Showing posts with label vikings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vikings. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Viking Legend Ragnar Lodbrok on This Day in History

This day in history: Paris was sacked on this day in 845 by Viking raiders under Ragnar Lodbrok, who collects a huge ransom in exchange for leaving. Yes, if you've been a fan of the History Channel TV series "Vikings" then you are well are of Ragnar Lodbrok.

H. A. Guerber wrote of Ragnar back in 1896:

Ragnar Lodbrok, who figures in history as the contemporary of Charlemagne, is one of the great northern heroes, to whom many mythical deeds of valor are ascribed. His story has given rise not only to the celebrated Ragnar Lodbrok saga, so popular in the thirteenth century, but also to many poems and songs by ancient scalds and modern poets. The material of the Ragnar Lodbrok saga was probably largely borrowed from the Volsunga saga and from the saga of Dietrich von Bern, the chief aim of the ancient composers being to connect the Danish dynasty of kings with the great hero Sigurd, the slayer of Fafnir, and thereby to prove that their ancestor was no less a person than Odin.

The hero of this saga was Ragnar, the son of Sigurd Ring and his first wife, Alfild. According to one version of the story, as we have seen, Sigurd Ring married Ingeborg, and died, leaving Frithiof to protect his young son. According to another, Sigurd Ring appointed Ragnar as his successor, and had him recognized as future ruler by the Thing before he set out upon his last military expedition.

This was a quest for a new wife named Alfsol, a princess of Jutland, with whom, in spite of his advanced years, he had fallen passionately in love. Her family, however, rudely refused Sigurd Ring's request. When he came to win his bride by the force of arms, and they saw themselves defeated, they poisoned Alfsol rather than have her fall alive into the viking's hands.

Sigurd Ring, finding a corpse where he had hoped to clasp a living and loving woman, was so overcome with grief that he now resolved to die too. By his orders Alfsol's body was laid in state on a funeral pyre on his best ship. Then, when the fire had been kindled, and the ship cut adrift from its moorings, Sigurd Ring sprang on board, and, stabbing himself, was burned with the fair maiden he loved.

Ragnar was but fifteen years old when he found himself called upon to reign; but just as he outshone all his companions in beauty and intelligence, so he could match the bravest heroes in courage and daring, and generally escaped uninjured from every battle, owing to a magic shirt which his mother had woven for him.

    "'I give thee the long shirt,
    Nowhere sewn,
    Woven with a loving mind,
    Of hair——-[obscure word].
    Wounds will not bleed
    Nor will edges bite thee
    In the holy garment;
    It was consecrated to the gods.'"
                   Ragnar Lodbrok Saga.

Of course the young hero led out his men every summer upon some exciting viking expedition, to test their courage and supply them with plunder; for all the northern heroes proudly boasted that the sword was their god and gold was their goddess.

On one occasion Ragnar landed in a remote part of Norway, and having climbed one of the neighboring mountains, he looked down upon a fruitful valley inhabited by Lodgerda [Lagertha], a warrior maiden who delighted in the chase and all athletic exercises, and ruled over all that part of the country. Ragnar immediately resolved to visit this fair maiden; and, seeing her manifold attractions, he soon fell in love with her and married her. She joined him in all his active pursuits; but in spite of all his entreaties, she would not consent to leave her native land and accompany him home.

After spending three years in Norway with Lodgerda, the young viking became restless and unhappy; and learning that his kingdom had been raided during his prolonged absence, he parted from his wife in hot haste. He pursued his enemies to Whitaby and to Lym-Fiord, winning a signal victory over them in both places, and then reentered his capital of Hledra in triumph, amid the acclamations of his joyful people.

He had not been resting long upon his newly won laurels when a northern seer came to his court, and showed him in a magic mirror the image of Thora, the beautiful daughter of Jarl Herrand in East Gothland. Ragnar, who evidently considered himself freed from all matrimonial bonds by his wife's refusal to accompany him home, eagerly questioned the seer concerning the radiant vision.

This man then revealed to him that Thora, having at her father's request carefully brought up a dragon from an egg hatched by a swan, had at last seen it assume such colossal proportions that it coiled itself all around the house where she dwelt. Here it watched over her with jealous care, allowing none to approach except the servant who brought the princess her meals and who provided an ox daily for the monster's sustenance. Jarl Herrand had offered Thora's hand in marriage, and immense sums of gold, to any hero brave enough to slay this dragon; but none dared venture within reach of its powerful jaws, whence came fire, venom, and noxious vapors.

