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قراءة كتاب Capitals of the Northlands Tales of Ten Cities

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Capitals of the Northlands
Tales of Ten Cities

Capitals of the Northlands Tales of Ten Cities

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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CAPITALS OF THE NORTHLANDS


THREE DEGREES FROM THE ARCTIC CIRCLE
TRONDHJEM CATHEDRAL

[Frontispiece

CAPITALS OF
THE NORTHLANDS

TALES OF TEN CITIES

BY

IAN C. HANNAH, M.A.

AUTHOR OF "EASTERN ASIA: A HISTORY," "THE SUSSEX COAST," "THE BERWICK AND LOTHIAN COASTS," ETC.

ILLUSTRATED BY EDITH BRAND HANNAH

HEATH CRANTON & OUSELEY, LTD.

FLEET LANE, LONDON, E.C.

TO
THE LOVED MEMORY
OF THE BEST OF MOTHERS
WITH WHOM I ONCE MADE A PILGRIMAGE
TO THE SHRINE OF ST. OLAF


PREFACE

Many excellent things have been written about the cities of the South, but little, comparatively speaking, about the cities of the North. True, indeed, they have not moulded kingdoms and shaped the culture of a continent, but England, like Scandinavia, is not a country city-built; she was formed by the dwellers on the land. Yet the less prominent part that they have played does not make our cities less noteworthy than those of the South.

Few and peculiarly interesting are the cities of the North. And, with the exception, perhaps, of St. Petersburg, those spoken of in this book have all the charm that comes because they were built by country-loving folk, to whom deep woods and open fields were lovelier than monumental streets and squares.

I shall not have written in vain if the perusal of this small book leads any one to study larger works on the Northlands, and particularly the matchless sagas, many of them so skilfully Englished by the joint labour of an Englishman and an Icelander, William Morris and Eirîkr Magnússon. In them we may read of all these ten towns, save that Copenhagen and St. Petersburg have risen in Saga Lands after the sagas were penned.

After accuracy I have striven hard, but if any reader should detect any error I should be grateful to have it pointed out for correction in a later edition.

I. C. H.

Fernroyd,

Forest Row.


CONTENTS

CHAPTER     PAGE
I.     Thorshavn, Capital of the Faroe Islands 11
II. Reykjavik, Capital of Iceland 28
III. Trondhjem, Old Capital of Norway 66
IV. Christiania, Capital of Norway 93
V. Roskilde, Old Capital of Denmark 111
VI. Copenhagen, Capital of Denmark 127
VII. Visby, Capital of Gothland 150
VIII. Upsala, Old Capital of Sweden 176
IX. Stockholm, Capital of Sweden 199
X. St. Petersburg, Capital of Russia 226
  Index 261

ILLUSTRATIONS

Gol Stavekirke Title Page
Trondhjem Cathedral Frontispiece
  PAGE
Thorshavn 11
Reykjavik Harbour 28
Boats at Trondhjem 66
Stabbur at Bygdö, Christiania 93
Market Place at Roskilde 111
Canal at Copenhagen 127
East Wells at Visby 150
Castle and Cathedral, Upsala 176
Houses of Parliament, Stockholm 199
Cathedral of St. Isaac, St. Petersburg 226
  FACE PAGE
Thorshavn Fishermen 22
Hot Springs near Reykjavik 60
Corona of Trondhjem Cathedral (interior) 86
Gamla Upsala, Church and Runic Stone (plan) 99
Greensted Church 108
Roskilde Cathedral (plan) 118
Roskilde Cathedral 122
Hojbroplads, Copenhagen 134
Town of Visby, with Drawing of a Saddle Tower (plan) 158
Interior of St. Lars, Visby 166
Churches of Visby (plan) 172
Gamla Upsala 180
General View of Stockholm 206
Trondhjem Cathedral (plan) 246
St. Isaac's Cathedral, St. Petersburg (plan) 246
Church of the Resurrection, St. Petersburg 254

CHAPTER I

THORSHAVN

Loud in Harfur's echoing bay,
Heard ye the din of battle bray,

'Twixt Kiotvi rich, and Harald bold?
Eastward sail the ships of war;
The graven bucklers gleam afar,

And dragon heads adorn the prows of gold.

Glittering shields of purest white,
And swords, and Celtic falchions bright,

And Western chiefs the vessels bring:
Loudly roar the wolfish rout,
And maddening Champions wildly shout,

And long and loud the twisted hauberks ring.

Firm in fight they proudly vie
With him whose might will make them fly,

Of Eastmen kings the warlike head.
Forth his gallant fleet he drew,
Soon as the hope of battle grew,

But many a buckler brake ere Long-chin bled.

Fled the lusty Kiotvi then
Before the Shock-head king of men,

And bade the islands shield his flight.
Warriors wounded in the fray,
Beneath the thwarts all gasping lay,

Where head-long cast they mourned the loss of light.

So does an Icelandic skald describe the most important battle in the annals of the Norse.[1] Harald Shock-head had exalted himself, and said "I will be king"

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