyle_RAGNAR= background-color: #fff;
}}
{{Tree chart | |!}}
{{Tree chart |JARNSIDA-BJORN|JARNSIDA-BJORN=[[Björn Ironside]]<!--(Björn járnsíða)-->
|boxstyle_JARNSIDA-BJORN= background-color: #fff;
}}
{{Tree chart | |!}}
{{Tree chart|ASLAKUR|ASLAKUR=Asleik{{Refn|group="†"|Áslákssonar, Bjarnarsonar járnsíðu in the Hauksbók}}|boxstyle_ASLAKUR=background-color: #fff;}}
{{Tree chart||!}}
{{Tree chart |HROALDR| | | | |KJARVAL|HROALDR=Hroald Spine{{Refn|group="†"|Hroald Spine (Hróaldr hryggr) is called Thorvald Backbone (Þórvaldr hryggr Ásleiksson) in the genealogy of Hauksbók version<ref name="rafn-on-hrygg">For example, {{citation|last=Rafn|first=Carl Christian|author-link=Carl Christian Rafn|title=Antiqvitates americanæ|publisher=Schulzianæ|year=1837|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FXtSAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA470}} crossreferences "Þórvaldr hryggr Ásleiksson" given by Haukr as Thord of Hofdi's grandfather to "Hróaldr hryggr" given by the Landnámabók.</ref>}}|KJARVAL=[[Kjarvalr Írakonungr|Kjarval, King of Ireland]]
|boxstyle_HROALDR= background-color: #fff;
|boxstyle_KJARVAL= border:none;
}}
{{Tree chart | |!| | | | | | |!}}
{{Tree chart |BYRDUSMJOR-BJORN| |THORIR|y|FRIDGERD|BYRDUSMJOR-BJORN=Björn Butterbox<ref group="†">Björn byrðusmjör</ref>|THORIR=Thorir Slouch|FRIDGERD=Fridgerd
|boxstyle_BYRDUSMJOR-BJORN= background-color: #fff;
|boxstyle_THORIR=border:none;
|boxstyle_FRIDGERD=border:none;
}}
{{Tree chart | |!| | | |,|-|'|}}
{{Tree chart |HOFDA-THORDR|y|THORGERD| |THORD-GELLIR|HOFDA-THORDR=Thord of Hofdi<br />({{ill|Þórðr fra Höfða Bjarnarson|is|Höfða-Þórður Bjarnarson}})|THORGERD=Thorgerd<ref group="†">In the ''Hauksbók'' she is indicated as bearing the same name as her mother Fridgerd.</ref>|THORD-GELLIR=Thord Gellir<ref group="†">Thord Gellir or "Yeller", son of [[Olaf Feilan]], grandson of [[Aud the Deep-Minded (Ketilsdóttir)|Aud the Deep-Minded]]</ref>
|boxstyle_HOFDA-THORDR= background-color: #fff;
|boxstyle_THORGERD= background-color: #fee;
|boxstyle_THORD-GELLIR= border:none;
}}
{{Tree chart |dj|j|-|(| | | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart | | |SNORRI|y|THORHILD|SNORRI=Snorri (Þórðarson)|THORHILD=Thorhild the Ptarmigan<ref group="†">Þórhildr Rjúpa</ref>
|boxstyle_SNORRI= background-color: #fff;
|boxstyle_THORHILD= background-color: #fee;
}}
{{Tree chart | | | | | |!}}
{{Tree chart | | | |THORDR|y|THORUNN|THORDR=Thord Horsehead<ref group="†">Þórðr hesthöfði</ref>|THORUNN=Thorunn
|boxstyle_THORDR= background-color: #fff;
|boxstyle_THORUNN= background-color: #fee;
}}
{{Tree chart | | | | | | |!}}
{{Tree chart | | | | | | |THORFINN|y|GUDRID|THORFINN='''Thorfinn Karlsefni'''|GUDRID=[[Gudrid Thorbjarnardóttir|Gudrid]]
|boxstyle_THORFINN= background-color: #fff;
|boxstyle_GUDRID= background-color: #fee;
}}
{{Tree chart/end}}
|caption = <!--Caption foo foo-->
}}
| belowstyle = text-align:left; font-weight:normal
| below = Thorfinn Karlsefni's genealogy based on ''Landnámabók'' up to Karsefni's father.<ref name="landnamabok-sect208">''Landnámabók'': {{Harvnb|Ellwood|1898|loc=Part III, Ch. X, pp.136-}}; {{Harvnb|Pálsson|2007|loc=§208. Thord (p.93)}}: "Thord, the son of Bjorn Butter-Box, son of Hroald Spine, son of Bjorn Ironside, son of Ragnar Hairy-Breeks.Thord.. took possession of Hofdastrand in Skagafjord.. and made his home at Hofdi...had a third son called Snorri, who married Thorhild the Ptarmigan, daughter of Thord Gellir, and their son was Thord Horse-Head. He married Thorgerd, daughter of Thorir Slouch and Fridgerd, daughter of King Kjarval of Ireland."</ref> (For further descendants, see under [[Snorri Karlsefnisson]]).}}

