Baby Boomers
Related: About this forumper dixiegrrrrl's suggestion - NEW trivia question - Why is Iceland called Iceland,
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Greenland called Greenland,
while it's Iceland that is green? ,
and Greenland is mostly covered in ice???
CaliforniaPeggy
(151,929 posts)But Greenland was most definitely named that to make people want to live there.
A little marketing hype, if you will!
And I guess it did work, at least to some extent.
MADem
(135,425 posts)http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/1965/shouldnt-greenland-be-known-as-iceland-and-vice-versa
You sometimes hear the story that Iceland was so named to discourage excessive immigration, but there seems to be no basis for this claim. Even if it's true, it didn't work very well. Between about 870 and 930, a period called the landnám, productive land in Iceland was free for the taking to all comers, and thousands of people immigrated from Norway, which was in political upheaval at the time. Landnám is usually translated "settlement," but "land grab" is a more literal translation and comes closer to the point. Incidentally, the Irish priests disappeared around the beginning of the landnám, probably muttering to themselves, "There goes the neighborhood."
ConcernedCanuk
(13,509 posts).
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both you and Peggy are close
got the right idea
gotta remember though, I'm 62 - much of my knowledge comes from BOOKS!
Remember books, encyclopedias, etcetera?
ANYONE can post anything on the web, don't make it true -
however, most publishers make sure what they print is true.
Not so on the web.
so many just do not get that. . .
(sigh)
MADem
(135,425 posts)well....but we're sly geezers, we--we've learned how to operate these new fangled computers~and the google as well~!
Don't be a tease, now....if you've got a better answer, post it for all to see; don't be sighing dramatically, time's a wasting. And be sure to give us an "old school footnote" so we can go to the library and check your source!
ConcernedCanuk
(13,509 posts).
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but I am a tease,
in more ways than one.
and my "source" is my memory from years ago
so probably won't meet your standards.
no sighing
(sigh)
I lied!
lol
ConcernedCanuk
(13,509 posts).
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sumwhere around 400AD I believe it was the Norsemen discovered both Iceland and Greenland.
Iceland was the nicer one, those thermal vents with hot springs and everything,
but the Norsemen decided to misname the islands to discourage mass immigration to Iceland.
It worked.
Here's a wiki link,
doesn't agree with what I believe,
but an interesting read just the same
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Iceland
SheilaT
(23,156 posts)I'm under the impression that Iceland was correctly named, unlike Greenland which wasn't.
Keep in mind that Iceland has been continuously occupied for a thousand years, maybe more (again, I'm not looking anything up) but I do know that Greenland was occupied, then everyone there died when the climate changed, the Little Ice Age took root, and ships that had been visiting were unable to go there because of deteriorating conditions.
Climate matters.