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Supplement to the Antiquitates American*:. 13
of wood, and only a very few of stone, cathedral churches
and a few castles forming almost the only excepfions.
The employment of wood instead of stone, even in the
erection of public buildings, has been adhered to in many
parts of Norway down to the latest times, and even in
our own days we find in many, if not in a great majority
of instances, the country churches in Norway built of
wood.
The earliest settlement in Vinland occurs in the llth
century, when wooden edifices were far more general than
in the subsequent centuries1. The country abounded
with building timber, which the Northmen exported thence
to Greenland. It is natural, therefore, to conclude that
also in Vinland itself they made use of this material in
the construction of their dwelling houses, as is likewise
confirmed by the Sagas, which expressly call the great
houses (mikil hus) erected by Leif and Thorfinn Karlsefne
bubir, i. e. wooden houses2. Wood is a substance very
subject to decay. The wooden buildings which were
erected in Vinland in the llth and 12th centuries must
have long ago perished. After the 13th century it seems
probable that the Northmen gradually intermixed with
the Aborigines of the country, as was the case in a some-
what later period in Greenland. They accordingly more
and more lost their original civilization, and as the con-
nexion with the mother country in the subsequent centu-
ries ceased to he upheld, they gradually degenerated into
a state of savagism, no longer erecting such buildings,
Of this and tiie succeeding century are the wooden churches
delineated and described in J. C. C. Dahl’s admirable work,
“Dcnkinale eincr sclir ausgebildelcn Holzbaukunst aus den friihcsten
Jahrhundcrtcn in den inncrn l.andschafien Xonvegcns, Dresden
1837”. — Ant. Ain. 32, 40, 57, CO, 155.
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