Below is the genealogy of descendants of Snorri, as given in the close of each saga, ''Grœnlendinga saga'' ch. 9 and ''Eiríks saga'' ch. 14.<ref>The saga texts obviously do not bother to reiterate the patronymic form in nominative case at every instance. For the English forms of the patronymics, {{Harvnb|Kunz|2000|loc=Index of Characters, pp. 759–782}} is consulted.</ref> It is supplemented with further ancestral information from (''Eiríks saga'' ch. 7 and ''[[Landnámabók]]''), a more complete family tree for which, see [[Thorfinn Karlsefni]].

{{Tree chart/start| summary=Boxes and lines diagram with 19 boxes}}
{{Tree chart | | THB | | | | | | | | | | | |THB=Thord of Hofdi<br />({{ill|Þórðr fra Höfða Bjarnarson|is|Höfða-Þórður Bjarnarson}}<ref group="†">''Eiríks saga'' Ch. 7, ''Hauksbók'' version says "Thord, who lived at Hofdi, son of Bjorn Butter-Box" ({{Harvnb|Magnusson|Pálsson|1965|p=91n}})which is identifiable with "Thord Bjarnarson (at Hofdi)" in {{Harvnb|Kunz|2000|loc=Index of Characters}}. However Thord Bjarnarson does not appear in Kunz's translation of ''Eiríks saga'' which does not use the Hauksbók version, and instead, appears only in ''Vatnsdál saga'', another tale in the anthology,</ref>)}}
{{Tree chart | | |!| | | | | | | | | | | | }}
{{Tree chart | |SNORR| |VIFIL|y|HALLV| | | |SNORR=Snorri Thordarson of Hofdi<ref group="†">"of Hofdi" appended in {{Harvnb|Kunz|2000|loc=Index of Characters, pp. 759–782}}, to distinguish from a man in ''[[Laxdæla saga]]''</ref>|VIFIL=Vifil of Vifilsdale<ref name="vik-icel-nominative-ending">{{Harvnb|Kunz|2000|loc=Spelling conventions, p. lxv–lxvi; Index of Characters pp. 759–782}}, "main rule.. to drop the nominative singular endings and use the stems instead. Thus ''Egil·l'' becomes Egil and.. (Auð·r becomes Aud)"</ref>|HALLV=Hallveig}}
{{Tree chart | | |!| | | | | |!| | | | | | }}
{{Tree chart | |THORD| | | |THORB| | | | | |THORD=Thord Snorrason Horse-head|THORB=Thorbjorn Vifilsson}}
{{Tree chart | | |!| | | | | |!| | | | | | }}
{{Tree chart | |THORF|~|y|~|GUDRI| | | | | |THORF=[[Thorfinn Karlsefni]]|GUDRI=[[Gudrid Thorbjarnardóttir]]}}
{{Tree chart | | | |,|-|^|-|-|-|-|-|-|-|.| }}
{{Tree chart | | |SNOR2| | | | | | | |THOR2|SNOR2='''Snorri Thorfinnsson'''|THOR2=Thorbjorn Thorfinnsson}}
{{Tree chart | |,|-|^|-|v|-|-|-|.| | | |!| }}
