news-1701

sabung ayam online

yakinjp

yakinjp

rtp yakinjp

slot thailand

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakin jp

yakinjp id

maujp

maujp

maujp

maujp

sabung ayam online

sabung ayam online

judi bola online

sabung ayam online

judi bola online

slot mahjong ways

slot mahjong

sabung ayam online

judi bola

live casino

sabung ayam online

judi bola

live casino

SGP Pools

slot mahjong

sabung ayam online

slot mahjong

SLOT THAILAND

sumbar-238000396

sumbar-238000397

sumbar-238000398

sumbar-238000399

sumbar-238000400

sumbar-238000401

sumbar-238000402

sumbar-238000403

sumbar-238000404

sumbar-238000405

sumbar-238000406

sumbar-238000407

sumbar-238000408

sumbar-238000409

sumbar-238000410

project 338000001

project 338000002

project 338000003

project 338000004

project 338000005

project 338000006

project 338000007

project 338000008

project 338000009

project 338000010

project 338000011

project 338000012

project 338000013

project 338000014

project 338000015

project 338000016

project 338000017

project 338000018

project 338000019

project 338000020

trending 438000001

trending 438000002

trending 438000003

trending 438000004

trending 438000005

trending 438000006

trending 438000007

trending 438000008

trending 438000009

trending 438000010

trending 438000011

trending 438000012

trending 438000013

trending 438000014

trending 438000015

trending 438000016

trending 438000017

trending 438000018

trending 438000019

trending 438000020

posting 538000001

posting 538000002

posting 538000003

posting 538000004

posting 538000005

posting 538000006

posting 538000007

posting 538000008

posting 538000009

posting 538000010

posting 538000011

posting 538000012

posting 538000013

posting 538000014

posting 538000015

posting 538000016

posting 538000017

posting 538000018

posting 538000019

posting 538000020

news 638000001

news 638000002

news 638000003

news 638000004

news 638000005

news 638000006

news 638000007

news 638000008

news 638000009

news 638000010

news 638000011

news 638000012

news 638000013

news 638000014

news 638000015

news 638000016

news 638000017

news 638000018

news 638000019

news 638000020

banjir 710000001

banjir 710000002

banjir 710000003

banjir 710000004

banjir 710000005

banjir 710000006

banjir 710000007

banjir 710000008

banjir 710000009

banjir 710000010

banjir 710000011

banjir 710000012

banjir 710000013

banjir 710000014

banjir 710000015

banjir 710000016

banjir 710000017

banjir 710000018

banjir 710000019

banjir 710000020

news-1701

Date: 7th – 21st July.

Themes: The impact of Norse culture upon Scotland and the Scottish Islands considered under different aspects: geographical, antiquarian, historical, social, economy and literary.

Patron: There was no Patron.

Organising Committee:

Dr. W. Douglas Simpson, University of Aberdeen; Mr. Andrew O’Dell, University of Aberdeen; Mr. A.C. Davis, British Council in Aberdeen.

National Representatives:

Denmark: Prof. Johannes Brøndsted, Prof. Christian Matras.

Iceland: Dr. Kristján Eldjárn, Prof. Einar Ólafur Sveinsson.

Ireland: Prof. S.P. Ó Ríordáin.

Sweden: Dr. Gösta Berg, Prof. Birger Nerman.

UnitedKingdom: R. L. S. Bruce-Mitford, Dr. W. Douglas Simpson.

It is not certain if national representatives  actually existed from the start. They do not appear in the proceedings of the first Congress – but these are mentioned in the proceedings of the second one.

Delegates of the Congress:

Denmark: Dr. O. Widding, Jutland, compiler of Danish dialect and Old Norse Dictionaries; Dr. Christian Matras (Faroes), Lecturer in Faroese, Copenhagen University; Dr. Ragnar Knudsen, teacher, Risskov, Denmark, philologist, folklorist and historian.

