Skip to main content

Wednesday’s Around the World ~ Leif Ericsson and the Vikings

Wednesday’s Around the World ~ Leif Ericsson and the Vikings

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

This week on Wednesday’s Around the World, I am sharing with you about Leif Ericsson and the Vikings.  Who is Leif Ericsson and what does he and the Vikings have to do with studying the United States?  Leif Ericsson was a Norseman, who lived in the far north of Europe. They had a hard life in the area they lived, because the weather could be brutal, with very cold temps, winds and snow. They were sometimes called Vikings, which just means exploring.  They explored to find food for those times that they ran short of food.  They traded with others, but sometimes they had to steal and they even looked for new places to live.

Claire Coloring Viking Ship

The Vikings used large boats that could go very fast with the unique sail that had.  When the wind wasn’t blowing, they had a large oar that many men could pull to make the boat go.  The large boat had a dragon head on the front and a dragon tail on the back.  The dragon was very intimidating to those people that the Vikings came across.  It filled them with fear and scared them a lot.  As the Vikings moved around they created colonies as they explored.  A lot of the Vikings, including Leif Ericsson’s dad, settled on land a land that is now called Iceland.

Samuel coloring Viking ship

It was always a dream of Eric the Red, Leif’s dad to find a better place to live for him and his family.  They hit the open waters and found a place west of Iceland and called it Greenland.  Although it was very similar to Iceland, he named it Greenland in hopes that the name would bring more people to settle.  However, due to a famine, people kept going to Iceland, instead of Greenland.  One a particular day when the weather was awful, a Viking ship accidentally was blown off course and missed Greenland.  They kept sailing even further west and came to unfamiliar land.  They sailed down the coast, hoping to see something that would remind them of Greenland.  They never did see anything they recognized, so they turned around and sailed back east.  After 4 long days on the sea, they finally reached Greenland.  They told Eric the Red what they had seen and his son, Leif overheard them.  Leif wondered why they did not go ashore and explore the land.  As Leif continued to get older, he never forgot that story.

Leif Ericsson Copywork

One day, Leif told his dad his was heading out on the sea, towards the west to find this land.  On the 4th day of his voyage, Leif and his crew caught sight of the land.  At first, he did think it looked like Greenland, but as they continue to sail down the coast, he noticed that the land began to change.  Leif and his crew went to the shore and started exploring.  Leif called this land Vine-land.  They stayed their through the winter and then returned to his dad and the people of Greenland.  He told them all about the rich land they had found.  Soon, other Vikings followed him to this new land and they set up a settlement.  The settlement only last a few years due to the battles with the Indians that lived there.   Vine-land, the place that Leif Ericsson discovered is known today as, Newfoundland, Canada.

Adding Leif Ericsson to Time-LineThe kids and I had a fun time learning about Leif Ericsson, his family and the Vikings. We learned that Leif had discovered what is now known as Newfoundland, Canada in North America.  This was the first time that someone discovered North America in A.D. 1000.

We looked on our world map and found Norway, Sweden, Finland, Iceland and Greenland.  We then kept following our finger all the way west and right to Newfoundland, Canada in North America.

My kids and I are learning a lot and enjoying the lessons in the Adventures in U.S. History from My Father’s World.

What have you been studying about in History and Geography?  Link up with us and share!

Wednesday’s Around the World ~ A History & Geography Link Up is back and with a giveaway!!

Wednesday’s Around the World ~ A History & Geography Link Up is back and with a giveaway!!

(disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links.  If you purchase a product through the link, I will receive a small portion. All money earned helps to by curriculum and books for our homeschooling journey.)

UPDATE: Winner of the $25 Amazon gift card is Ticia.  Winner of the $20 CurrClick gift card is Jennifer J.!

Congrats to the winners!

Last year, I started a link up for history and geography called, Wednesday’s Around the World.  I am going to continue on with it this year.  There has been a change in it for this year.  Last year, I was using Bright Ideas Press, Mystery of History, curriculum and had limited the history link up just to Bright Ideas Press History and Geography.  I am not using Mystery of History or All American History this year and will be using My Father’s World instead.  So with that change, I am going to open up the link-up for all History and Geography curriculums.

