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⚔️ Víkingaarf

Víkingastaðir á Íslandi

Kannaðu lönd þar sem víkingaforingjar settust að, sögurnar fæddust og elsta þingið í heiminum var stofnað.

Reykholt
📜Literary Heritage~1200 AD

Reykholt

Keeper of Norse Mythology

During the 13th century, Reykholt became one of the most important intellectual centers in Iceland. Here lived Snorri Sturluson, a powerful chieftain, poet, and historian whose writings preserved the stories of the Viking Age long after it had passed. From his farm at Reykholt, Snorri recorded ancient myths about the Norse gods and heroic traditions that had been carried orally for generations. In the Prose Edda, he described the creation of the world, the adventures of Thor, and the fate of the gods at Ragnarök. These stories helped later generations understand Viking beliefs, poetry, and worldview. Reykholt was not only a literary center but also a place of political importance during the turbulent Sturlung Age, when Icelandic chieftains competed for influence. Today, Reykholt stands as one of the key places where the memory of the Viking world was preserved for the future 📜⚔️

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At Reykholt, Snorri Sturluson wrote the Prose Edda, the most important source for understanding Norse mythology today. Without his work, much of what we know about gods like Odin, Thor, and Loki might have been lost.

📍 West Iceland🗡️ Snorri Sturluson
Keldur
🏠Historic Farm~1100 AD

Keldur

One of Iceland's Oldest Viking Age Farm Sites

Keldur was once home to powerful Viking-age families mentioned in medieval sagas. The site includes underground tunnels believed to have been used as defensive escape routes.

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Keldur remains one of the best preserved turf farm complexes in Iceland.

📍 South Iceland🗡️ Ingjaldur Geirmundarson
Húsavík
🧭Settlement Site~860 AD

Húsavík

One of Iceland's Earliest Viking Winter Settlements

Explorer Garðar Svavarsson stayed in Húsavík after sailing around Iceland and proving the land was an island during the 9th century.

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Garðar's winter stay helped confirm Iceland's geography for early Viking explorers.

📍 North Iceland🗡️ Garðar Svavarsson
Laugarvatn
🧭Settlement Site~930 AD

Laugarvatn

Travel Route of Early Settlers

The Laugarvatn region lay along important inland travel routes used by Viking settlers moving between coastal farms and assembly sites such as Þingvellir.

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Many modern hiking routes still follow paths first used by Viking settlers more than 1,000 years ago.

Þingvellir
🏛️Assembly / Law930 AD

Þingvellir

Birthplace of Icelandic Democracy

Þingvellir was the meeting place of Alþingi, Iceland's national assembly founded in the year 930. Viking chieftains gathered here each summer to create laws, settle disputes and govern the country without a king.

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At Lögberg, the Law Rock, laws were spoken aloud from memory by the Lawspeaker. This system helped create one of the oldest parliamentary traditions in Europe.

📍 South Iceland🗡️ Alþingi Chieftains
Eiríksstaðir
🧭Settlement Site~980 AD

Eiríksstaðir

Home of the Vinland Explorer

At Eiríksstaðir in Dalir, one of the most famous explorers of the Viking Age is believed to have begun his life. Leif Erikson, son of Erik the Red, grew up in a family known for bold voyages across the North Atlantic. Inspired by stories of lands to the west and driven by curiosity and ambition, Leif later sailed beyond Greenland and reached the shores of Vinland. According to the sagas, his journey brought him to fertile lands rich with forests and wild grapes—resources unknown in Greenland and Iceland. From this expedition came one of the earliest recorded European encounters with North America. Today, Eiríksstaðir stands as a powerful reminder of the settlement age explorers whose journeys connected Iceland to a wider Atlantic world centuries before the Age of Discovery began in Europe.

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Leif Erikson, who is believed to have been born at Eiríksstaðir, reached the shores of North America around the year 1000—nearly five centuries before Christopher Columbus crossed the Atlantic. His voyage made him one of the earliest known Europeans to set foot in the New World.

📍 West Iceland🗡️ Leifur Eiríksson
Borg á Mýrum
⚔️Viking Saga~910 AD

Borg á Mýrum

Home of Egill the Warrior Poet

Borg á Mýrum was the home of Egill Skallagrímsson, one of Iceland's most famous Viking warriors and poets whose life story is preserved in Egils saga.

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Egill Skallagrímsson was known both for his battlefield strength and his powerful poetry.