England: Mr. E.O.G. Turville-Petre, M.A.,B.Litt., Reader in Ancient Icelandic, Oxford University; Professor A.S.C. Ross, Professor of English Language, Birmingham University.

Iceland: Professor Einar Ól. Sveinsson, Professor of Icelandic Literature in the University of Iceland, Reykjavík; Professor Jón Helgason, Professor of Icelandic in Copenhagen University.

Norway: Professor Haakon Shetelig, Historical Museum of Antiquities, Bergen, Norway, Dr. Per Thorsen, Bergen, secondary school teacher (modern languages), investigator of Scandinavian elements in English and Scots, Mr. Haakon Hamre, Lecturer in Old Norse, Bergen University (son-in-law of Professor Shetelig).

Ireland: Dr. J.H. Delargy, Director of the Irish Folklore Commission, University College, Dublin.

Scotland: Principal T.M. Taylor, Principal of Aberdeen University; Mrs. Taylor General Sir Ronald Adam, Chairman of the British Council; Dr. A.O. Curle , formerly Director of the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland; Mr. T.M.Y. Manson, M.A., of the Local Committee. Mr. G.W. Russell of the Local Committee and former Town Clerk of Lerwick; Professor J.D. Mackie, Historiographer Royal of Scotland, and Professor of Scottish History and Literature, Glasgow University; Dr. A.B. Taylor, Assistant Secretary to the Department of Health for Scotland, recent translator of the Orkneyinga Saga; Mr. Stewart Cruden, Inspector of Ancient Monuments for Scotland, Ministry of Works; Mrs. Murison, wife of the Editor of the Scottish National Dictionary; Mr. George Scott Moncrieff, Scottish descriptive author; Dr. W.T.H. Williamson, Lecturer in Soil Science, Aberdeen University (native of Reawick, Shetland); Mr. A.C. Davis, M.A., Area Officer for the North of Scotland, the British Council, Aberdeen; professor Angus McIntosh, Professorof Linguistics, Edinburgh University; Mr. H. Harvey Wood, Representative for Scotland of the British Council, Edinburgh; Miss M. Macgregor, Matron, the Bruce Hostel; Mr. Gerrie, free-lance press photographer; Dr. E.F. Halvorsen (Norwegian), Lecturer in Norse, Glasgow University; Dr. W. Douglas Simpson, Librarian, Aberdeen University. Mr. E.S. Reid Tait, of the Local Committee, Shetland bibliographer and text editor; Professor Croft Dickinson, Fraser Professor of Scottish History and Palaeography, Edinburgh University; Mr. David Murison, Editor of the Scottish National Dictionary; Mr. A.O. O’Dell, Reader in Geography, Aberdeen University, and author of The Historical Geography of the Shetland Islands; Dr. F.T. Wainwright, Lecturer in Mediaeval History, University College, Dundee; Mr. R.W. Munro, representative of the Scotsman newspaper; Mr. John Stewart, teacher in Skene Square School, Aberdeen (native of Whalsay, Shetland).

Sweden: Professor Dag Strömbäck, of the Chair of Folk-Lore Research, Uppsala University, Sweden: Mrs. Strömbäck; Dr. Oscar Lundberg, retired Head of the Foreign Department of Uppsala; University Library, Sweden; Miss Asa Sjödin, Swedish folklorist, ethnologist and traveller

Dr. Gösta Berg, Director of the Nordic Museum, Stockholm; Mr. Erik Frykman, University of Uppsala, reappointed while in Lerwick to the post of Lecturer in Swedish at Aberdeen; University, which he held temporarily from 1946 to 1948.

Excursions:

Jarlshof, Scalloway, Eshaness, Broch of Clickhimin, Broch of Mousa, Stanydale, Kirkwall.

Sponsors:

The British Council

The University of Aberdeen, with the cooperation of the Universities of Hull, Leeds and Sheffield

County Council of Shetland

The Town Council of Lerwick.

