Floki Vilgeroarson after spending one winter there gave the island its currrent name. He was the first Scandinavian to deliberately sail to Iceland.
the floki guy named it iceland to keep the vikings away from it
Actually no, I was born and raised in iceland, and am descendant from Vikings, my father told me the real story, Floki named it iceland because he sailed to the north part where everything was ice and snow, hence, Iceland.
The myth that we named iceland, iceland, is totally untrue but seems beliveable.
The Vikings never got kicked out of Iceland.
No, Iceland got it's independence 1944yes, because you said it got its independence in the year of 1944.
The name for "Iceland" in Irish is "an Íoslainn"; The name in Scottish Gaelic: ?
The name of the volcano that erupted in Iceland was named Eyjafjallajokull.
Yes, Iceland is a proper noun, the name of a country. A proper noun is the name of a person, a place (Iceland), a thing, or a title.
Fire & Ice.
Yes, Iceland is a proper noun, the name of a country. A proper noun is the name of a person, a place (Iceland), a thing, or a title.
The current population of Iceland is just over 250,000 people. This is because when the Vikings discovered it, they did not want everyone cramping into this small island, that is why it got its name. By then, people said "Iceland, hmm, it sounds very cold so I dont want to go there".
No, there is no name in iceland that is like English
"Ísland" is the Icelandic for "Iceland". The meaning is the same.
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
Iceland has a president not a king. His name is Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson.