The Description of Scricfinnia, year 1555
by Olaus Magnus
(This is the world's oldest lengthy written
description of skis and climbing skins, excerpted from Historia
de Gentibus Septentrionalibus (A History of the Northern
Peoples), Rome, 1555; English translation of 1658. Included
are woodcuts from the original book.)
Scricfinnia
is a country between Biarmia and Finmarck [at the top of Norway];
yet it hath one long corner that stretcheth Southward and towards
the Bothrick Sea; it is called a Tail principally, because the
Inhabitants of it slide very swift, having their feet fastened
to crooked pieces of Wood made plain and bent like a bow in
the former part, with a staff in their hands to guide them;
and by these, at their pleasure they can transport themselves
upward, downward, or obliquely, over the tops of snow; yet ever
observing that proportion, that one of these pieces of Wood
shall be longer than the other a full foot, according as the
men or women are in tallness: so that if a manor woman be eight
feet high [sic] the one piece of wood shall be just so long,
and the other piece of wood shall be nine foot.
Moreover,
they provide that those pieces of wood be covered beneath with
the tender skin of a young Fawn, the form and color whereof
is like to a Deer Skin but it is far longer and larger. But
why the pieces of wood are covered with these tender Skins there
be diverse causes given; namely that they may transport themselves
the swifter over these high Snows, that they may the more nimbly
avoid Cliffs of Rocks, and steep places with an overthwart [transverse]
motion, that when they ascend to a place they may not fall backward:
because the Hair will rise like Spears, or Hedg-Hog Bristles,
and by an admirable power of Nature hinder them from falling
down. Therefore with such Instruments and the Art they have
to run they are wont, especially in Winter
time, to pass over the inaccessible places of Mountains, and
Valleys; but not so easily in Summer, though the Snow be there,
because the Wood soon sinks into them. Nor is there any Rock
too prominent, but they can cunningly run up to the top of it,
by winding course. For first leaving the deep places of Valleys,
they pass over the feet of the Mountains, with crooked motion
round about; and they so turn to and fro, until they come to
the highest parts of those winding Hills; sometimes they do
in the head of Hunting, sometimes to try their Skill, and to
contend for mastery therein, as those who run Race to win the
prize.
(research and digital imaging by Louis Dawson)
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