Notes:

After a successful Congress it was unanimously decided that The Viking Congress should become a permanent institution with a certain number of delegates invited by national representatives or contact persons.

Congress Diary:

The idea of bringing together at Lerwick a representative team of British and Scandinavian scholars to discuss, in its broadest aspects, the whole question of the Norse occupation of the Scottish islands originated in the year 1946 in the mind of Mr. Robert Bruce, a graduate of Aberdeen University, who at that time was Area Officer in Aberdeen of the British Council. Early in 1948 Mr. Bruce was transferred to an overseas post and the project came to naught: but the idea of the Scoto-Scandinavian Conference, as it was at first called, was taken up afresh and vigorously pursued by his successor, Mr. A. C. Davis.

Early in this second stage the co-operation of the University of Aberdeen was sought by the British Council and very cordially given. As a result of their joint efforts, the Viking Congress duly took place in Lerwick from the 7th to the 21st of July, 1950. The title of the Congress was chosen by the distinguished Scottish author, Eric Linklater.The proposal to gather so large and distinguished a company at the remotest apex of the British Islands was certainly a bold one. It was not received with favour in all quarters. There were those who urged the impracticability of holding the Conference in the far northern town and who conceived that the only proper place for it was a metropolitan centre. Others again thought of the Congress purely as a gathering of museumists whose requirements would be satisfied by looking at exhibits through the panels of glass cases. The promoters of the Congress had a wider vision and a more vivid imagination than those of such doubters. They did not conceive of the Congress as a purely antiquarian gathering but as one of scholars drawn from broad fields of research who should consider the Norse occupation of the Islands and of large tracts of Northern Scotland in all its bearings: geographical, antiquarian, historical, social, economic, and literary. And they were determined that our Scandinavian guests should be shown something of the actual lands in which the Vikings settled. Their minds were fired by an eloquent passage in one of the books of the late Professor A. W. Brøgger―who, to the great regret of the Congress was prevented at the last moment by illness from attending―in which he described the feelings that allured those ancient wanderers from the Scandinavian countries to our Northern shores and islands:―

Why did not the Norwegian emigrants journey more to the south, to warmer countries and better conditions? Why did they content themselves with the Shetlands, Orkneys, and Hebrides, and why, at a later date, did they seek even harder conditions in the Faroes and Iceland?

The answer to this is easily found. Some of the emigrants of olden times actually did make their homes in southern lands, become freeholders both in England and France. In those cases, however, they came under other forms of law in countries where they lost their racial identity and disappeared swamped in an alien race. As a matter of fact, only a very small percentage chose this course. The choice of northerly regions by the majority was due to fundamental and primitive causes. It was the craving for surroundings where something of the old was to be found in their new activities. They asked for sea and fjord, mountain and hill, the fowling cliffs and sealing grounds. They needed the pastures, meadows, and heather, to which they had been accustomed in the land of their birth, and the light summer nights which brooded softly over farm and field at home in Norway. No sentimental spirit of homesickness lay at the back of all this, but the simple fact that the whole of their mentality, fostered by the toil of countless generations before them, was adjusted to a life in which all these things were to be found. All else would be in the nature of transplanting, obliteration, and sacrifice. It would deprive them of the powers which were their inheritance and their greatest asset.

In the organization of the Congress the division of responsibilities, broadly speaking, was that the British Council was concerned with the administrative side and the University with the academic side of the programme. From the moment that the project was first brought to their attention the County Council of Shetland and the Town Council of Lerwick threw themselves into the arrangements with the utmost possible zeal, co-operation and generosity.

