Book description
The first book to tackle the subject in forty years, the true
extent of the Viking discovery and colonisation of the eastern
seaboard of America is fully examined, taking into account the new
archaeological, linguistic and DNA evidence which supplements the
historic account. When Columbus claimed to have discovered America in
1492, and the Borgia Pope claimed it as a New World for Catholic
Spain, the Vatican started a 500 hundred year conspiracy to conceal
the true story of Viking America. In this groundbreaking new work by
the author of The Early English Settlement of Orkney and Shetland, the
true extent of the Viking discovery and colonisation of the eastern
seaboard of America is fully examined, taking into account the new
archaeological, linguistic and DNA evidence which supplements the
historic account. For four centuries or more, from their first visits
around AD 1000 to the eve of the Columbus voyages, the Vikings
explored and settled thousands of miles of the coasts and rivers of
North America. From New York's Long Island to the Canadian High Arctic
the New World was a playground for Viking adventurers. And the name
the Vikings gave to this New World - America.
Dr Graeme Davis is a specialist in the mediaeval world, its
language, literature and culture. Recent books include studies of the
language and literature of Anglo-Saxon, Old High German and Old
Icelandic cultures. He is a lecturer in the History of the English
Language with the Open University, previously a British Academy funded
researcher at the University of Iceland, and an enthusiast for the
North Atlantic region, where he has travelled extensively.