Title: Medieval Greenland Norse
1Medieval Greenland Norse
By Gabby Orsino, Ben Meshumar, and Sam Havlicek
2Society
Erik the Red was exiled from the Scandinavian
empire. He spent years sailing the waters and
eventually wound up on a piece of land that he
called Greenland in order to attract settlers. 2
settlements were established, East and West.
Began as an independent society but later
re-established under the king. Prosperation
depended on trade. Very harsh conditions.
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6What happened to the population
Lief Eriksson brought a big wave of settlers to
the young land. Among these new inhabitants came
the religious types Church was established. Huge
population boom. Geography, Climate and Resources
were a recipe for destruction. Possible clash
between Greenlandians and the native Inuit people.
7Aspect of life
- Environment
- Religion
- Attitude
8Greenland And the U.S.Similarities
9Greenland And the U.S.Difrences
- Population Size
- Food resource
- Climate
- Change
10SOCIETY BEFORE AND AFTER GROWTH
11RESOURCES
- BEFORE
- -cows, sheep, goats, birds, fish, seals (animal
life) - -farm land
- -fresh waters
- AFTER
- -thinner soils, shorter growing seasons
- -livestock could no longer be maintained
- -climate change caused resources to deminish
12ECONOMY
- BEFORE
- -relied on trading goods
- -cod fishing, falconry, sea mammal oil, soapstone
and walrus ivory had become intense commercial
efforts, driven by the need to pay taxes to kings
and tithes to the church - -Greenland's Norse in particular traded heavily
on its walrus ivory resources - AFTER
- -climate change caused resources to dwindle, had
less to trade - -demand for Greenlands primary export, walrus
tusks, went down - -less economically stable
13SOCIAL
- BEFORE
- -The Norse had a population of 4-5000
- -Ruins of more than 300 farms, twenty-two
churches, a nunnery, and many cemeteries - -Traded with Iceland and Scandinavia
- AFTER
- -Communication between trading ships went down
- -Loss of support from home or trade partners
(Iceland and Scandinavia
14The
End
15Bibliography
Mnh.si.edu/vikings/voyage/htmlonly/greenland.html
Greenland-guide.gl/leif2000/history.htm Archaelo
gy.org/online/featured/greenland