Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-02T21:59:18.140Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Scottish kayaks reconsidered

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Extract

In my article in 1954 I suggested that the role of the Finns in the folklore of the northern Scottish Islands might have assisted in the attribution to these visitors of the designation “Finn-men” which is found in the earliest accounts. The aim of the article was to dispose of suggestions by earlier students of the problem (e.g. MacRitchie, 1912a, 130-1) that they might be visitors from Northern Europe, and to identify them clearly as Eskimos arriving directly from Greenland. The problem that the kayak becomes waterlogged after being immersed in water for 48 hours presents difficulties to this solution which could only be overcome if one postulated Olympic standards on the part of the travellers. At the time of this study I presumed that the Scottish specimens and traditions were unique, and therefore sought an explanation which was particular to that country.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1977 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

Some twenty-three years ago (1954, 99–104) our predecessor in the Editorial chair published an article by Professor Whitaker which examined the traditional and material evidence for the appearance of Eskimo kayaks off the Scottish coast. Professor Whitaker now wishes to re-examine the situation in the light of the publication of a study from Holland which has not so far been reviewed in the British Isles, and of which Professor Whitaker has only recently become aware. Professor Whitaker is Professor of Anthropology in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada.

References

Beste, G. 1867. A true discourse of the late voyages of discoverie for finding of a passage to Cathaya, by the North-west, in Richard Collinson, The three voyages of Martin Frobisher (Hakluyt Society No. 38), 1376, 121–57, 225–89 (London).Google Scholar
Birket-Smith, K. 1924. Ethnology of the Egedesminde district (Meddelelser om Gronland, LXVI) (Copenhagen).Google Scholar
Bobé, l. (ed.). 1936. Diplomatarium Groenlandicum 14921814 (Meddelelser om Gronland, LV, No. 3) (Copenhagen).Google Scholar
Brand, J. 1883. A brief description of Orkney, Zetland, Pightland-Firth and Caithness (Edinburgh).Google Scholar
D[apper], O. 1663. Historische Beschrijving der Stadt Amsterdam (Amsterdam).Google Scholar
Douglas, F. 1826. A general description of the east coast of Scotland (Aberdeen).Google Scholar
Gad, F. 1970. The history of Greenland, Vol. I. Earliest times to 1700 (trans. Ernst Dupont). (London).Google Scholar
Gad, F. 1973. The history of Greenland, Vol. II, 1700-82 (Montreal).Google Scholar
Gosch, C. G. A. (ed.). 1897. Danish arctic expeditions, 16051620 (Hakluyt Society No. 96), Vol. I (London).Google Scholar
Lyschander, C. C. 1608. Den grønlandske chronica (Copenhagen).Google Scholar
Macritchie, D. 1912a. Kayaks of the North Sea, Scottish Geographical Magazine, XXVM, 126–33.Google Scholar
Macritchie, D. 1912b. The kayak in north-western Europe, JRAI, XLII, 493510.Google Scholar
Magnusson, M. and Palsson, H. (trans.) 1965. The Virtland sagas : the Norse discovery of America (Harmondsworth).Google Scholar
Markham, C. R. 1889. A life ofjohft Davis, the Navigator, 1550-1605, discoverer of Davis Straits (Hakluyt Society No. 75) (London).Google Scholar
Mikkelsen, E. 1954. Kajakmanden fra Aberdeen, Grønland 1954, 53-8 (Copenhagen).Google Scholar
Nooter, G. 1971. Old kayaks in the Netherlands (Meded-lingen van het Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde, Leiden No. 17) (Leiden).Google Scholar
Olearius, A. 1656. Vermehrte neue Beschreibung der Muscowitischen und Persischen … … … (Schleswig).Google Scholar
Reid, R. W. 1912. Description of kayak preserved in the Anthropological Museum of the University of Aberdeen, JRAI, XLII, 511–14.Google Scholar
Soutek, W. C. 1935. The story of our kayak and some others (Presidential Address to the Aberdeen Medico-Chirurgical Society, 1933) (Aberdeen).Google Scholar
Thalbitzer, W. 1912. Four Skraeling words from Markland (Newfoundland) in the Saga of Erik the red (Eirikr rauöi), International Congress of Americanists Proceedings of XVIII Session, London 1912, 8795 (London).Google Scholar
Thórdarsson, M. 1930. The Vinland ooyages, American Geographical Society Research Series No. 18 (trans. Thorstina Jackson Walters) (New York).Google Scholar
Wallace, J. 1883. A description of the Isles of Orkney (Edinburgh).Google Scholar
Whitaker, I. 1954. The Scottish kayaks and the ‘Finnmen’, Antiquity, 36, 99104.Google Scholar