New Iceland

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New Iceland (Icelandic: Nýja Ísland About this soundlisten ) is the name of a region on Lake Winnipeg in the Canadian province of Manitoba which was named for settlers from Iceland. It was settled in 1875.

Background[]

The first Icelandic emigrants to Canada were members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from the Westman Islands. The more general migration followed an offer from Lord Dufferin of land in Manitoba to establish what amounted to a "free state".[1]

Due to harsh environmental and economic conditions in Iceland, including the eruption of Mount Askja, some 20,000 Icelanders left their homeland between 1870 and 1915—roughly a quarter of the population of Iceland.[1] In 1875 a large group of Icelandic immigrants migrated from Ontario to Manitoba, leaving Kinmount, Ontario, on 25 September 1875, for Gimli, Manitoba, on the shores of Lake Winnipeg. One of the main reasons for the choice of the colony site was "the abundance of fish"[according to whom?] in Lake Winnipeg, but according to The Icelandic People in Manitoba, their first attempts at fishing on Lake Winnipeg were not successful, partly because they set their nets too close to the shore.[2] Moreover, the "winter of 1875–1876 was one of the coldest on record in Manitoba, and the settlers' clothes, including the leather shoes from Ontario, were not suitable for the rigorous weather".[3] However, the immigrants eventually learned to handle the ax, prepare the soil, fish through ice, and hunt game. They also learned how to drain the land, grow crops, and build better houses.

These Icelandic settlers, known in their native language as Vestur-Íslendingar (meaning Icelanders in the West; initially many Icelanders did not see emigration as a change of country, and there was some discussion of moving the entire population[1]), called their settlement "New Iceland", and the region remains a symbolic centre of the Icelandic heritage in Canada today[when?].

Other information[]

  • According to Statistics Canada (government agency), Manitoba is home to the largest Icelandic population outside of Iceland.[4] There are about 26,000 people with Icelandic ancestry living in Manitoba,[5] making up about 2 per cent of the total population of the province. About 35 per cent of the Icelandic Canadian population lives in Manitoba.[6]
  • Currently many ethnic festivals related to New Iceland, such as Íslendingadagurinn, are held in these areas, and also the weekly newspaper Lögberg-Heimskringla[7] is printed in Winnipeg.
  • The University of Manitoba has an Icelandic department in which students can study Icelandic language and literature at the undergraduate and graduate levels.
  • Gimli, Manitoba, was within the "Icelandic Reserve" granted to Icelandic settlers by the Government of Canada in 1875. Contrary to popular misconception,[by whom?] New Iceland was never a "republic", though the settlers did organize their own local government, which until December 1881 was outside the boundaries of Manitoba. The reserve, at that time within the District of Keewatin, Northwest Territory, was always under Canadian jurisdiction, and the Icelanders were keenly aware of their new loyalties and obligations as Canadians and British subjects—as evidenced during speeches made at Gimli during the visit of Lord Dufferin, Governor General of Canada, in 1877.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c William H. Swatos, Jr. and Loftur Reimar Gissurarson, Icelandic Spiritualism: Mediumship and Modernity in Iceland, New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction, 1996, ISBN 1-56000-273-5, p. 53.
  2. ^ Wilhelm Kristjanson, The Icelandic People in Manitoba (Wallingford Press, 1965), p. 35
  3. ^ Kristjanson (1965), p. 36
  4. ^ "Manitoba Icelandic Population". Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  5. ^ Statcan - Manitoba Icelandic Population
  6. ^ Statcan - Icelandic Canadians living in Manitoba
  7. ^ Combining Heimskringla ('Globe'), founded in 1886, and Lögberg ('Law-Mound'), founded in 1888; Swatos and Gissurarson, p. 57.

Bibliography[]

  • Guðjón Angrímsson (1997), Nýja Ísland: Saga of the journey to New Iceland ISBN 978-0-88801-255-5
  • David Arnason (1994), The new Icelanders: A North American community ISBN 0-88801-186-5
  • Kristin Olafson-Jenkyns (2001), The Culinary Saga of New Iceland: Recipes from the Shores of Lake Winnipeg ISBN 0968911900

External links[]

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