{{Tree chart |HALLF| |THORG| |STEIN| |THORU|HALLF=Hallfrid Snorradottir<ref name="vik-icel-patronymic"/>|THORG=Thorgeir Snorrason<ref name="vik-icel-patronymic"/>|STEIN=(*) Steinunn<ref>{{Harvnb|Magnusson|Pálsson|1965|loc=''Eir.'' ch.14, p.91}}, "H reads: Snorri Karlsefnisson had another daughter, called Steinunn, who married Einar, etc" extending to "Hauk the Lawman"; {{Harvnb|Storm|1891|p=47}}, "Fra Dottir Snorra Karlsefnissvnar var ok Steinvnn er atti Einarr</ref><ref group="†">This daughter Steinunn, as well as Haukr's mostly patrilineal line is only given in the Hauksbók manuscript, and his family tree will given under the article [[Haukr Erlendsson]]</ref>|boxstyle_STEIN=border:none;background-color: #fff;|THORU=Thorunn Thorbjarnardottir<ref name="vik-icel-patronymic">patronymics after {{Harvnb|Kunz|2000|loc=Index of Characters, pp. 759–782}}</ref>}}
{{Tree chart | |!| | | |!| | | |:| | | |!| }}
{{Tree chart |THORL| |YNGVI| | |:| | |BJORN|THORL=[[Þorlákur Runólfsson|Thorlak Runolfsson]], Bp.<ref group="†" name="biskup">Bp.=short for "Bishop". For Bishop Björn and the first Bishop Brand, the patrynomycs are not given in text, but e.g. supplied in {{Harvnb|Kunz|2000|loc=Index of Characters}}</ref>|YNGVI=Yngvild Thorgeirsdottir<ref group="†">In ''Grl.'' she is spelt Yngveld, and this distinction is kept in Kunz's translations ({{Harvnb|Kunz|2000|pp=651, 674}}); Text of ''Grl.'' :"Snorre atti son þann er Þorgæirr het hann var fadir Jnguelldar modur Branz byskups" ({{Harvnb|Storm|1891|p=73}})</ref>|BJORN={{Interlanguage link multi|Bjorn Gilsson|2=is|3=Björn Gilsson (ábóti)|preserve=1}}, Bp.<ref group="†" name="biskup"/>}}
{{Tree chart | | | | | |!| | | |:| | | | | }}
{{Tree chart | | | | | BRS | | |:| | | | | |BRS={{Interlanguage link multi|Brand Sæmundarsson|2=is|3=Brandur Sæmundsson|preserve=1}}, Bp.<ref group="†" name="biskup"/>}}
{{Tree chart | | | | | | | | | |:| | | | | }}
{{Tree chart | | | | | | | | |HAUKR| | | | |HAUKR=[[Haukr Erlendsson]]|boxstyle_HAUKR=border:none;background-color: #fff;}}
{{Tree chart/end}}

{{Reflist|group="†"}}
==Family tree==
The following stemma is drawn from the genealogy appended to the last chapter of ''[[Eiríks saga rauða]]'' in Hauk's own recension (in the ''Hauksbók'', supplemented with additional information from the ''Landnámabók'').