Ragnar, who as usual thirsted for adventure, immediately made up his mind to go and fight this dragon; and, after donning a peculiar leather and woolen garment, all smeared over with pitch, he attacked and successfully slew the monster.

                   "'Nor long before
    In arms I reached the Gothic shore,
    To work the loathly serpent's death.
    I slew the reptile of the heath.'"
                       Death Song of Regner Lodbrock (Herbert's tr.).

In commemoration of this victory, Ragnar ever after bore also the name of Lodbrok (Leather Hose), although he laid aside this garment as soon as possible, and appeared in royal garb, to receive his prize, the beautiful maiden Thora, whom he had delivered, and whom he now took to be his wife.

    "'My prize was Thora; from that fight,
     'Mongst warriors am I Lodbrock hight.
     I pierced the monster's scaly side
     With steel, the soldier's wealth and pride.'"
                          Death Song of Regner Lodbrock (Herbert's tr.).

Thora gladly accompanied Ragnar back to Hledra, lived happily with him for several years, and bore him two sturdy sons, Agnar and Erik, who soon gave proof of uncommon courage. Such was Ragnar's devotion to his new wife that he even forbore to take part in the usual viking expeditions, to linger by her side. All his love could not long avail to keep her with him, however, for she soon sickened and died, leaving him an inconsolable widower.

To divert him from his great sorrow, his subjects finally proposed that he should resume his former adventurous career, and prevailed upon him to launch his dragon ship once more and to set sail for foreign shores. Some time during the cruise their bread supply failed, and Ragnar steered his vessel into the port of Spangarhede, where he bade his men carry their flour ashore and ask the people in a hut which he descried there to help them knead and bake their bread. The sailors obeyed; but when they entered the lowly hut and saw the filthy old woman who appeared to be its sole occupant, they hesitated to bespeak her aid.

While they were deliberating what they should do, a beautiful girl, poorly clad, but immaculately clean, entered the hut; and the old woman, addressing her as Krake (Crow), bade her see what the strangers wanted. They told her, and admiringly watched her as she deftly fashioned the dough into loaves and slipped them into the hot oven. She bade the sailors watch them closely, lest they should burn; but these men forgot all about their loaves to gaze upon her as she flitted about the house, and the result was that their bread was badly burned.

When they returned to the vessel, Ragnar Lodbrok reproved them severely for their carelessness, until the men, to justify themselves, began describing the maiden Krake in such glowing terms that the chief finally expressed a desire to see her. With the view of testing her wit and intelligence, as well as her beauty, Ragnar sent a message bidding her appear before him neither naked nor clad, neither alone nor unaccompanied, neither fasting nor yet having partaken of any food.

This singular message was punctually delivered, and Krake, who was as clever as beautiful, soon presented herself, with a fish net wound several times around her graceful form, her sheep dog beside her, and the odor of the leek she had bitten into still hovering over her ruby lips.

Ragnar, charmed by her ingenuity no less than by her extreme beauty, then and there proposed to marry her. But Krake, who was not to be so lightly won, declared that he must first prove the depth of his affection by remaining constant to her for one whole year, at the end of which time she would marry him if he still cared to claim her hand.

The year passed by; Ragnar returned to renew his suit, and Krake, satisfied that she had inspired no momentary passion, forsook the aged couple and accompanied the great viking to Hledra, where she became queen of Denmark. She bore Ragnar four sons—Ivar, Björn, Hvitserk, and Rogenwald,—who from earliest infancy longed to emulate the prowess of their father, Ragnar, and of their step-brothers, Erik and Agnar, who even in their youth were already great vikings.

The Danes, however, had never fully approved of Ragnar's last marriage, and murmured frequently because they were obliged to obey a lowborn queen, and one who bore the vulgar name of Krake. Little by little these murmurs grew louder, and finally they came to Ragnar's ears while he was visiting Eystein, King of Svithiod (Sweden). Craftily his courtiers went to work, and finally prevailed upon him to sue for the princess's hand. He did so, and left Sweden promising to divorce Krake when he reached home, and to return as soon as possible to claim his bride.