The link up will still be taking place every Wednesday.  The first link-up for the school year will be next Wednesday, September 4th.  All you have to do is write a post about what you are learning in history and/or geography, then come to my page and link-up with that lesson.  Did you do a project or activity for history that you would like to share?  Write a post about it and link it up!  Here are a couple of examples from last year, Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-Nego and Aesop’s Fables, Tortoise and the Hare.

The following week, I will share a little about what we have been studying in our history and geography and then will highlight a couple of those who have linked up!

To start us off for this year, I am having a giveaway!  Actually, two giveaways!  There is a $25 Amazon gift card and a $20 CurrClick gift card up for grabs!  All I need you to do is leave me a comment telling me what history and/or geography curriculum you will be using this year.  I will choose a winner on Sept. 4th and announce it at the beginning of the link-up!

 

Wednesday’s Around The World ~ Ancient Native Americans

Wednesday’s Around The World ~ Ancient Native Americans

Welcome to another week of Wednesday’s Around The World.  This week the lesson I am highlighting is about the Ancient Native Americans. It is lesson 48 in the Mystery of History: Volume 1 book.  While I have been enjoying studying about people in ancient times and they are calling this lesson the Ancient Native Americans, I am truly excited that we have shifted to North America for a lesson.  I am so amazed that at the same time Hezekiah was ruling Judah, there were actually people living in what we now know as the United States.

The Ancient Native Americans have been labeled and put into 4 different groups.  The first group are known as the Paleo Indians.  They are the earliest known group.  Not too much is known about this group of Indians.  It looks like they moved around a lot, following the herds of animals for food and their skins.  They think they also had light weight tools because they did travel so much.

The second group is the Archaic Indians.   They seemed to be settled a little more than the first group, but staying in one place for a while.  They also dried some of their meat and grew grain for food.  They also had tools that they used for carving.

The next group is known as the Adena Indians.   This Indian tribe actually farmed their land.  They also made pottery to store the food they made.  The Adena’s are also known for their burial mounds that they built.

The last group is known as the Hopewell Indians.  They took the Adena’s idea of the burial mound and really went over the top with it.  Their mounds weren’t just the typical round mounds, they actually made it a work of art.  They would shape their burial mounds into different shapes.  Some are shaped into animals and are as long as 1600 feet!  That is truly amazing!  The Hopewell Indians were farmers who grew corn.  They also grew tobacco and made pipes out of the shapes of animals.

Some of these mounds are still standing today.  There is one in Ohio that is called the Great Serpent Mound and there is also one in Wisconsin that is in the shape of a turtle.  What is so wonderful about these mounds?  They have withstood the weather for for than 2000 years.

My kids enjoyed the activity we did for this lesson.  They got to play with model magic clay.  The suggestion from the book was to make an animal pipe using a straw and the clay.  However, the kids and I decided that they would make different animal shapes like they made the burial mounds out of.  My kids chose to make a bear, turtle and snake!

Turtle, Snakes and Bear Burial Mound shapes

While these were just simple small shapes, can you imagine making a burial mound 1600 feet long?  That would take a lot of digging and dirt moving!

We had several to link up last week and I thought I would share them with you today.

Ticia at Adventures in Mommydom had a lesson on The Call of Abraham.  They went outside and built an alter like God had told Abraham to do.

Deborah at The Paper Maid shares about the listening guides that you can find for Mystery of History: Volume 3 at the yahoo group.  Her boys will read their lesson and fill the pages out.  The lessons will sometimes include maps.  I did not know about this and look forward to checking in on this for my oldest daughter.

Lindsay from Bytes of Memory is talking about the Shang Dynasty and the Silk Secret.  Did you know that the Chinese people kept how silk was made a secret for over 3000 year?  She also has her son doing a neat little activity with yarn!

Be sure to stop by and visit these ladies.  They did a wonderful job sharing about their lessons.

Now for this weeks Wednesday’s Around the World link-up.  We would love to see what you learned this week!  Just follow the link-up below!

****disclaimer~ This link-up is not officially affiliated with Bright Ideas Press but is my own project. I am a customer and fan.  This post also contains affiliate links.