{{Tree chart/start}}
{{Tree chart | | | |THORIR|THORIR=Thorir of {{Interlanguage link multi|Espihill|2=is|3=Espihóll|preserve=1}}}}
{{Tree chart | | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart | | | |THORVALD| | | |THORFINN|THORVALD=Thorvald Hook<ref group="†">Þorvaldr krók</ref>|THORFINN=[[Thorfinn Karlsefni]]}}
{{Tree chart | | | | |!| | | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart | | | |KETIL| | | |SNORRI|KETIL=Grundar-Ketil|SNORRI=[[Snorri Karlsefnisson]]}}
{{Tree chart | | | | |!| | | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart | | | |EINAR|y|STEINUNN|EINAR=Einar|STEINUNN=Steinunn}}
{{Tree chart | | | | | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart | | | | | |THORSTEIN|THORSTEIN=Thorstein the Unjust<ref group="†">Þorsteinn ranglátr; also in ''Landnamabók'', Part III, Ch. X and translated as "Thorstein Wrongdoer" ({{Harvnb|Ellwood|1898|loc=, p.136}})</ref>}}
{{Tree chart | | | | | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart | |JORUND|y|GUDRUN|JORUND=Jorund of Keldur|GUDRUN=Gudrun}}
{{Tree chart | | | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart |BJARNI|y|HALLA|BJARNI=Bjarni Bjarnason<ref group="†">''Landnamabók'', Part V, Ch. VII (''[[#islandinga-sogur1|Islandinga sögur]]'', Vol. 1, p.295; {{Harvnb|Ellwood|1898|p=202}})</ref>|HALLA=Halla}}
{{Tree chart | | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart | | |FLOSI|y|RAGNHILD|FLOSI=Flosi the priest<ref group="†" name="landnam-iv-i"/>|RAGNHILD=Ragnhild<ref group="†" name="landnam-iv-i">''Landnamabók'', Part IV, Ch. I (''[[#islandinga-sogur1|Islandinga sögur]]'', Vol. 1, p.240; {{Harvnb|Ellwood|1898|p=165}})</ref>}}
{{Tree chart | | | | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart | |GRANDPA|y|VALGERD|GRANDPA=Olaf(?){{Refn|Erlend's patronymic given as "Erlendr Ólafsson sterki" in the Index to [[#Diplomatarium2|Diplomatarium islandicum]]'', Vol. II, p. 951<ref name="bref-2-jun-1294">Letter, 2. Juni 1294 ''[[#Diplomatarium2|Diplomatarium islandicum]]'', Vol. II, p. 281. The letter reads "herra Ællender stærki", but index lists it as an occurrence of "herra Erlendr Ólafsson sterki".</ref>}}{{Refn|Guðbrandur Vigfússon had noted the grandfather was not known.<ref name="sturlunga-pref">{{cite book|editor=Guðbrandur Vigfússon |editor-link=Guðbrandur Vigfússon |title=Sturlunga saga: including the Islendinga saga of Lawman Sturla |volume=1 |publisher=Clarendon Press |year=1878 |page=clxi |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=m5wNAAAAQAAJ&pg=PR161 |quote=we know who his mother, father, and grandmother were, his birth-year is not known... A son of Lawman Erlend the Strong, by Jorun, and base born...etc.}}</ref>}}|VALGERD=Valgerd Flosadottir
|boxstyle_GRANDPA=border:none
}}
{{Tree chart | | | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart | | |ERLEND|y|JORUNN|ERLEND=Erlend the Strong|JORUNN=Jorunn<ref group="†">''Landnamabók'', Part II, Ch. XIX (''[[#islandinga-sogur1|Islandinga sögur]]'', Vol. 1, p.138; {{Harvnb|Ellwood|1898|p=86}})</ref>}}
{{Tree chart | | | | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart | | | | | |HAUK|HAUK='''Hauk the Lawman'''}}
{{Tree chart/end}}

