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Garðar, Greenland

Coordinates: 60°59′13.56″N 45°25′22.44″W / 60.9871000°N 45.4229000°W / 60.9871000; -45.4229000
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Garðar
Harvesting the hay in Vatnahverfi, Garðar
Garðar, Greenland is located in Greenland
Garðar, Greenland
Location of the site in Greenland
LocationKujalleq, Greenland
Coordinates60°59′13.56″N 45°25′22.44″W / 60.9871000°N 45.4229000°W / 60.9871000; -45.4229000

Garðar was the seat of the bishop in the Norse settlements in Greenland.[1] It is a Latin Catholic titular see,[2] and was the first Catholic diocese established in the Americas.[3]

Diocese

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The sagas tell that Sokki Þórisson, a wealthy farmer of the Brattahlíð area, launched the idea of a separate bishop for Greenland in the early 12th century and got the approval of the Norwegian King Sigurd I Magnusson 'the Crusader' (1103–1130). Most of the clergy came from Norway.

Bishops

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  • The first bishop of Garðar, Arnaldur, was ordained by the Archbishop of Lund in 1124. He arrived in Greenland in 1126. He began the construction of the cathedral dedicated to St Nicholas, patron saint of sailors.[4]
  • The diocese was first assigned to the ecclesiastical province of the German Metropolitan Archbishopric of Bremen. The diocese was subject to the Archdiocese of Lund (present-day Sweden) from 1126 to 1152. Arnaldur returned to Norway in 1150 and became bishop of Hamar (Norway) in 1152.
  • In 1152, this diocese, as well as those of Iceland, the Isle of Man, the Orkney Islands and the Faroe Islands, became suffragans to the newly established Norwegian Metropolitan Archdiocese of Nidaros (now Trondheim).[5] The second bishop was Jón Knútr, who served from 1153 to 1186.
  • The third bishop was Jón Árnason (nicknamed Smyril). He took office in 1189. In 1202–1203 he went on a pilgrimage to Rome and met Pope Innocent III. He died in Garðar in 1209 and was buried there, most likely in the Northern Chapel of the cathedral.
  • The next bishop, Helgi, arrived in Greenland in 1212 and was bishop until his death in 1230.
  • In 1234, Nikulás was ordained. He arrived in Greenland in 1239. He died in 1242.
  • Ólafr was ordained in the same year, arriving in 1247.[6] He remained bishop until the mid-1280s. He was abroad from 1264 to 1280, thus hardly serving in his own diocese.
  • The next bishop was Þórdr, who stayed in Garðar from 1289 until his return to Norway in 1309.[6]
  • The next bishop was Árni, from 1315 to 1347. Due to poor communication between Greenland and Norway, it was assumed that he had died and a new bishop (Jón Skalli) was ordained in 1343. When it was discovered that bishop Árni was still alive, Skalli resigned and never went to Greenland.[6] Jon Skalli never visited Garðar.[6]
  • After Árni's death in 1347 there was a 19-year vacancy period. Norwegian cleric Ivar Bardsson served as principal during the interim period.[6]
  • Bishop Álfr was ordained in 1365 and served as the last effectively residential bishop of Garðar until 1378.
  • The Greenland diocese disappeared in the 15th century, when ships from Norway stopped.[7][8]
  • News of the diocese has been reported in two letters by popes Nicholas V and Alexander VI, first compiled by papal chamberlain J. C. Heywood in 1893 in Rome and republished in 1903.[9][10][11][12]

List of residential bishops

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Crosier and episcopal ring of a 13th-century Greenlandic bishop, probably Óláfr (1247–1280)
Residential bishops[13]
Bishop Consecrated Served years
Eiríkr Gnúpsson Before 1112 1112–1121 (Served in Greenland prior to the establishment of the see)
Arnaldr 1124 1126–1150
Jón knútr 1150 (After 1150)–1187
Jón smyrill Árnason 1188 1189–1209
Helgi 1210-1212 1212–1230
Nikolás 1234 1239–1242
Óláfr 1246 1247–1280
Þórðr 1288 1289–1309
Árni 1313 (or 1314) 1315–1347 (or 1348)
Álfr 1365 1368–1377 (or 1378)

Ghost see

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Although the diocese had ceased to function, 'full' bishops were nominated to the see until 1537, apparently none of whom ever visited the diocese:[6]