As Ragnar entered the palace at Hledra, Krake came, as usual, to meet him. His conscience smote him, and he answered all her tender inquiries so roughly that she suddenly turned and asked him why he had made arrangements to divorce her and take a new wife. Surprised at her knowledge, for he fancied the matter still a secret, Ragnar Lodbrok asked who had told her. Thereupon Krake explained that, feeling anxious about him, she had sent her pet magpies after him, and that the birds had come home and revealed all.

This answer, which perhaps gave rise to the common expression, "A little bird told me," greatly astonished Ragnar. He was about to try to excuse himself when Krake, drawing herself up proudly, declared that while she was perfectly ready to depart, it was but just that he should now learn that her extraction was far less humble than he thought. She then proceeded to tell him that her real name was Aslaug, and that she was the daughter of Sigurd Fafnisbane (the slayer of Fafnir) and the beautiful Valkyr Brunhild. Her grandfather, or her foster father, Heimir, to protect her from the foes who would fain have taken her life, had hidden her in his hollow harp when she was but a babe. He had tenderly cared for her until he was treacherously murdered by peasants, who had found her in the hollow harp instead of the treasure they sought there.

    "Let be—as ancient stories tell—
    Full knowledge upon Ragnar fell
    In lapse of time, that this was she
    Begot in the felicity
    Swift-fleeting of the wondrous twain,
    Who afterwards through change and pain
    Must live apart to meet in death."
                        WILLIAM MORRIS, The Fostering of Aslaug.

In proof of her assertion, Aslaug then produced a ring and a letter which had belonged to her illustrious mother, and foretold that her next child, a son, would bear the image of a dragon in his right eye, as a sign that he was a grandson of the Dragon Slayer, whose memory was honored by all.

Convinced of the truth of these statements, Ragnar no longer showed any desire to repudiate his wife; but, on the contrary, he besought her to remain with him, and bade his subjects call her Aslaug.

Shortly after this reconciliation the queen gave birth to a fifth son, who, as she had predicted, came into the world with a peculiar birthmark, to which he owed his name—Sigurd the Snake-eyed. As it was customary for kings to intrust their sons to some noted warrior to foster, this child was given to the celebrated Norman pirate, Hastings, who, as soon as his charge had attained a suitable age, taught him the art of viking warfare, and took him, with his four elder brothers, to raid the coasts of all the southern countries.

Ivar, the eldest of Ragnar and Aslaug's sons, although crippled from birth, and unable to walk a step, was always ready to join in the fray, into the midst of which he was borne on a shield. From this point of vantage he shot arrow after arrow, with fatal accuracy of aim. As he had employed much of his leisure time in learning runes and all kinds of magic arts, he was often of great assistance to his brothers, who generally chose him leader of their expeditions. [See Guerber's Myths of Northern Lands, p. 39.]

While Ragnar's five sons were engaged in fighting the English at Whitaby to punish them for plundering and setting fire to some Danish ships, Rogenwald fell to rise no more.

Eystein, the Swedish king, now assembled a large army and declared war against the Danes, because their monarch had failed to return at the appointed time and claim the bride for whom he had sued. Ragnar would fain have gone forth to meet the enemy in person, but Agnar and Erik, his two eldest sons, craved permission to go in his stead. They met the Swedish king, but in spite of their valor they soon succumbed to an attack made by an enchanted cow.

    "'We smote with swords; at dawn of day
    Hundred spearmen gasping lay,
    Bent beneath the arrowy strife.
    Egill reft my son of life;
    Too soon my Agnar's youth was spent,
    The scabbard thorn his bosom rent.'"
                      Death Song of Regner Lodbrock (Herbert's tr.).

Ragnar was about to sally forth to avenge them, when Hastings and the other sons returned. Then Aslaug prevailed upon her husband to linger by her side and delegate the duty of revenge to his sons. In this battle Ivar made use of his magic to slay Eystein's cow, which could make more havoc than an army of warriors. His brothers, having slain Eystein and raided the country, then sailed off to renew their depredations elsewhere.

This band of vikings visited the coasts of England, Ireland, France, Italy, Greece, and the Greek isles, plundering, murdering, and burning wherever they went. Assisted by Hastings, the brothers took Wiflisburg (probably the Roman Aventicum), and even besieged Luna in Etruria.

