Yes it is.
If you mean the name then before it was named Iceland it was called Snæland (Snowland (some dude saw snow in the mountains and thought it was a good idea)) Iceland was only named Iceland because someone saw some ice floating in sea when they arrived. Iceland is not covered with snow and ice and there for it is not an "ice" land
Ultima Thule.
The cast of Ultima Thule - Das weite Land - 1986 includes: Wolfgang Neumayer as 2. Reisender
Well Iceland was not officially founded until 874-930 but few legends say that an island to the north was occupied by few monks. They called the land Thule. So the answer to your question. About 1200 years ago or so.
It is actually pretty warm. Greenland is the cold one.
Bjork is really famous ans she's from iceland
The land area of beautiful iceland is 39.770 sq miles.
iceland
There is no definitive answer to that question. It's probable that different people came up with that name. Most likely the first humans that lived there Norsemen or Scandinavians. In icelandic it is called Ísland or Eylenda. These words have different origins. The first one literally means ice-land and the seconds one island. The s in island was added by confusion with Old French isle, which is not related but is instead from Latin insula.
The land of fire and ice
The land of frost and fire refers to Iceland and likely comes from the book "Iceland: Land of Fire and Frost" by Olive Murray Chapman. It details the adventures of a woman who crossed Iceland on horseback while the terrain still lacked adequate roads.
Iceland's land area covers 100,250,000,000 square meters.