  • Henricus (mentioned in 1386)
  • Bertholdus (circa 1407)
  • Jacobus Treppe, Friars Minor (O.F.M.) (27 March 1411 – death 1421)
  • Nicolaus
  • Robertus Ryngman, O.F.M. (30 May 1425 – ?)
  • Gobelinus Volant, Canons Regular of Saint Augustine (C.R.S.A.) (circa 1 October 1431 – 19 March 1432), next bishop of Diocese of Børglum (Denmark) (1432.03.19 – ? not possessed)
  • Johannes Erles de Moys, O.F.M. (12 July 1432 – ?)
  • Bartholomeus de Sancto Hyppolito, O.P. (1433 – death 1440)
  • Gregorius (1440 – 1450)
  • Andreas
  • Jacobus Blaa, Dominican Order (O.P.) (16 June 1481 – ? deposed)
  • Mathias Canuto (Matthias Knutsson), a Danish monk of the Benedictine Order (O.S.B.) (9 July 1492 – ?). He had desired to reach Gardar in person, but there is no indication he ever did.[6]
  • Vincenz Kampe, O.F.M. (20 June 1519 – 1537).

Titular see

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In 1996, the diocese was nominally restored as Latin titular bishopric of Gardar (Curiate Italian) / Garðar (Norsk bokmål Norwegian) / Garden(sis) (Latin adjective).

Its single incumbent is Edward William Clark, Auxiliary bishop of Los Angeles (16 January 2001 – present).

Remains

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Currently, the previous settlement of Igaliku is situated on the same geographic location. The site has been the subject of archaeological investigations since the 1830s. The cathedral was the primary target of much of the archaeological work and was fully excavated in 1926 by Danish archaeologist Poul Nørlund [da] (1888–1951). Nørlund made several scientific studies in Greenland starting in 1921 and ending in 1932.[14]

Many Norse settlement ruins remain visible in Igaliku. The ruins mostly consist of the stone foundations of the walls in their original positions so that the extent of the settlement, both individual buildings and collectively, can be determined and understood. The main ruin is of the Garðar Cathedral, a cross-shaped church built of sandstone in the 12th century. The maximum length is 27 m, the width 16 m. Two large barns are on the site, able to have held up to 160 cows.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Eastern Settlement at Garðar (Igaliku), Greenlan(The Holocene 2009)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
  2. ^ "Why Do We Celebrate Columbus Day and Not Leif Erikson Day?". Culture. 11 October 2015. Archived from the original on 1 March 2021.
  3. ^ Starr, Kevin (2016). Continental ambitions : Roman Catholics in North America : the Colonial experience. San Francisco. ISBN 978-1-62164-118-6. OCLC 949870420.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ "Gardar, Greenland : Bishops". www.servinghistory.com.
  5. ^ "Land management at the bishop's seat, Garðar, medieval Greenland | Antiquity Journal". antiquity.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 21 June 2011.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Larson, Laurence M. (1919). "The Church in North America (Greenland) in the Middle Ages". The Catholic Historical Review. 5 (2/3): 175–194. ISSN 0008-8080. JSTOR 25011635.
  7. ^ "History of Medieval Greenland". www.personal.utulsa.edu. Archived from the original on 16 October 2009. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
  8. ^ Magnus Stefansson. "Ivar Bårdsson, Geistlig". Norsk biografisk leksikon. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
  9. ^ "American Journeys Background on Papal Letters Concerning the Bishophric of Gardar in Greenland during the Fifteenth Century". americanjourneys.org. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  10. ^ Fischer, Joseph; Soulsby, Basil H. (Basil Harrington) (1903). The discoveries of the Norsemen in America : with special relation to their early cartographical representation. Robarts - University of Toronto. London : H. Stevens, Son & Stiles. pp. 49–51.
  11. ^ "Liutprand - Associazione culturale". www.liutprand.it. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  12. ^ "The Medieval American Church". The Catholic Historical Review. 3 (2): 210–227. 1917. ISSN 0008-8080. JSTOR 25011500.
  13. ^ Grönlands historiske mindesmærker at the Internet Archive
  14. ^ "Gardar (The Norse History of Greenland 982-1500)". Archived from the original on 4 August 2017. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
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Further reading

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  • Buckland, Paul C. m.fl. (2009). Palaeoecological and historical evidence for manuring and irrigation at Garðar (Igaliku), Norse Eastern Settlement, Greenland. In The Holocene pages 105–116.
  • Høegsberg, Mogens Skaaning (2005). Det norrøne bispesæde i Gardar, Grønland (archeology master thesis in Danish). Aarhus University: Afdeling for Middelalder- og Renæssancearkæologi. OCLC 476576493.
  • Mitlid, Åke (2006). Grønlandsgåten. Kampen om Grønland. Levende Historie . 4 (6): 16–19. ISSN 1503-4208.
  • Plovgaard, Karen (1963). Da Grønland fik sit første bispesæde: Glimt fra nordboriget i det 12. århundrede (PDF). In Tidsskriftet Grønland (Danish) (12): 463–469