Articles about Icelandic History and Culture
Iceland’s landscape gets all the attention, but the country’s history and culture run just as deep. This is an island settled by Norse and Celtic peoples more than 1,100 years ago, home to one of the world’s oldest parliaments and a literary tradition that has shaped how Icelanders see themselves ever since.
The medieval sagas are the heart of it. Written in the 13th century, these prose epics tell of the settlers, their feuds, and their journeys — and the places they describe are still on the map today, which makes touring saga country a real possibility. Þingvellir, where the Alþingi was founded in 930, is both a historic site and a place to stand in the landscape where it all happened.
For experiencing Iceland’s history and culture firsthand, the museums are an easy start. The National Museum in Reykjavík covers the full sweep of the story, while smaller regional museums bring the herring era, turf-house life, and local folklore to life. Folklore runs strong here too — tales of elves, trolls, and hidden people that locals will discuss with a straight face. Christmas has its own cast of characters, including the thirteen mischievous Yule Lads.
Living culture matters as much as the past. Iceland punches far above its size in music, literature, and the arts, and the modern food scene draws on old traditions. The language itself has changed remarkably little in a thousand years.
In this section, you’ll find our guides to Iceland’s history and culture: the sagas, the museums worth your time, the folklore behind the landscape, and the traditions still alive today — the honest, practical advice we’d give a friend wanting to understand the country, not just see it.
Stuck in Iceland Celebreates Two Years and 60.000 Readers
Ghost Stories: On the Trail of Agnes Magnusdottir
Photographing the People With Divine Names
Drink, Write, Love: Discovering Iceland’s Creative Culture
Icelandic Holidays You Never Heard Of
The Party of the Year Approaches at Light Speed!
See the Seat of the Bishops at Skálholt
Run a Cable Car Across a Raging River to Meet a Fearsome Female Ghost
Iceland travel advice from someone who actually lives here
I'm Jón, a native Icelander who has called Reykjavík home for over 30 years. Since 2012, I've been running this magazine the way a knowledgeable local friend would — giving you the honest advice, the real discounts from 50+ partners in the Icelandic travel industry, and 200+ expert interviews you won't find anywhere else. This is Iceland from the inside.