The County Council placed at the Congress’s disposal the splendid Bruce Hostel where the members were quartered together in the greatest comfort, and provided free transport for all the land excursions. The Town Council, in addition to entertaining the Congress to lunch on their arrival and giving a civic reception for them, also provided an admirable concert illustrating Shetland folk culture, including the famous Papa Stour Sword Dance, by a team brought over from the islands. The Town Council placed at the Congress’s disposal the Garrison Theatre for those lectures where a lantern was necessary and their very handsome Town Hall for the other sessions of the Congress. To the Town and County Councils, to Mr. W. Thomson, the Convener of the County, and to two successive Provosts of Lerwick―Mr. J. Aitken, who was in the civic chair when the initial arrangements were made, and his successor, Mr. R. A. Anderson― the warm thanks of the British Council and the University of Aberdeen are due.

In a short introductory summary such as this it is obviously quite impossible to acknowledge by name the indebtedness of the Congress to all those in Shetland who laboured with might and main to make it a success and of whose enthusiasm, helpfulness, and abounding hospitality, the members of the Congress will retain an indelible impression. It would, however, be a gross omission not to mention the outstanding assistance rendered to the Congress, from the moment when the project was first mooted, by Mr. T. M. Y. Manson, editor of the Shetland News. His great services to the Congress and his outstanding qualifications as an authority on the historical aspects of the Norse Earldom of the Isles have since been fitly recognized by the University, which, in 1951, conferred upon him the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Laws.

This Introductory Note is followed by a daily record of the sessions of the Congress as they actually took place. Certain small alterations were inevitable in the programme as drafted beforehand and contained in the Congress Handbook. In the body of the present volume will be found summaries at greater or lesser length of the principal papers delivered. It should be stated that Dr. Linklater’s address on the Battle of Clontarf, delivered to the most crowded session of the Congress, has been published by him separately.

All the meetings of the Congress were open to the public and all present were invited freely to join in the discussions that followed the readings of the various papers. One of the things that most pleased the visiting members of the Congress was the revelation that there exists in Shetland a body of scholarly men and women who were able to take part on an equal footing with their learned guests in discussions and arguments ranging over abstruse questions of archaeology, history, Norse and Scottish law, economics, philology, literature and folklore.

The University of Aberdeen and the Shetland County Library combined in making available to the members of the Congress, in the Bruce Hostel, an extensive collection of books dealing with the subjects of the sessions.

The Congress was particularly fortunate in its weather. There was only one really bad day, which led to the abandonment of the proposed visit to the Northern Islands, though a shorter voyage was substituted later on. In their various excursions round the islands the members of the Congress were almost literally overwhelmed by the hospitality which they everywhere received both from local institutions and other such organizations and from private individuals. One of the most successful items in this connection was the opportunity which was given to our Scandinavian visitors to become guests in the homes of farmers and crofters in the parish of Tingwall, and thus to learn something, not only of the agricultural routine, but also of the Shetland dialect with its strong traces of the old Scandinavian languages.

At the civic reception held in the Town Hall on Wednesday, July 12, the British Council was represented by its Chairman, General Sir Ronald Adam, himself an honorary graduate of Aberdeen University; and the University of Aberdeen by its Principal, Dr. Thomas Murray Taylor; both of whom travelled to Shetland specially for the purpose. The Congress was also attended during part of its proceedings by Sir Arthur J. F. W. Nicolson of Fetlar, Lord Lieutenant of Shetland; and by Joseph Grimond, M.P. for Orkney and Shetland.

The list of the distinguished scholars who accepted the invitation of the British Council and the University of Aberdeen to attend the Congress and the contents of this volume will sufficiently indicate the great success that attended their joint venture. The British Council and the University are satisfied that the Congress resulted in an important addition to our knowledge of the Norse influence in Scotland and that it provided a notable impetus towards co-operation between the scholars of Britain and the Scandinavian countries. It is a source of particular satisfaction to the University and to the British Council that a return visit of the Congress to Scandinavia was held in 1953.

A. C. Davis

Andrew C. O’Dell

W. Douglas Simpson

Congress Proceedings:

W. Douglas Simpson 1954. The Viking Congress, Lerwick, July 1950. Edinburgh.

A photograph taken on the steps of the Bruce Hostel, Lerwick.