As this city was too strongly fortified and too well garrisoned to yield to an assault, the Normans (as all the northern pirates were indiscriminately called in the South) resolved to secure it by stratagem. They therefore pretended that Hastings, their leader, was desperately ill, and induced a bishop to come out of the town to baptize him, so that he might die in the Christian faith. Three days later they again sent a herald to say that Hastings had died, and that his last wish had been to be buried in a Christian church. They therefore asked permission to enter the city unarmed, and bear their leader to his last resting place, promising not only to receive baptism, but also to endow with great wealth the church where Hastings was buried.

The inhabitants of Luna, won by these specious promises, immediately opened their gates, and the funeral procession filed solemnly into the city. But, in the midst of the mass, the coffin lid flew open, and Hastings sprang out, sword in hand, and killed the officiating bishop and priests. This example was followed by his soldiers, who produced the weapons they had concealed upon their persons, and slew all the inhabitants of the town.

These lawless invaders were about to proceed to Romaburg (Rome), and sack that city also, but were deterred by a pilgrim whom they met. He told them that the city was so far away that he had worn out two pairs of iron-soled shoes in coming from thence. The Normans, believing this tale, which was only a stratagem devised by the quick-witted pilgrim, spared the Eternal City, and, reembarking in their vessels, sailed home.

Ragnar Lodbrok, in the mean while, had not been inactive, but had continued his adventurous career, winning numerous battles, and bringing home much plunder to enrich his kingdom and subjects.

    "'I have fought battles
    Fifty and one
    Which were famous;
    I have wounded many men.'"
                  Ragnar's Sons' Saga.

The hero's last expedition was against Ella, King of Northumberland. From the very outset the gods seemed to have decided that Ragnar should not prove as successful as usual. The poets tell us that they even sent the Valkyrs (battle maidens of northern mythology) to warn him of his coming defeat, and to tell him of the bliss awaiting him in Valhalla.

    "'Regner! tell thy fair-hair'd bride
    She must slumber at thy side!
    Tell the brother of thy breast
    Even for him thy grave hath rest!
    Tell the raven steed which bore thee
    When the wild wolf fled before thee,
    He too with his lord must fall,—
    There is room in Odin's Hall!'"
                       MRS. HEMANS, Valkyriur Song.

In spite of this warning, Ragnar went on. Owing to the magic shirt he wore, he stood unharmed in the midst of the slain long after all his brave followers had perished; and it was only after a whole day's fighting that the enemy finally succeeded in making him a prisoner. Then the followers of Ella vainly besought Ragnar to speak and tell his name. As he remained obstinately silent they finally flung him into a den of snakes, where the reptiles crawled all over him, vainly trying to pierce the magic shirt with their venomous fangs. Ella perceived at last that it was this garment which preserved his captive from death, and had it forcibly removed. Ragnar was then thrust back amid the writhing, hissing snakes, which bit him many times. Now that death was near, the hero's tongue was loosened, not to give vent to weak complaints, but to chant a triumphant death song, in which he recounted his manifold battles, and foretold that his brave sons would avenge his cruel death.

    "'Grim stings the adder's forked dart;
    The vipers nestle in my heart.
    But soon, I wot, shall Vider's wand,
    Fixed in Ella's bosom stand.
    My youthful sons with rage will swell,
    Listening how their father fell;
    Those gallant boys in peace unbroken
    Will never rest, till I be wroken [avenged].'"
                        Death Song of Regner Lodbrock (Herbert's tr.).

This heroic strain has been immortalized by ancient scalds and modern poets. They have all felt the same admiration for the dauntless old viking, who, even amid the pangs of death, gloried in his past achievements, and looked ardently forward to his sojourn in Valhalla. There, he fancied, he would still be able to indulge in warfare, his favorite pastime, and would lead the einheriar (spirits of dead warriors) to their daily battles.

    "'Cease, my strain! I hear a voice
    From realms where martial souls rejoice;
    I hear the maids of slaughter call,
    Who bid me hence to Odin's hall:
    High seated in their blest abodes
    I soon shall quaff the drink of gods.
    The hours of life have glided by;
    I fall, but smiling shall I die.'"
                       Death Song of Regner Lodbrock (Herbert's tr.).