{{Reflist|group="†"}}

==Footnotes==
{{Reflist|2}}

==References==
'''Texts'''
*{{citation|editor-last=Storm|editor-first=Gustav |editor-link=Gustav Storm|title=Eiríks saga rauða og Flatøbogens Grænlendingaþáttr: samt uddrag fra Ólafssaga Tryggvasonar|publisher=S. L. Møllers bogtr.|year=1891|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iGxkBx_vMeUC |oclc=64689433}}. For ''Eiríks saga rauða'' A=Hauksbók, B=AM 557=Skálholtsbók.
*{{citation|last= Ellwood|first=T. |title=The Book of the Settlement of Iceland:as it Illustrates the Dialect, Place Names, Folk Lore, & Antiquities of Cumberland, Westmorland, and North Lancashire |location=Kendal|publisher=T. Wilson|year=1894|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7ATXAAAAMAAJ}}

'''Translations'''
*{{citation|first1=Magnus |last1= Magnusson |author-link1=Magnus Magnusson |first2=Hermann |last2=Pálsson |author-link2=Hermann Pálsson |title=The Vinland Sagas |publisher=Penguin |year=1965 |isbn=0-14-044154-9}}
*{{citation|last=Kunz |first=Keneva |contribution=The Vinland Sagas |editor-last=Smiley |editor-first=Jane |title=The Sagas of the Icelanders |publisher=Viking |year=2000 |isbn=0-670-89040-5}}
*{{citation|last= Ellwood|first=T. |title=The Book of the Settlement of Iceland: translated from the original Icelandic of Ari the Learned|location=Kendal|publisher=T. Wilson|year=1898|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_3BBAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA136|section=Part III: chapter X|page=136}}
*{{citation|first= Hermann|last=Pálsson|title=Landnámabók|publisher=Univ. of Manitoba Press|year=2007|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jj6cIwMCZqIC&pg=PA93|section=§208. ''Thord''|page=93|isbn=978-0-887-55370-7}}

'''Studies'''
*{{citation|last=Mallet|first=Paul Henri |author-link=Paul Henri Mallet|translator=[[Thomas Percy (bishop of Dromore)|Percy, Thomas]] |title=Northern antiquities|location=London|publisher=H. G. Bohn|year=1847|chapter-format=google|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AhUzAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA244|chapter=Supplementary Chapter: Colonization of Greenland and discovery of the American continent by the Scandinavians|pages=244–}}

==External links==
*[http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?id_nbr=273 Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online'']
*[http://www.vanderkrogt.net/statues/object.php?webpage=LE&record=is004 Snorri Thorfinnsson]
*[http://www.vanderkrogt.net/statues/subject.php?webpage=LE&id=Thorbjarnard%C3%B3ttir,%20Gudhridhur Guðríðr Eiríksdóttir]

{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Snorri Thorfinnsson}}
[[Category:11th-century births]]
[[Category:11th-century deaths]]
[[Category:Viking Age in Canada]]
[[Category:11th-century Icelandic people]]
[[Category:11th-century North American people]]
[[Category:Year of death unknown]]
[[Category:History of Christianity in Iceland]]
[[Category:Scandinavian diaspora in Canada]]
[[Category:Icelandic diaspora in Canada]]

Latest revision as of 01:47, 16 October 2024

Snorri Thorfinnsson
Bornc. 1004 - 1013
Diedc. 1090
Known forChristianisation of Iceland
Children2
Parents

Snorri Thorfinnsson (Old Norse and Icelandic: Snorri Þorfinnsson or Snorri Karlsefnisson;[1][2] most likely born between 1004 and 1013, and died c. 1090) was the son of explorers Thorfinn Karlsefni and Gudrid Thorbjarnardóttir. He is considered to be the first child of European descent to be born in the Americas, apart from Greenland. He became an important figure in the Christianisation of Iceland.[3]

Name

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Snorri is an Old Norse name derived from the word snerra, meaning "a fight." Þorfinnsson is a patronymic, meaning "son of Þorfinnr", (see Icelandic naming conventions). Snorri was named for his great-grandfather, Snorri Þórðarson,[4] or after Snorri Þorbrandsson who was not a kinsman but a participant in Karlsefni's expedition[5]