FRONT ROW – left to right:– Professor Dag Strömbäck; Mrs. Strömbäck; Professor Haakon Shetelig; Principal T.M. Taylor; Mrs. Taylor; General Sir Ronald Adam; Dr. A.O. Curle; Professor Einar Ól. Sveinsson; Mr.T.M.Y. Manson. SECOND AND THIRD ROWS, left to right:– Mr. G.W. Russell; Dr. O. Widding, Jutland; Dr. Per Thorsen, Bergen; Professor Jón Helgason; Dr. Oscar Lundberg; Professor J.D. Mackie; Miss Asa Sjödin; Mr. Haakon Hamre; Dr. A.B. Taylor; Mr. Stewart Cruden; Mrs. Murison.

FOURTH AND FIFTH ROWS, left to right:– Mr. George Scott Moncrieff; Dr. W.T.H. Williamson; Mr. A.C. Davis; professor Angus McIntosh; Dr. Gösta Berg; Mr. H. Harvey Wood; Mr. E.O.G. Turville-Petre; Miss M. Macgregor; Mr. Gerrie; Dr. E.F. Halvorsen; Dr. W. Douglas Simpson.

SIXTH AND SEVENTH ROWS, left to right:– Mr. E.S. Reid Tait; Professor Croft Dickinson; Mr. David Murison; Mr. A.O. O’Dell; Dr. F.T. Wainwright; Professor A.S.C. Ross; Dr. S.H. Delargy; Dr. Christian Matras; Dr. Ragnar Knudsen; Mr. R.W. Munro; Mr. John Stewart; Mr. Erik Frykman.

Contents:

INTRODUCTIONIX
MEMBERS OF CONGRESSXV
PROGRAMME OF MEETINGSXVII

THE VIKING CONGRESS IN LERWICK, JULY 1950. Haakon Shetelig, translated by Inge Holbek

XXI 

THE SHETLAND ISLANDS. A. C. O’Dell1
JARLSHOF. A. O. Curle9
THE BROCH OF CLICKHIMIN. W. Douglas Simpson19

THE DATE AND PURPOSE OF THE BROCHS. B. H. St. J. O’Neil

46
A NOTE ON THE STRUCTURAL FEATURES OF THE BROCHS. Angus Graham53

HISTORICAL PROBLEMS OF SHETLAND TO THE END OF THE OLD EARLDOM. T. M. Y. Manson

58

UDAL LAW AND GOVERNMENT IN SHETLAND. John Stewart84
SHETLAND PLACE-NAMES IN THE SAGAS. A. B. Taylor112
THE VIKING MOVEMENTS. Haakon Shetelig130
ODAL RIGHTS AND FEUDAL WRONGS. William Croft Dickinson142

SHETLAND FOLK TALES. John Nicolson

161

THE CASTLES OF SHETLAND. W. Douglas Simpson

175

NEOLITHIC TEMPLE, STANYDALE, PARISH OF SANDSTING, SHETLAND. Charles S. T. Calder

184

THE NORSE IN THE HEBRIDES. Sir Lindsay Scott.