Ragnar Lodbrok's sons had reached home, and were peacefully occupied in playing chess, when a messenger came to announce their father's sad end. In their impatience to avenge him they started out without waiting to collect a large force, and in spite of many inauspicious omens. Ella, who expected them, met them with a great host, composed not only of all his own subjects but also of many allies, among whom was King Alfred. In spite of their valor the Normans were completely defeated by the superior forces of the enemy, and only a few of them survived. Ivar and his remaining followers consented to surrender at last, provided that Ella would atone for their losses by giving them as much land as an oxhide would inclose. This seemingly trifling request was granted without demur, nor could the king retract his promise when he saw that the oxhide, cut into tiny strips, inclosed a vast space of land, upon which the Normans now proceeded to construct an almost impregnable fortress, called Lunduna Burg (London).

Here Ivar took up his permanent abode, while his brothers returned to Hledra. Little by little he alienated the affections of Ella's subjects, and won them over to him by rich gifts and artful flattery. When sure of their allegiance, he incited them to revolt against the king; and as he had solemnly sworn never to bear arms against Ella, he kept the letter of his promise by sending for his brothers to act as their leaders.

As a result of this revolution Ella was made prisoner. Then the fierce vikings stretched him out upon one of those rude stone altars which can still be seen in England, and ruthlessly avenged their father's cruel death by cutting the bloody eagle upon him. After Ella's death, Ivar became even more powerful than before, while his younger brothers continued their viking expeditions, took an active part in all the piratical incursions of the time, and even, we are told, besieged Paris in the reign of Louis the Fat. [See Guerber's Myths of Northern Lands, p. 85.]

Other Danish and Scandinavian vikings were equally venturesome and successful, and many eventually settled in the lands which they had conquered. Among these was the famous Rollo (Rolf Ganger), who, too gigantic in stature to ride horseback, always went on foot. He settled with his followers in a fertile province in northern France, which owes to them its name of Normandy.

The rude independence of the Northmen is well illustrated by their behavior when called to court to do homage for this new fief. Rollo was directed to place both his hands between those of the king, and take his vow of allegiance; so he submitted with indifferent grace. But when he was told that he must conclude the ceremony by kissing the monarch's foot, he obstinately refused to do so. A proxy was finally suggested, and Rollo, calling one of his Berserkers, bade him take his place. The stalwart giant strode forward, but instead of kneeling, he grasped the king's foot and raised it to his lips. As the king did not expect such a jerk, he lost his balance and fell heavily backward. All the Frenchmen present were, of course, scandalized; but the barbarian refused to make any apology, and strode haughtily out of the place, vowing he would never come to court again.

All the northern pirates were, as we have seen, called Normans. They did not all settle in the North, however, for many of them found their way into Italy, and even to Constantinople. There they formed the celebrated Varangian Guard, and faithfully watched over the safety of the emperor. It was probably one of these soldiers who traced the runes upon the stone lion which was subsequently transferred to Venice, where it now adorns the Piazza of St. Mark's.

    "Rose the Norseman chief Hardrada, like a lion from his lair;
    His the fearless soul to conquer, his the willing soul to dare.
    Gathered Skald and wild Varingar, where the raven banner shone,
    And the dread steeds of the ocean, left the Northland's frozen zone."
                                       VAIL, Marri's Vision.

See also Norse Mythology and Viking Legends - 115 Books on DVDrom

For a list of all of my digital books and books on disk click here


 

Saturday, October 9, 2021

The Vikings in Ancient America on This Day in History

 
Who Really Discovered America? - 90 Books on DVDrom [or download] (Vikings, Irish, Welsh etc)

This Day in History: In October 2000 President Bill Clinton issued Presidential Proclamation 7358, proclaiming October 9 as Leif Erikson Day. Leif Erikson Day is a day held in honor of the first Europeans who have set foot in North America. 

According to the sagas of Icelanders, Erikson established a Norse settlement at Vinland, which is usually interpreted as being coastal North America. There is ongoing speculation that the settlement made by Leif and his crew corresponds to the remains of a Norse settlement found in Newfoundland, Canada, called L'Anse aux Meadows and which was occupied c. 1000.