📍 West Iceland🗡️ Egill Skallagrímsson
Vestmannaeyjar
🧭Settlement Site~874 AD

Vestmannaeyjar

The Story Behind the Name Westman Islands

The Westman Islands were named after Irish slaves who escaped after killing their Viking master Hjörleifur. Ingólfur Arnarson later tracked them to the islands during the settlement period.

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The word "Westmen" referred to Irish people living west of Norway during the Viking Age.

📍 South Iceland🗡️ Hjörleifur Hróðmarsson
Gásir
🏪Trading Post~1200 AD

Gásir

Northern Iceland Trading Harbor

Gásir was one of the most important medieval trading centres in northern Iceland where merchants from Norway and mainland Europe exchanged goods with Icelandic farmers.

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Annual trading markets were held here long before permanent towns existed in North Iceland.

📍 North Iceland🗡️ For Gásir, there is no single specific saga hero directly associated with the site. Gásir functioned primarily as a medieval trading centre, where merchants from Norway and mainland Europe exchanged goods with Icelandic farmers. Recommended entry: Hákon IV of Norway Reason: Trade at Gásir took place during the period when Iceland came under the authority of the Norwegian crown (13th century). King Hákon IV of Norway represents the royal trade network that influenced Iceland’s medieval commerce.
Orustuhóll
🛡️Battle Site1238 AD

Orustuhóll

Battle Hill of the Sturlung Age Conflicts

Orustuhóll, meaning "Battle Hill," is located near the site of the Battle of Örlygsstaðir in 1238, one of the largest conflicts in Icelandic medieval history. Although slightly later than the Viking Age, the battle reflected the continuing power struggles between chieftain families whose origins traced back to Viking settlement leaders.

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The Battle of Örlygsstaðir involved thousands of warriors and marked one of the turning points leading to Iceland coming under Norwegian rule.

📍 North Iceland🗡️ Sturlung chieftains
Skálholt
Religious Center~1056 AD

Skálholt

Religious Center of Early Iceland

Skálholt became one of the most important religious centers in Iceland after Christianity was adopted around the year 1000 during the Alþingi assembly at Þingvellir.

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For centuries Skálholt served as one of Iceland's two episcopal seats.

📍 South Iceland🗡️ Ísleifur Gizurarson
Reykjavík — Ingólfur Arnarson
🧭Settlement Site874 AD

Reykjavík — Ingólfur Arnarson

Settlement of Reykjavík

Around the year 874, Ingólfur Arnarson arrived on the southwestern coast of Iceland and became the island’s first permanent settler. Following Norse tradition, he cast his carved high-seat pillars into the sea and vowed to establish his farm where they reached land. After searching the coastline for several years, his followers found the pillars in a quiet bay filled with rising steam from geothermal springs. There, he founded his home and named the place Reykjavík, meaning “Smoky Bay.” From this modest Viking farmstead grew the settlement that would eventually become Iceland’s capital city. Ingólfur’s decision marked the beginning of organized settlement during the Icelandic Settlement Age, when families from Norway and the North Atlantic began building farms across the island. Today, Reykjavík stands not only as Iceland’s political and cultural center, but also as the symbolic starting point of the nation’s history. 🛶

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According to Landnámabók, Ingólfur Arnarson threw his high-seat pillars into the sea and promised to settle wherever they came ashore. When they drifted into the bay of Reykjavík, he chose the site as his home around the year 874—marking the beginning of permanent settlement in Iceland.

📍 Capital Region🗡️ Ingólfur Arnarson
Drangey
⚔️Viking Saga~1031 AD

Drangey

Last Refuge of Grettir the Strong

Drangey Island was the final refuge of Grettir the Strong, one of Iceland's most legendary outlaw heroes. He lived here for years before being defeated by enemies who climbed the island cliffs.

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Climbing Drangey today still follows routes similar to those described in Grettis saga.

📍 North Iceland🗡️ Grettir Ásmundarson

⚔️ Víkingastaðakort

Allir 13 víkingastaðir um allt Ísland

📍 West Iceland
  • 📜Reykholt
  • 🧭Eiríksstaðir
  • ⚔️Borg á Mýrum
📍 South Iceland
  • 🏠Keldur
  • 🧭Laugarvatn
  • 🏛️Þingvellir
  • 🧭Vestmannaeyjar
  • Skálholt
📍 North Iceland
  • 🧭Húsavík
  • 🏪Gásir
  • 🛡️Orustuhóll
  • ⚔️Drangey
📍 Capital Region
  • 🧭Reykjavík — Ingólfur Arnarson