Around 874 C.E., Norse seafarers made landfall on a volcanically active island in the North Atlantic and decided to stay. What followed was one of the most consequential acts of settlement in the medieval world — not just because it populated one of Europe’s last uninhabited large islands, but because the people who settled it built something remarkable: a functioning society with a parliament at its center, nearly a thousand miles from anywhere.
Key findings
- Norse settlement: Conventional dating places the first permanent Norse settlement of Iceland at 874 C.E., though a cabin excavated at Hafnir on the Reykjanes Peninsula was carbon-dated to between 770 and 880 C.E., suggesting human presence predates the traditional date.
- Irish monastic presence: The Landnámabók (Book of Settlements), written in the 1100s, records that Irish monks known as the papar occupied Iceland before the Norse arrived, leaving behind bells, books, and crosiers — though no such artifacts have been confirmed archaeologically.
- Althing parliament: By 930 C.E., Icelandic chieftains had established the Althing, a legislative assembly that is among the oldest continuously operating parliaments in world history.
Why Iceland was the last to be settled
Iceland is geologically young — it began forming about 20 million years ago from volcanic eruptions along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, where the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates meet. The island is still growing. Its landscape of glaciers, fjords, lava fields, and geothermal vents made it inhospitable in ways that even other remote Atlantic islands were not.
Yet the Norse came anyway. Many were Norwegians fleeing the political upheaval caused by the unification of Norway under King Harald Fairhair, seeking land they could farm and govern themselves. They brought with them people they had enslaved, primarily from Ireland and the broader British Isles. Modern genetic studies of Icelandic ancestry confirm this: a significant proportion of Iceland’s founding female lineage traces to the British Isles, reflecting the presence of enslaved women whose names the sagas rarely recorded but whose descendants shaped the nation.
The land filled quickly. By 930 C.E. — within roughly two generations of conventional settlement — the available farmland was taken and a new political structure was needed. The Althing was born.
The Althing: governance from nothing
There was no king in early Iceland. No pre-existing state apparatus, no inherited bureaucracy, no Roman road system to build on. The Althing — held annually at Þingvellir, a dramatic rift valley where the tectonic plates visibly pull apart — was a gathering of chieftains and free men who came to legislate, settle disputes, and conduct trade.
It was imperfect and unequal by any modern standard. Enslaved people had no standing. Women had limited formal voice. Powerful chieftains could bend outcomes. But the core principle — that a community of settlers could create law collectively rather than receive it from a monarch — was genuinely novel for its time and place.
The Althing’s decisions were memorized and proclaimed aloud by a lawspeaker, a single official who recited the entire legal code from memory over a three-year rotation. The office existed before writing was widespread in Iceland, and it represents one of the most remarkable acts of institutional memory in the medieval world.
A literary culture built on the edge of the world
Iceland’s settlers also created something no other Norse colony managed at the same scale: a written literary tradition. The sagas of Icelanders, composed from the 12th century onward, are among the most sophisticated prose narratives of the medieval period anywhere in Europe. They recorded genealogies, legal disputes, voyages, and feuds with a psychological realism that was unusual for their era.
This literary culture was not incidental. It grew directly from Iceland’s political structure. Because law was oral and precedent mattered enormously, the ability to narrate — to place events in sequence, to argue cause and effect — was a practical skill as much as an artistic one. The same culture that produced the Althing produced Njáls saga.
The Landnámabók itself, written in the 1100s, named more than 400 original settlers and recorded their origins, their landholdings, and their descendants. It is one of the most detailed records of any early medieval colonization anywhere, though scholars note it reflects the perspectives of the literate, landowning class rather than the enslaved or the dispossessed.
Lasting impact
Iceland’s settlement established a model of decentralized governance in an era dominated by kingdoms and empires. The Althing survived — with interruptions — for over a thousand years, and the modern Icelandic parliament still bears its name. When Iceland became the first country in the world to elect a female head of state — Vigdís Finnbogadóttir in 1980 — the institution through which that democratic tradition ran was the same one chieftains had built in 930 C.E.
The Norse settlement of Iceland also set the stage for the European discovery of North America. It was from Iceland that Erik the Red sailed to Greenland, and from Greenland that Leif Eriksson reached the North American continent — roughly 500 years before Columbus. None of that chain of exploration happens without Iceland as a staging point.
The island’s position in the North Atlantic has shaped world history repeatedly since, from Viking-age trade routes to its strategic importance in World War II, when the United Kingdom occupied the island in 1940 to prevent a Nazi foothold in the North Atlantic.
Blindspots and limits
The conventional 874 C.E. settlement date is a narrative convenience as much as a historical fact. The Hafnir cabin excavation, the literary record of the papar, and the uncertainty about Roman-era coins found on the island all suggest the story is messier than the sagas present it. The names and experiences of the enslaved people who made up a significant portion of Iceland’s founding population are almost entirely absent from the written record — their presence survives in genetics, not in text. The Althing, celebrated as an early parliament, was also a mechanism by which a small elite of chieftains managed disputes among themselves, with no formal representation for the majority of people on the island.
Read more
For more on this story, see: History of Iceland — Wikipedia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Indigenous land rights: 160 million hectares recognized ahead of COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on the Middle Ages
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