Leif was the son of Erik the Red, who was the founder of the first Norse settlement in Greenland.

There are actually many nationalities who have also claimed to be the first discoverers of America, long before Columbus...some before Leif. The Welsh Prince Madoc claimed to have visited in the 1100's and there have been stories among the Creek natives of the "Welsh Indians."

The Irish have also sailed to America in the 6th century (St. Brendan), as well as the Phoenicians, and the Chinese in the 5th century (there was a supposed discovery that Buddhistic traditions among the Mexican natives, jade ornaments in Nicaragua, and a Chinese symbol on a monument), and the Greeks have claimed the earliest European discovery (Ptolemy) 2300 years ago.

The Book of Mormon states that some ancient inhabitants of the New World are descendants of Semitic peoples who sailed from the Old World.

There are also Native American legends that tell of a race of white giants that inhabited the Americas a long time ago.

Chief Rolling Thunder of the Comanches, a Great Plains tribe, once gave the following account of a race of white giants in 1857: “Innumerable moons ago, a race of white men, 10 feet high, and far more rich and powerful than any white people now living, here inhabited a large range of country, extending from the rising to the setting sun. Their fortifications crowned the summits of the mountains, protecting their populous cities situated in the intervening valleys."

See also: Did Vikings Actually Inhabit Minnesota?

Friday, September 11, 2015

Who Really Discovered America? - 90 Books to Download (Vikings, Irish, Welsh etc)


Only $3.00 -  You can pay using the Cash App by sending money to $HeinzSchmitz and send me an email at theoldcdbookshop@gmail.com with your email for the download.


Books Scanned from the Originals into PDF format

For a list of all of my download click here Contact theoldcdbookshop@gmail.com for questions

Books are in the public domain. I will take checks or money orders as well.

Contents:

Madoc - an essay on the Discovery of America by Madoc ap Owen Gwynedd in the Twelfth century by Thomas Stephens 1893 (Madoc was a Welsh prince)

The Magog Tradition (Welsh) article in The Cambrian

Traditions of the earliest visits of Foreigners to North America by Reuben T Durretts 1908 (Atlantis, Madoc, Phoenicians, Chinese, Norse etc)

America Discovered by the Welsh in 1170 A.D. by Benjamin Bowen 1876

The Welch (Welsh) Indians - A collection of papers respecting a people whose ancestors emigrated from Wales to America, in the year 1170, with Prince Madoc Three hundred years before the first voyage of Columbus by George Burder 1922

The Discovery of America by the Northmen in the 10th Century by North Ludlow Beamish 1841

The Discovery of America by the Northmen 985-1015 by Edmund F Slafter 1891

A Lecture on the Discovery of America by the Northmen by A Davis 1839

The Discovery of America by the Northmen in the Tenth century by Joshua T Smith 1842

The Northmen in New England - America in the Tenth century by Joshua T Smith 1839

The History of Ancient America anterior to the time of Columbus, proving the identity of the aborigines with the Tyrians and Israelites and the introduction of Christianity into the western hemisphere by the Apostle St. Thomas by George Jones 1843

History of America Before Columbus, Volume 1 by Peter De Roo 1900

History of America Before Columbus, Volume 2 by Peter De Roo 1900

The Finding of Wineland, the history of the Icelandic Discovery of America

The History of Ancient Vinland by Thormod Torfason 1891 (Wineland, Vinland, names given to Greenland and the Canadian east coast leading to the belief that grapes grew in these areas due to a period of global warming 1000 years ago)

The Norse Discoverers of America, the Wineland sagas by G.M. Gathorne-Hardy 1921

American Antiquities by Josiah Priest 1834 (Discovery of America by the Norwegians and Welch [Welsh] before the Time of Columbus)


The Discoveries of America to the Year 1525 by Arthur J Weise 1884

The Saint Lawrence - its Basin & Border-lands, the story of their discovery by Samuel E Dawson (Mythical PreColumbian Discoveries)

The Pre-Columbian Discovery of America by the Northmen by Benjamin Franklin DeCosta 1868

The pre-Columbian voyages of the Welsh to America by Benjamin Franklin DeCosta 1891

The Northmen in Maine by Benjamin Franklin DeCosta 1870

Ancient America by John D Baldwin 1872 (Northmen, Welsh etc)

