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Supplement to the Antiquitates American.®. 23
At tlie commencement of the century in question
the population of Greenland had considerably increased,
churches had been built in many of the firths both in the
eastern and western settlement, or Byrj5. Colonies had
been settled in Finland, to which country many were
allured by the superior mildness of the climate and
more abundant supply of the means of subsistence.
The same was probably also the case with respect
to Markland. The feeling of independence in the hold
and freeminded people, the insulated situation of the
settlements in so many firths, many of them widely se-
parated from each other, and where navigation during a
great part of the year was so hazardous, the difficulty
or rather the impossibility of any of the Bishops of Ice-
land exercising an inspection over the ecclesiastical affairs
of the people — all these united circumstances awakened
in the inhabitants of Greenland the desire of having
a Bishop of their own. They probably under these cir-
cumstances applied to Gissur Isleifson, formerly Bishop
of all Iceland, hut then only Bishop of Skalholt; for in
1106 a separate Bishopric had been erected at Holum.
Most likely in consequence of mutual consultation with
Saemund Frode at Odde1, with Thorlak Runolfson and
The advice of Sicmund Sigfusson was asked and followed
on many important occasions. This learned priest had in his
younger years visited Germany and France with the view of there
prosecuting his studies. For several years he frequented the
school at Paris, where he would have remained, had it not been
for his relation Jon Ogmundson, afterwards Bishop of Holum,
who also travelled in France and who persuaded him to return
to his native country. After his return in 107(J he fixed his re-
sidence at his paternal estate Odde in the southern quarter of
Iceland. There he opened a school, which Eric Gnupson, whose
family resided in that neighbourhood, most likely attended.
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