The year 2000 was named the Year of the Viking, because it marked the millennium of Leif Erikson's arrival in North America.
In 985, a Viking named Bjarni Herjolfson, on the way from Iceland to Greenland, was driven off course by storms and fog. Eventually he sighted wooded land. It didn't look like the description of Greenland he had been given, so he sailed north until he found the Viking settlement on Greenland. Fifteen years later Leif Eriksson set out with 34 men to find the land Bjarni had described.
After passing areas they named Helluland, (Flat-Stone Land) and Markland (Woodland), they found a river outlet. They followed the river to a lake, carried their skin sleeping-bags off the boat and built huts. Later they decided to build a big house and stay for the winter. They found lots of salmon, and the climate was milder than on Greenland. The next summer they sailed back to Greenland. The hostility of the Native Americans, whom they named skraelings, discouraged permanent settling, but they returned repeatedly to explore further along the North American coast and gather furs, timber and iron.
Two Icelandic sagas, The Greenlander's Saga and Eirik' s Saga, tell of Leif's discovery of a new land southwest of Greenland. Some scholars believe that Columbus learned about America through the Icelandic sagas in 1477 when he traveled to Iceland.
In 1961, Norwegian archaeologists Helge Ingstad and his wife Anne Stine discovered remains of a Viking settlement on Newfoundland, near the village L'Anse aux Meadows. Ingstad and his crew spent six years exploring the site. One house had a fireplace of the same design as that on Leif Eriksson's farm on Greenland. Many other buildings and numerous artifacts were uncovered. The site was large enough to house about 90 people.
There is now a National Historic site with reconstructed buildings at L'Anse aux Meadows. The remains of the original buildings have been left as they were discovered by the Ingstads. Adjacent to the site are reconstructions of the buildings, a museum and an interpretative center.
In the year of 994 . When he was 24. add more about Leif Erisson to the thing
He was born 907 and died 1020 and he started exploring on 1001 and no one knows when he stopped exploring.
about 30 days after he left Nova Scotia. You could also say he landed when he quit sailing/rowing
The year 1002 or 1003.
Around the year 1002 or 1003.
In the year 1002 or 1003.
He was searching for new lands to colonize.
He was searching for new lands to colonize.
North America.
In the year 1002 or 1003.
In the year 1002 or 1003.
He was searching for new lands to colonize.
In the year 1002 or 1003.
Leif Ericson's occupation was a viking. But that was before he started exploring. Which by the way he's very famous for. You should check him out sometime :) LOvE, RaNdOm PeRsOn :)
He sailed west from Greenland to North America.
American Indians (First Nations).
Leif Ericson landed in Vinland.
well all i now is that he was born 970 and started exploring 1020 hope that helps, anonymous answerer