In AD 1022ish, a tree surrendered its life to build a Scandinavian-themed home in Markland. Map Myths reports a possible Danish attempt to reëstablish contact. With the help of a couple of German pirates and the Portuguese.
As you may imagine this has run up against 1930s German nationalism and general we-wuzzery around Europe about "who discovered the Americas". (The answer is "the Navajo". Because screw you.)
Frankly all this is the wrong question for the last decades of the AD 1400s, on account of a few factors long mooted here on this blog. tl;dr everyone already knew about the "Markland" for at least a century. Few in the 1400s cared about cold worthless islands. The great powers - which did not then include Denmark nor England - cared about bypassing the Ottomans and getting to the Indies. Whatever these privateers were doing well north of all that, didn't figure. No northwest passage, no cities of gold in Labrador, nothing but cod.
I do however find this of interest for several other, if I may say better, reasons. Cod wasn't worthless in this Catholic age. And the fisher fleets were improving. Perhaps the Danes were starting to care about those "islands" again.
It may witness the fifteenth century in Greenland; when the old towns were abandoned. The island might not have been abandoned. These Danes coming toward the end of the century thought some "pirates" might have lingered there. If so: what was their prey? Basque fishermen? the Welsh and Cornish?
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