
Our Fake History Episode #246 - How Far Did the Vikings Voyage? (Part III)
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Mar 11, 2026 A deep dive into the Vinland tales and how 19th-century scholars reshaped American beliefs about Norse arrival. The story of the Kensington Runestone and a rash of runic forgeries that muddied real history. Archaeological breakthroughs at L'Anse aux Meadows and clues like butternuts that suggest how far Norse sailors traveled. The episode traces how myth, identity, and pseudo-history intertwined.
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Kensington Runestone Discovery And Inscription
- The Kensington Runestone story began when Olaf Omon found a 30-inch sandstone slab with runes in 1898 near Kensington, Minnesota.
- The inscription claimed a 1362 Norse expedition and read like a narrative grave marker, sparking immediate public fascination and debate.
Runes And Grammar Reveal Forgery
- Scholars found multiple red flags: the runes and grammar mixed medieval forms with 19th-century Swedish and some symbols matched a 1800s tailor runic system.
- These linguistic and weathering inconsistencies led most experts to conclude the stone is a 19th-century forgery.
Raffn Made Vinland Famous In English
- Carl Christian Rafn's 1837 Antiquitates Americanae popularized the Vinland sagas by presenting them in Icelandic, Danish, Latin, and an English abstract.
- His 40-page America Discovered in the Tenth Century made the case accessible and sparked US interest in Norse pre-Columbus voyages.