189
SOILS AND HISTORY. W. T. H. Williamson216

ON THE SHETLAND SEA LANGUAGE AS A SOURCE OF OLD NORSE LITERATURE Oskar Lundberg

221

THE THIRD NORN DIALECT―THAT OF CAITHNESS. Per Thorsen230

VIKING MILITARY ORGANIZATION AND THE DANISH TRÆLLEBORGS. Ragnar Knudsen

239

SCOTS SPEECH IN SHETLAND. David Murison255

ORKNEY-SHETLAND-ICELAND. Einar Ól. Sveinsson

261

ST. MAGNUS CATHEDRAL. Hugh Marwick

284
MAESHOWE. Hugh Marwick286

SKARABRAE. Hugh Marwick

288
THE SHETLAND BOAT. Charles and Duncan Sandison291
news-1701

sabung ayam online

yakinjp

yakinjp

rtp yakinjp

slot thailand

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakin jp

yakinjp id

maujp

maujp

maujp

maujp

slot mahjong

SGP Pools

slot mahjong

sabung ayam online

slot mahjong

SLOT THAILAND

article 888000081

article 888000082

article 888000083

article 888000084

article 888000085

article 888000086

article 888000087

article 888000088

article 888000089

article 888000090

article 888000091

article 888000092

article 888000093

article 888000094

article 888000095

article 888000096

article 888000097

article 888000098

article 888000099

article 888000100

cuaca 898100126

cuaca 898100127

cuaca 898100128

cuaca 898100129

cuaca 898100130

cuaca 898100131

cuaca 898100132

cuaca 898100133

cuaca 898100134

cuaca 898100135

cuaca 898100136

cuaca 898100137

cuaca 898100138

cuaca 898100139

cuaca 898100140

cuaca 898100141

cuaca 898100142

cuaca 898100143

cuaca 898100144

cuaca 898100145

cuaca 898100146

cuaca 898100147

cuaca 898100148

cuaca 898100149

cuaca 898100150

cuaca 898100151

cuaca 898100152

cuaca 898100153

cuaca 898100154

cuaca 898100155

cuaca 898100156

cuaca 898100157

cuaca 898100158

cuaca 898100159

cuaca 898100160

cuaca 898100161

cuaca 898100162

cuaca 898100163

cuaca 898100164

cuaca 898100165

cuaca 898100166

cuaca 898100167

cuaca 898100168

cuaca 898100169

cuaca 898100170

cuaca 898100171

cuaca 898100172

cuaca 898100173

cuaca 898100174

cuaca 898100175

article 710000151

article 710000152

article 710000153

article 710000154

article 710000155

article 710000156

article 710000157

article 710000158

article 710000159

article 710000160

article 710000161

article 710000162

article 710000163

article 710000164

article 710000165

article 710000166

article 710000167

article 710000168

article 710000169

article 710000170

article 710000171

article 710000172

article 710000173

article 710000174

article 710000175

article 710000176

article 710000177

article 710000178

article 710000179

article 710000180

article 710000181

article 710000182

article 710000183

article 710000184

article 710000185

article 710000186

article 710000187

article 710000188

article 710000189

article 710000190

article 710000191

article 710000192

article 710000193

article 710000194

article 710000195

article 710000196

article 710000197

article 710000198

article 710000199

article 710000200

psda 438000036

psda 438000037

psda 438000038

psda 438000039

psda 438000040

psda 438000041

psda 438000042

psda 438000043

psda 438000044

psda 438000045

psda 438000046

psda 438000047

psda 438000048

psda 438000049

psda 438000050

psda 438000051

psda 438000052

psda 438000053

psda 438000054

psda 438000055

psda 438000056

psda 438000057

psda 438000058

psda 438000059

psda 438000060

psda 438000061

psda 438000062

psda 438000063

psda 438000064

psda 438000065

psda 438000066

psda 438000067

psda 438000068

psda 438000069

psda 438000070

psda 438000071

psda 438000072

psda 438000073

psda 438000074

psda 438000075

psda 438000076

psda 438000077

psda 438000078

psda 438000079

psda 438000080

psda 438000081

psda 438000082

psda 438000083

psda 438000084

psda 438000085

psda 438000086

psda 438000087

psda 438000088

psda 438000089

psda 438000090

psda 438000091

psda 438000092

psda 438000093

psda 438000094

psda 438000095

psda 438000096

psda 438000097

psda 438000098

psda 438000099

psda 438000100

psda 438000101

psda 438000102

psda 438000103

psda 438000104

psda 438000105

psda 438000106

psda 438000107

psda 438000108

psda 438000109

news-1701