Family

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There is speculation about the birth date of Snorri Thorfinnsson. Birth years such as 1005, 1009, and 1012 have been postulated, but all sources agree that he was born between 1004 and 1013. According to the Vinland sagas, when Snorri was 3 years old, his family left Vinland because of hostilities with indigenous peoples (called Skrælingar by the settlers, meaning "barbarians"). The family returned to the Glaumbær farm in Seyluhreppur.[6][7] [8]

Snorri Thorfinnsson had two children; a daughter named Hallfrid, and a son named Thorgeir. Hallfrid was the mother of Thorlak Runolfsson, bishop of Skálholt in the south of Iceland. One of the descendants of Snorri's brother Thorbjorn, Bjorn Gilsson, was also a bishop of Hólar. Thorgeir was the father of Yngvild who was the mother of Brand Sæmundarsson, bishop of Hólar.[9] The sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen claimed descent from Snorri Thorfinnsson in the 19th century.[10]

Christianisation of Iceland

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In the 13th century texts Snorri Thorfinnsson and Snorri Thorrgrimsson are considered the two main figures responsible for the early Christianisation of Iceland. Consequently, they were portrayed by various writers of the 13th and 14th century as "Christian chieftain models".[3] According to Grœnlendinga saga, Snorri had built the first church of Glaumbaer, which would later increase Christian influence in the area. His descendants became the first Bishops of Iceland, and published the first Christian Code of Iceland.[11]

Legacy

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  • Snorri Thorfinnsson was purported to be born in Vinland (North America), making him the first European child known to be born in the Americas, provided that Greenland is defined as being outside the Americas.[12][13]
  • In 2002, American archaeologists discovered the remains of a thousand-year-old longhouse located on Iceland's northern coast. It is believed that it was Snorri Thorfinnsson's farmhouse.[14] The longhouse was found near the Glaumbær Folk Museum, at the Skagafjörður Heritage Museum outside the coastal village of Sauðárkrókur. The museum was once thought to have been built on the site of Snorri's farmhouse. According to archaeologists it was "a classic Germanic fortress longhouse like the Great Hall of Beowulf".[15][16]
  • There is a non-profit organisation called The Snorri Program that focuses on the history of Icelandic settlers in North America and regularly runs exchange programs for youth and adults.[17]

Genealogy

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Below is the genealogy of descendants of Snorri, as given in the close of each saga, Grœnlendinga saga ch. 9 and Eiríks saga ch. 14.[20] It is supplemented with further ancestral information from (Eiríks saga ch. 7 and Landnámabók), a more complete family tree for which, see Thorfinn Karlsefni.