Early Norse visits to North America by William Henry Babcock 1913

The Cities of the Sun - stories of ancient America founded on historical incidents in the Book of Mormon by Elizabeth Cannon Porter 1911

America not discovered by Columbus by Rasmus B Anderson 1874

An Inglorious Columbus by Edward Vining - Evidence that Hwui Shn and a party of Buddhist monks from Afghanistan discovered America in the fifth century, A.D 1885

The Discovery of America by Chinese Buddhist Priests in the Fifth Century by Charles G Leland 1875

Was America Discovered by the Chinese? article in The Magazine of American History 1892

Fu-Sang, or Who Discovered America (the Chinese) by E Bretschneider Esq. M.D. 1871

The Discovery of America, Volume 1 by John Fiske 1892

The Discovery of America, Volume 2 by John Fiske 1892

Heroes of Discovery in America by Charles Morris 1906 (Leif the Lucky and the Discovery of Vinland)

The Divinity of the Book of Mormon Proven by Archaeology by Louise Palfrey 1908

View of the Hebrews by Ethan Smith 1823 (Congregationalist minister, who argued that Native Americans were descended from the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel)

Some Pre-Columbian Discoveries of America by George R Howell 1893

The Irish in America 1000 Years before Columbus by Martin Mulroy 1906

Prehistoric Structures of Central America by Martin I Townsend 1895 ("Ancient Greek and Roman Scholars knew of the existence of the Western Continent")

Did the Phoenicians Discover America by Thomas Crawford Johnston 1890 (some pages cropped and cut off)

The First Discovery of America and its Early Civilization by Franz Kruger 1863

A Narrative of Travels in the United States of America by William O'Bryan 1836 ("It is also evident that some Greeks discovered America, at least as far back as Alexander the great, if not before, by that stone found as related, page 178 . And perhaps the Greeks had discovered it long before that time, and kept it a secret, as the phcenicians did the tin trade of Cornwall")'



A Popular History of the Discovery of America from Columbus to Franklin by JG Kohl 1865 ("The Norman Eric the Red in Greenland (Anno 982) The Norman Biorn sees the Coast of Labrador (985) The Norman Leif in Vinland (1000) Frisians sail from the Weser to the North (1035) Arabs sail from Lisbon into the Great Ocean (1147) Prince Madoc sails from Wales westward (1170) Vivaldi and Doria sail from Genoa into the Ocean (1284) Marco Polo travels in China (1280-1295) Spaniards visit the Canary Islands since 1326 Madeira discovered by the Portuguese (1420) The Azores visited by the
Portuguese since 1432 Cape Verde discovered by the Portuguese (1446))

Pre-historic Races of the United States of America by John Wells Foster 1874

Divers Voyages Touching the Discovery of America by Richard Hakluyt 1850

Early Voyages to America by James P Baxter 1889

The Icelandic Discoverers of America by Marie Shipley 1887

Erik the Red, Leif the Lucky and other pre-Columbian discoverers of America by George P Upton 1911

The English Rediscovery and Colonization of America by John B Shipley 1891 (Suppressed Historical Facts)

Did the Norsemen erect the Newport Round Tower? (Rhode Island) by Barthinius Wick 1911

The Norse Discovery of America by Andrew Fossum 1918

The Early Peopling of America by John B Newman 1848

The Bibliographies of the Pre-Columbian Discoveries of America by Paul Barron Watson 1881

Myvyrian Archaiology, the pre-Columbian Voyages of the Welsh to America by BF DeCosta 1891

A Popular History of the United States, from the First Discovery of the Western Hemisphere by the Northmen to the end of the Civil War, Volume 1 by William Cullen Bryant 1881

A Popular History of the United States, from the First Discovery of the Western Hemisphere by the Northmen to the end of the Civil War, Volume 2 by William Cullen Bryant 1881

A Popular History of the United States, from the First Discovery of the Western Hemisphere by the Northmen to the end of the Civil War, Volume 3 by William Cullen Bryant 1881

