Prof. Gísli Sigurðsson - Gaelic Influences in the Icelandic Sagas

Mother's Blood, Sister Songs: 5. Professor Gísli Sigurðsson. Professor Gísli Sigurðsson was a young Icelandic scholar of the sagas when he came to Dublin in the 1980s to follow an MPhil under Professor Bo Almqvist at UCD. His thesis resulted in a ground-breaking piece of research on the gaelic influences in the Icelandic Sagas. At the time his work was often seen, by his academic colleagues, as overstating the gaelic influences in iceland and the Icelandic culture. But today the genetic studies that show that the settler population were 60% gaelic women and 20% gaelic men, mostly slaves brought by the Norwegian Vikings, confirms his theory that there was a significant gaelic population during the settlement period. In this audio interview with Linda Buckley and producer Helen Shaw Prof. Gísli Sigurðsson explains the impact of his research, how it challenges the nationalist thinking of the time, and how the story of the Irish princess slave, Melkorka, is one of the few slave stories that the Icelandic culture has both embraced and celebrated. To find out more about Gísli Sigurðsson, who is a research professor at The Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies, University of Iceland go to his page  and visit our website www.mothersbloodsistersongs.com and see a short video of Gísli's interview with us under the dropdown menu VOICES. Mother's Blood, Sister Songs is a transmedia storytelling project exploring how the genetics of Iceland reveals its gaelic roots . The project is made by Irish composer Linda Buckley, and the documentary team from Athena Media Helen Shaw and John Howard. The radio version of the project will air on RTÉ Lyric fm in 2020.

Om Podcasten

How the genetics of Iceland reveals its Irish motherhood; an exploration of the connections between Iceland and Ireland presented by composer Linda Buckley and produced Helen Shaw at Athena Media. Acclaimed Irish composer Linda Buckley has a personal and professional affinity to Iceland and in this radio series she teams up with documentary maker Helen Shaw to trace the connections between the two places. The Icelandic female line goes directly back to gaelic women, mostly taken as slaves, by Norwegian Vikings who settled the land over a thousand years ago. http://mothersbloodsistersongs.com