Thord of Hofdi
(Þórðr fra Höfða Bjarnarson [is][† 9])
Snorri Thordarson of Hofdi[† 10]Vifil of Vifilsdale[21]Hallveig
Thord Snorrason Horse-headThorbjorn Vifilsson
Thorfinn KarlsefniGudrid Thorbjarnardóttir
Snorri ThorfinnssonThorbjorn Thorfinnsson
Hallfrid Snorradottir[22]Thorgeir Snorrason[22](*) Steinunn[23][† 11]Thorunn Thorbjarnardottir[22]
Thorlak Runolfsson, Bp.[† 12]Yngvild Thorgeirsdottir[† 13]Bjorn Gilsson [is], Bp.[† 12]
Brand Sæmundarsson [is], Bp.[† 12]
Haukr Erlendsson
  1. ^ Ragnar Hairy-Breeks — Björn Ironside — Aslak — Thorvald Backbone (hryggr) — Björn Butterbox, etc. is the patrilineal lineage given in the Hauksbók
  2. ^ Áslákssonar, Bjarnarsonar járnsíðu in the Hauksbók
  3. ^ Hroald Spine (Hróaldr hryggr) is called Thorvald Backbone (Þórvaldr hryggr Ásleiksson) in the genealogy of Hauksbók version[18]
  4. ^ Björn byrðusmjör
  5. ^ In the Hauksbók she is indicated as bearing the same name as her mother Fridgerd.
  6. ^ Thord Gellir or "Yeller", son of Olaf Feilan, grandson of Aud the Deep-Minded
  7. ^ Þórhildr Rjúpa
  8. ^ Þórðr hesthöfði
  9. ^ Eiríks saga Ch. 7, Hauksbók version says "Thord, who lived at Hofdi, son of Bjorn Butter-Box" (Magnusson & Pálsson 1965, p. 91n)which is identifiable with "Thord Bjarnarson (at Hofdi)" in Kunz 2000, Index of Characters. However Thord Bjarnarson does not appear in Kunz's translation of Eiríks saga which does not use the Hauksbók version, and instead, appears only in Vatnsdál saga, another tale in the anthology,
  10. ^ "of Hofdi" appended in Kunz 2000, Index of Characters, pp. 759–782, to distinguish from a man in Laxdæla saga
  11. ^ This daughter Steinunn, as well as Haukr's mostly patrilineal line is only given in the Hauksbók manuscript, and his family tree will given under the article Haukr Erlendsson
  12. ^ a b c Bp.=short for "Bishop". For Bishop Björn and the first Bishop Brand, the patrynomycs are not given in text, but e.g. supplied in Kunz 2000, Index of Characters
  13. ^ In Grl. she is spelt Yngveld, and this distinction is kept in Kunz's translations (Kunz 2000, pp. 651, 674); Text of Grl. :"Snorre atti son þann er Þorgæirr het hann var fadir Jnguelldar modur Branz byskups" (Storm 1891, p. 73)

Family tree

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The following stemma is drawn from the genealogy appended to the last chapter of Eiríks saga rauða in Hauk's own recension (in the Hauksbók, supplemented with additional information from the Landnámabók).

Thorir of Espihill [is]
Thorvald Hook[† 1]Thorfinn Karlsefni
Grundar-KetilSnorri Karlsefnisson
EinarSteinunn
Thorstein the Unjust[† 2]
Jorund of KeldurGudrun
Bjarni Bjarnason[† 3]Halla
Flosi the priest[† 4]Ragnhild[† 4]
Olaf(?)[25][27]Valgerd Flosadottir
Erlend the StrongJorunn[† 5]
Hauk the Lawman
  1. ^ Þorvaldr krók
  2. ^ Þorsteinn ranglátr; also in Landnamabók, Part III, Ch. X and translated as "Thorstein Wrongdoer" (Ellwood 1898, , p.136)
  3. ^ Landnamabók, Part V, Ch. VII (Islandinga sögur, Vol. 1, p.295; Ellwood 1898, p. 202)
  4. ^ a b Landnamabók, Part IV, Ch. I (Islandinga sögur, Vol. 1, p.240; Ellwood 1898, p. 165)
  5. ^ Landnamabók, Part II, Ch. XIX (Islandinga sögur, Vol. 1, p.138; Ellwood 1898, p. 86)

