Swedish Press May 2008 Issue

In the May'08 issue of Swedish Press you can read Canadian Bob Cox’s thoughtful and fun LastWord about his Swedish Culture Shock.
When the Vikings wanted to tell us something, they had to do it in stone. In this issue we also tell you about these messages in the form of runes and about a runestone safari in Sweden. True fans will go to great lengths to check out runes and there are many discoveries to be made.
In the hills of Colombia in South America there are many stone monuments that date back to centuries before the Spanish conquest of the New World. A few of them look very much like the prehistoric representatives of the God Thor that have been found in Iceland. One of the stone monuments is especially interesting because its headdress features what appears to be runic inscriptions. Skeptics have suggested that the runes could have been carved by modern Scandinavian tourists, but it is unlikely as they are evident on the photographs of the monument from as early as 1863. Similar Viking graffiti has been found on the stone lions in Venice and here it has been verified as authentic carvings by Vikings.
Just like it took many centuries to prove without any doubt that the Vikings reached the American continent, it could take a long time to produce the ultimate proof that the Vikings actually also reached Mexico and Columbia in South America, a thesis launched by several scholars.
According to the Sagas, Ari Marson and his eleven ships never reached Greenland because they were blown off course, but they reached a land where they were "much respected" by the inhabitants.
The Swedish-born Mexican researcher, Gustavo Nelin feels that the description of the "god" Quetzalcoatl, who is said to have appeared around the year 1000, as a middle-aged white man, with long red hair and a grizzled beard, sounds very much like what Ari Marson must have looked like.
Add to that that he is sometimes depicted wearing a sort of medieval clothing favored by the Norse, that he taught the inhabitants to use metal and argued against human sacrifice and it sounds just like a Chris-tianized Norseman. The word Quetzalcoatl means "flying serpent" and that is just what the Vikings called their ships.
Some of the First Nations people in the Queen Charlotte Islands in British Colum-bia are blue-eyed and fair-haired as are the Mandan Indians in Minnesota. Both people have legends similar to the Columbians, of Viking-like white men with beards arriving on their shores and settling down.
Thor Heyerdahl in the book No Boun-daries claims that the Vinlanders lived pri-mitively and left few traces of their existence behind them. Nevertheless Heyerdahl was a true believer of a wider presence of Vikings in North America and he even came to the defence of the much questioned Vinland Map, and such “Norse” artifacts as the Kensington runestone and the mysterious stone tower in Newport R.I..
I have not taken a stand on this issue. But I continue to find the subject truly fascinating and am constantly on the search for more evidence.
Have a nice May!
Anders


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