The North Americans of Antiquity by John T Short 1880

The Successive Discoveries of America, article in The Dublin Review 1841

Was Middle America Peopled from Asia? by Edward S Morse 1898

The Myths of Mexico and Peru By Lewis Spence 1913

Studies on the Vineland Voyages by Gustav Storm 1889

Leif's House in Vineland by Eben Norton Horsford 1893

Chinese Discovery of America by R Seymour Long 1893

Voyages of the Northmen to America by Edmund Farwell Slafter - 1877

Discovery of America by Northmen by Eben Norton Horsford 1888

The Voyages of the Venetian (Zeno) brothers to the northern seas in the 14th century comprising the latest known accounts of the lost colony of Greenland and of the Northmen in America before Columbus by Richard Henry Major 1873

Notes concerning the Wampanoag tribe of Indians by William Jones Miller 1880

In Northern Mists - Arctic exploration in Early Times, Volume 1 by Fridtjof Nansen 1911

In Northern Mists - Arctic exploration in Early Times, Volume 2 by Fridtjof Nansen 1911

The Finding of Wineland the Good - the History of the Icelandic Discovery of America by Arthur Middleton Reeves 1890

Antiquities of America - the First Inhabitants of Central America and the Discovery of New-England by the Northmen 500 years before Columbus by A Davis 1846

History of the New World called America by Edward John Payne 1892

America Discovered in the Tenth Century by Charles C Rafn 1838

The First Discoverers of America, article in Putnam's Monthly 1854

A lecture on the Discovery of America by the Northmen 500 years before Columbus by A Davis 1839

The History of the Discovery and Settlement of America by William Robertson 1855

Historical Account of Discoveries and Travels in North America, Volume 1 by Hugh Murray 1829

Historical Account of Discoveries and Travels in North America, Volume 2 by Hugh Murray 1829

An Account of Discoveries in the West Until 1519 by Conway Robinson 1848

View of the Origin and Migrations of the Polynesian Nation, demonstrating their ancient discovery and progressive settlement of the continent of America by John Dunmore Lang 1834

A History of the Character and Achievements of the Socalled Christopher Columbus by Aaron Goodrich 1874

Remarks on the Voyages to the Northern Hemisphere, Ascribed to the Zeni of Venice by CC Zahrtmann 1835

Recent Discoveries Attributed to Early Man in America by Ales Hrdlicka 1918

Book of Mormon (The Book of Mormon describes God's dealings with three heavily populated, literate, and advanced civilizations in ancient America)

The Ten Tribes of Israel, Or the True History of the North American Indians by Timothy Jenkins 1883

The Ten Tribes of Israel Historically identified with the Aborigines of the Western Hemisphere by Mrs Simon 1836

Cumorah Revisited: Or, "The Book of Mormon" and the Claims of the Mormons by Charles Augustus Shook 1910
"Latter-day Saints tell us further that the Indians were in the habit of using the sacred ejaculation, "Hallelujah," and Jenkins says: "In the Choctaw nation they often sing 'Halleluyah,' intermixed with their lamentations." — The Ten Tribes, p. 132. Elsewhere (p. 144) he informs us that both the Choctaw and Cherokee tribes use the word. The Creeks had a sacred chant, hi-yo-yu or hay-ay-al-gi* The Cherokees employed the sacred, but meaningless, chant, ha-wi-ye-e-hi, in their "Groundhog Dance;" he-e! hay-u-ya han-iwa, etc., was employed by their bear-hunters to attract the bear ; while ha-wi-ye-hy-u-we was a part of one of their baby songs. Hayuya falling on the ears of an Englishman might be mistaken for "hallelujah." Lastly, the words for "Jehovah" (Yohewah in the Cherokee, Che-ho-wa in the Choctaw, and Chihufa in the Creek) are not original words at all, and the same may be said for Shiloh, Canaan and other Old Testament names, but are simply the efforts of these tribes to pronounce our Scriptural terms."

Light and Truth: Collected from the Bible and Ancient and Modern History by Robert Benjamin Lewis 1844
"In their sacred dances, these authors assure us the Indians sing "Halleluyah Yohewah;"—praise to Jah Jehovah. When they return victorious from their wars, they sing, Yo-he-wah; having been by tradition taught to ascribe the praise to God. The same authors assure us, the Indians make great use of the initials of the mysterious name of God, like the tetragrammation of the ancient Hebrews; or the four radical letters which form the name of Jehovah; as the Indians pronounce thus, Y-O-He-wah." p. 261


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