The Making of Iceland: Settlement, Survival, and a New World by Adrian E. Markham traces how a volcanic island on the edge of the North Atlantic became one of medieval Europe's most extraordinary experiments in society and law. From the first landfalls of Norse explorers to the founding of the AlÞing at þingvellir, Markham follows the transformation of Iceland from wilderness to community, shaped by endurance, restraint, and imagination.
Drawing on archaeology, saga literature, and environmental science, the book reveals how settlers adapted to a landscape of fire and ice, building turf homes from earth, balancing fragile ecosystems, and creating a barter economy sustained by ingenuity and exchange. It explores the rise of chieftains, the codification of law in Grágás, and the evolution of a culture without kings, armies, or cities, yet bound together by consensus and oral tradition.
Markham also examines Iceland's spiritual and ecological consciousness, its veneration of land spirits, the adaptation of Norse belief to an unforgiving environment, and the birth of a written tradition that gave lasting form to memory and moral order. By the thirteenth century, Iceland stood as a literate, self-governing society whose achievements reached far beyond its size.
Clear, evocative, and grounded in evidence, The Making of Iceland offers a sweeping account of how endurance and imagination forged civilization at the edge of the known world.