Resting on the edge of the Arctic Circle and
sitting atop one of the world's most
volcanically active hotspots,
Iceland is
nowadays thought of for its striking mix of
magisterial glaciers, bubbling hot springs and
rugged fjords, where activities such as hiking
under the Midnight Sun are complemented by
healthy doses of history and literature. It's
unfortunate, then, that one of the country's
earliest visitors, the Viking Flóki Vilgerðarson,
saw fit to choose a name for it that emphasized
just one of these qualities, though perhaps he
can be forgiven in part: having sailed here with
hopes of starting a new life in this then
uninhabited island, a long hard winter in around
870 AD killed off all his cattle. Hoping to spy
out a more promising site for his farm he
climbed a high mountain in the northwest of the
country, only to be faced with a fjord full of
drift ice. Bitterly disappointed, he named the
place
Ísland (literally "ice
land") and promptly sailed home for the
positively balmy climes of Norway.
A few years later, however, Iceland was
successfully settled and, despite the subsequent
enthusiastic felling of trees for fuel and
timber, visitors to the country today will see
it in pretty much the same state as it was over
a thousand years ago, with the coastal fringe
, for example, dotted with sheep farms, a few
score fishing villages and tiny hamlets - often
no more than a collection of homesteads nestling
around a wooden church. An Icelandic town, let
alone a city, is still a rarity and until the
twentieth century the entire nation numbered no
more than 60,000. The country remains the most
sparsely populated in Europe, with a population
of just 272,000 - over half of whom live down in
the southwestern corner around the surprisingly
cosmopolitan capital, Reykjavík. Akureyri
, up on the north coast, is the only other
decent-sized population centre outside the
Greater Reykjavík area.
But if the coast is thinly populated,
Iceland's Interior remains totally
uninhabited and unmarked by humanity: a starkly
beautiful wilderness of ice fields, infertile
lava and ash deserts, windswept upland plateaux
and the frigid vastness of Vatnajökull, Europe's
largest glacier. Even in downtown Reykjavík,
crisp, snow-capped peaks and fjords hover in the
background, evidence of the forces that created
the country. And Iceland's location on the
Mid-Atlantic ridge also gives it one of the most
volcanically active landscapes on Earth,
peppered with everything from naturally
occurring hot springs, scaldingly hot bubbling
mud pools and noisy steam vents to a string of
unpredictably violent volcanoes, which have
regularly devastated huge parts of the country.
It's something that Icelanders have learned to
live with: in June 1998, when Reykjavík was
rocked by a major earthquake, the ballet dancers
at the National Opera performed right through it
without missing a step.
Historically, the Icelanders have a
mix of Nordic and Celtic blood, a heritage often
held responsible for their characteristically
laconic approach to life - taps in hotels often
drip, buses don't depart to the stroke of the
driver's watch, and everybody, including the
President and the Prime Minister, is known by
their first name. The battle for survival
against the elements over the centuries has also
made them a highly self-reliant nation, whose
dependence on the sea and fishing for their
economy is virtually total - hence their refusal
to allow foreign trawlers to fish off Iceland
during the diplomatically tense 1970s, sparking
off three "Cod Wars", principally with
Britain. However, their isolated location in the
North Atlantic also means that their island is
frequently forgotten about - Icelanders will
tell you that they've given up counting how many
times they've been left off maps of Europe -
something that deeply offends their strong sense
of national pride. For all their self-confidence
though, they can seem an initially reserved
people - until Friday and Saturday nights roll
around, when the bjór starts to flow,
and turns even the most monosyllabic fisherman
into a lucid talkshow host, right down to
reciting from memory entire chunks of medieval
sagas about the early settlers.