Footnotes

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  1. ^ SNORRI KARLSEFINSSON used in Magnusson & Pálsson 1965, List of Proper Names, p.111
  2. ^ Thrapp, Dan (1991), Encyclopedia of Frontier Biography: P-Z, University of Nebraska Press, ISBN 0-8032-9420-4
  3. ^ a b Vésteinsson, Orri (2000), The Christianisation of Iceland: priests, power, and social change, 1000–1300, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-820799-9
  4. ^ Berry, Francis (1977), I tell of Greenland: an edited translation of the Sauđarkrokur manuscripts, University of Michigan, ISBN 0-7100-8591-5
  5. ^ Mowat, Farley (1965), Westviking: the ancient Norse in Greenland and North America (snippet), University of Michigan, p. 224, ISBN 978-0-7710-6579-8, named Snorri, possibly in honor of Snorri Thorbrandsson, who seems not only to have been Karlsefni's closest comrade but to have also been the elder wise man of the expedition
  6. ^ "Historical Places in Northwest Iceland: Glaumbær". Northwest Iceland. Archived from the original on 2011-07-22. Retrieved 2011-02-26.
  7. ^ Mallet 1847, p. 261
  8. ^ Magnússon, Magnús (1973), Viking expansion westwards, Bodley Head
  9. ^ Magnusson & Pálsson 1965, Eir. ch.14, p.91 (1983 ed., p.71)
  10. ^ Mallet, Paul Henri, Northern Antiquities, Harvard University Press
  11. ^ Waters, Henry Fritz-Gilbert (1992), The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Heritage Books, ISBN 1-55613-687-0
  12. ^ Mallet 1847, p. 257n
  13. ^ Blum, Ralph (2004), Rune Cards, Connections Book Publishing, ISBN 1-85906-138-9
  14. ^ Explorers and Exploration, Marshall Cavendish Corporation, 2005, ISBN 0-7614-7535-4
  15. ^ "Archaeology team unlocks the saga of Snorri Thorfinnsson", The Age, Melbourne, 17 September 2002
  16. ^ "Glaumbaer – The first farmer". Skagafjordur Heritage Museum. Retrieved January 20, 2016.
  17. ^ "The Snorri Program"
  18. ^ For example, Rafn, Carl Christian (1837), Antiqvitates americanæ, Schulzianæ crossreferences "Þórvaldr hryggr Ásleiksson" given by Haukr as Thord of Hofdi's grandfather to "Hróaldr hryggr" given by the Landnámabók.
  19. ^ Landnámabók: Ellwood 1898, Part III, Ch. X, pp.136-; Pálsson 2007, §208. Thord (p.93): "Thord, the son of Bjorn Butter-Box, son of Hroald Spine, son of Bjorn Ironside, son of Ragnar Hairy-Breeks.Thord.. took possession of Hofdastrand in Skagafjord.. and made his home at Hofdi...had a third son called Snorri, who married Thorhild the Ptarmigan, daughter of Thord Gellir, and their son was Thord Horse-Head. He married Thorgerd, daughter of Thorir Slouch and Fridgerd, daughter of King Kjarval of Ireland."
  20. ^ The saga texts obviously do not bother to reiterate the patronymic form in nominative case at every instance. For the English forms of the patronymics, Kunz 2000, Index of Characters, pp. 759–782 is consulted.
  21. ^ Kunz 2000, Spelling conventions, p. lxv–lxvi; Index of Characters pp. 759–782, "main rule.. to drop the nominative singular endings and use the stems instead. Thus Egil·l becomes Egil and.. (Auð·r becomes Aud)"
  22. ^ a b c patronymics after Kunz 2000, Index of Characters, pp. 759–782
  23. ^ Magnusson & Pálsson 1965, Eir. ch.14, p.91, "H reads: Snorri Karlsefnisson had another daughter, called Steinunn, who married Einar, etc" extending to "Hauk the Lawman"; Storm 1891, p. 47, "Fra Dottir Snorra Karlsefnissvnar var ok Steinvnn er atti Einarr
  24. ^ Letter, 2. Juni 1294 Diplomatarium islandicum, Vol. II, p. 281. The letter reads "herra Ællender stærki", but index lists it as an occurrence of "herra Erlendr Ólafsson sterki".
  25. ^ Erlend's patronymic given as "Erlendr Ólafsson sterki" in the Index to Diplomatarium islandicum, Vol. II, p. 951[24]
  26. ^ Guðbrandur Vigfússon, ed. (1878). Sturlunga saga: including the Islendinga saga of Lawman Sturla. Vol. 1. Clarendon Press. p. clxi. we know who his mother, father, and grandmother were, his birth-year is not known... A son of Lawman Erlend the Strong, by Jorun, and base born...etc.
  27. ^ Guðbrandur Vigfússon had noted the grandfather was not known.[26]

References

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Texts

Translations

Studies

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