Logo of the Project Leif 2000 LEIF ERIKSSON MONUMENTS PAGES
(& other Vikings)
by Peter van der Krogt

ÞORFINNUR KARLSEFNI — GUÐRÍÐUR ÞORBJARNARDÓTTIR— SNORRI ÞORFINNSSON
This website shows the monuments erected all over the world to honor Leif Eriksson and the other Vikings, who were the first Europeans to set foot on North America.

Included are(*):
  • Statues
  • Sculptures
  • Plaquettes

Additions are welcome!

Eriksson Monuments

See also the page with Christopher Columbus Monuments

First Europeans:
  • 986 A.D. who saw North America:
    Bjarni Herjólfsson
  • 1000 A.D. to set foot on North America:
    Leifur Eiríksson
  • 1003? A.D. who died in North America:
    Þorvald Eiríksson
  • 1004? A.D. who was born in North America:
    Snorri Þorfinnsson
Reading Icelandic names:
Þ, þ = th
Ð ð = dh

The first Viking settlers in America

Iceland was a stepping-stone for westward voyagers. Among them were Eiríkur Þorvaldsson (Eirík rauða or Erik the Red), who left his farm Eiríksstaðir near Búðardalur in Dalasýsla, west Iceland, to found the Viking settlement in Greenland. Eiríkur's son Leifur Eiríksson (in English literature more commonly known als Leif Eriksson, or Leif the Lucky), born around 960 A.D., had heard of the accounts of the chance sighting of land to the west of Greenland by the Icelandic trader Bjarni Herjólfsson in 986. In the year 1000 Leifur launched an expedition to explore these coasts. He reached land at a place he named Helluland ("Flatstone Land," namely Baffin Island), then sailed down the coast to Markland ("Wood Land," the south of Labrador). Later he wintered in a place which he named Vínland ("Wineland," Newfoundland or more likely the southern regions of the Gulf of St. Lawrence) after grapes he found growing there.
Leifur's brother, Þorvald Eiríksson, made the next voyage to the new-found territory. During a conflict with the Skrælings (the natives) Þorvald was killed. His men buried him in Vinland. Þorvald was the first European we know to die and to be buried in America.
The Philadelphia statue of Þorfinnur Karlsefni on an Icelandic stampA number of other expeditions were made over the next twenty years. An other son of Erik the Red, Þorsteinn Eiríksson, died of a fever on the crossing. His widow Guðríður Þorbjarnardóttir, from Laugarbrekka on the Snæfellsnes peninsula, remarried Þorfinnur Karlsefni Þórðarson (the nickname means, literally, 'Makings of a Man'), son of Þórður Snorrason and Þórunn, and they spent three years in North America. Þorfinnur took 160 people with him and pressed even farther south to explore the New World, reaching a place which he named Hóp and which has been argued to be the site of modern New York.
Snorri Þorfinnsson, the first child of European descent born in America, detail of statue in OttawaGuðríður gave birth to a son during their stay and they named him Snorri, the first child of European descent to be born in North America, probably around 1004 in L'Anse aux Meadows. When the Vikings abandoned their attempt at settlement, Þorfinnur and Guðríður settled in Glaumbær in Skagafjord. After her husband's death, Guðríður made a pilgrimage to Rome, making her the most widely travelled woman in the world then and one of the first-ever transatlantic travellers.
N.B. On the genealogy website of Dagmar Þórisdóttir the relations are different: Þorfinnur and Guðríður had a son Þorbjörn (also Björn) Þorfinnsson; and Guðríður had another son from an unknown father: Snorri Þórðarson. (Dagmar used a very complicated genealogy program, you can start here, cf. Pétur Stefánsson's genealogy).

Identical statues of Guðríður and Snorri are in her birthplace Laugarbrekka, in Glaumbær and in Ottawa. A statue of Þorfinnur Karlsefni is in Philadelphia.


Borrowed mainly from

Last updates

9 October 2006: 21 monuments: one new Bremen.
12 March 2005: The 20th Eriksson monument added: Minot, N.D.
10 February 2005: Photo on this introduction page altered.
14 August 2004: Photo added to Glaumbær. New photo: Seattle.
24 February 2004: Updated with new photos: Cambridge and Cleveland.
7 July 2003: 19 Eriksson and 5 other monuments. Added: 3 Eriksson monuments in Keflavik, Cambridge and Waltham; updated those in Reykjavik, Eiríksstaðir, and Boston; concerning the monuments for Guðríður and Snorri the one in Laugarbrekka updated, and one new monument for Þorfinnur Karlsefni in Reykjavik added.
20/24 April 2003: 16 Eriksson and 4 other monuments. Added: the monuments for Guðríður and Snorri (3) and Þorfinnur Karlsefni (1). (24 April: I found out that the Philadelphia Karlsefni monument was originally listed as an Eriksson statue; photo to Milwaukee added).
19 April 2003: 17 Monuments: 1 New: Búðardalur; New photo: Duluth.
2 April 2003: Photos added to Seattle, Los Angeles, and Duluth. New photo for St. Paul.
26 March 2003: Corrections at the Trondheim and Qassiarsuk pages.
18 November 2001: 16 Monuments: 4 New: Cleveland, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, and New York. Photos added to Trondheim.
3 November 2001: First day of this website. 12 monuments.


Name variants:
Leif Eriksson * Leif Erikson * Leif Ericsson * Leif Ericson * Leif Erickson * Leiv Eiriksson * Leiv Eriksson den Hepne * Leif the Lucky * Leif den Lykkelige * Leifur Eiriksson * Leifr Eirkisson

Bjarni Herjulfsson * Biarni Heriolfsson

Thorfinnur Karlsefni * Thorfinn Karlsefni

Gudrid * Gudridur Thorbjarnardottir


(*) not included are oil paintings, frescos etc. inside buildings.


Who am I? Go to my homepage Compiled by
Peter van der Krogt
e-mail: peter@vanderkrogt.net

Since 2 November 2001