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What two main factors prompted Norse westward exploration c.982–1020?
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1.1.112 cards
What two main factors prompted Norse westward exploration c.982–1020?
Population pressure and lack of arable land in Scandinavia/Iceland, plus advances in shipbuilding (the longship and knarr) enabling open-ocean voyages.
Define population pressure as it applies to Norse Iceland.
Too many people for the amount of farmable (arable) land available, worsened by land being split between sons through inheritance.
What is a knarr, and how does it differ from a longship?
A wider, deeper-hulled Norse ship built for cargo and long ocean voyages, unlike the narrower, shallower longship built for speed and coastal raiding.
What is clinker-building?
A Norse shipbuilding method where planks overlap and are riveted together, giving a hull that is light, strong, and flexible in rough seas.
Who was Erik the Red and what did he do?
A Norse leader (c.950–1003) exiled from Iceland c.982 who explored and then led settlers to found the first Norse colony in Greenland c.985.
Who was Leif Erikson and what did he do?
Erik the Red's son (c.970–1018) who led an expedition further west c.1000 CE, becoming the first known European to reach North America (Vinland).
What are the Icelandic sagas, and why are they important but limited as sources?
Medieval Icelandic texts (e.g. Saga of Erik the Red) recording Norse exploration; important because they are the main surviving account, but limited because they were written down 200–250 years after the events from oral tradition.
Process: how do you answer a Paper 1 Q1 (content) question well?
Identify specific content from BOTH sources, explain what each shows, and explicitly connect that content back to the inquiry question.
Process: how do you analyse a source's context (Q2 skill)?
Consider its origin (who made it, what type of source), purpose (why it was made), and time/place — then explain how these shape what the source can reliably be used for.
Why does timing matter when using a saga as a source for events in 982 CE?
Because it was recorded centuries later based on oral tradition, so it is more reliable for showing how later Norse society remembered events than for precise factual detail.
What did Erik the Red name the island he settled, and why?
Greenland — a deliberately attractive name used to recruit settlers to a mostly ice-covered island.
Compare push and pull factors in Norse exploration.
Push factors are problems at home driving people to leave (lack of arable land, population pressure); pull factors are attractions abroad (empty land, resources) that drew them onward.
1.1.212 cards
Medieval Warm Period
A period of milder-than-usual North Atlantic climate, roughly 950–1250 CE, that reduced sea ice and lengthened sailing and growing seasons.
Why does the Medieval Warm Period count as a 'condition' rather than a cause?
Because it made Norse voyaging possible by removing obstacles like sea ice, but it did not by itself make anyone sail — human decisions and skill were still needed.
Erik the Red
Led Norse settlers from Iceland to Greenland around 985 CE after being exiled from Iceland for manslaughter.
Leif Erikson
Erik the Red's son; sailed further west around 1000 CE and reached Vinland, drawn by timber and a milder climate.
Vinland
Norse name for the North American coast Leif Erikson reached around 1000 CE, likely near modern Newfoundland; valued for timber and wild grapes.
Route Norway to Greenland
Norway → Faroe Islands → Iceland (settled from 874 CE) → Greenland (settled from c.985 CE) → Vinland (reached c.1000 CE).
Greenland's environmental limits
Fjords offered good grazing land for livestock, but grain farming stayed marginal and there was almost no native timber.
Vinland's environmental advantages
Milder climate than Greenland, wild grapes, and valuable timber — but too far away to supply reliably long-term.
Compare Greenland and Vinland as environments
Greenland: grazing-friendly but marginal for farming, no timber. Vinland: richer in timber and crops, but distant and exposed to risk from the Skrælingjar.
Paper 1 Q1 — what it tests
Explain how the content of two sources can be used to answer the inquiry question [6 marks]; needs specific detail from each source explicitly linked to the question.
How to read a saga extract for Q1 content
Identify a precise detail (e.g. mention of wild grapes) then explain what it shows about the inquiry question, rather than just summarising the source's topic.
Why Greenland lacked grain but Iceland/Norway didn't rely on grazing alone
Greenland's climate was colder and more marginal even during the Medieval Warm Period, so its window for successful grain farming was far narrower than Norway's.
1.1.312 cards
What does 'Skrælingjar' mean?
The Norse term for the Indigenous peoples (Inuit and other groups) the Norse encountered in Greenland and Vinland.
Where is L'Anse aux Meadows and why does it matter?
A Norse site on the northern tip of Newfoundland, Canada — the only confirmed Norse settlement in North America, proving the sagas' claims about Vinland.
What archaeological finds at L'Anse aux Meadows prove Norse presence?
Turf-walled buildings in Norse style, an iron smithy, a bronze cloak pin, and a spindle whorl for spinning wool.
How did the Norse produce food in Greenland?
Pastoral farming (cattle, sheep, goats) on limited grassland, supplemented by hunting seal and caribou and fishing.
Why couldn't the Norse rely only on farming in Greenland?
The growing season was short and grassland scarce, so hunting and fishing filled the gap crops and livestock could not.
What does 'Vinland' mean and what resource does the name point to?
Land named by the Norse, likely for wild grapes or berries found there — suggesting a much milder environment than Greenland.
What do the Vinland sagas record about Skrælingjar contact?
Both trade (the Norse swapping red cloth and dairy for furs) and violent conflict (skirmishes, including the killing of Þorvald Eiriksson).
Name the two main sagas describing Vinland.
The Saga of Erik the Red and The Saga of the Greenlanders (Grænlendinga saga) — both written down in Iceland over 200 years after the events.
Why must a historian be cautious using the Vinland sagas as sources?
They were composed and written down centuries after c.1000, from oral tradition — details may be altered, added, or dramatized over time.
Compare saga evidence and archaeological evidence for Vinland.
Sagas give narrative detail (names, events, emotions) but are late and oral; archaeology (L'Anse aux Meadows) gives physical proof of presence but no story of why contact ended.
What does the abandonment of L'Anse aux Meadows after only a few years suggest?
The Skrælingjar's numbers and resistance, plus the site's distance from Greenland, made permanent settlement too costly to sustain.
For Paper 1 Q2 (context), what four features of a source should you consider?
Origin (who made it), purpose (why), time (when), and place (where) — because these shape what the source can and cannot reliably tell a historian.
Topic 1.1 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Norse exploration (c.982–1020)
History (2028+) exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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