Vigur

Coordinates: 66°03′18″N 22°49′41″W / 66.055°N 22.828°W / 66.055; -22.828
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Vigur
Vigur is located in Iceland
Vigur
Vigur
Geography
LocationÍsafjarðardjúp
Coordinates66°03′18″N 22°49′41″W / 66.055°N 22.828°W / 66.055; -22.828
Area0.6 km2 (0.23 sq mi)
Administration
ConstituencyNorthwest
RegionVestfirðir
Demographics
LanguagesIcelandic
Ethnic groupsIcelanders
Additional information
Time zone
Vigur, pictured in September 2009
Vigur windmill, pictured in July 2011

Vigur (Icelandic pronunciation: [ˈvɪːɣʏr̥] ) is the second largest island of the Ísafjarðardjúp fjord in Westfjords, Iceland. Located just south of the Arctic Circle, the island is around 2 kilometres (6,600 ft) in length and 400 metres (1,300 ft) in width. The island is most noted for its thriving seabird colonies—particularly Atlantic puffins—traditional eiderdown production and historical buildings.

The two story Viktoriuhús, built in 1860, is one of the oldest timber buildings in Iceland and is part of The Historical Buildings Collection of Þjóðminjasafn Íslands. Iceland's oldest seaworthy boat, Vigurbreiður, is also on Vigur.

Today, there is only a single farm located on Vigur. In the seventeenth century the farm on Vigur was home to Magnús Jónsson, a wealthy man who collected and commissioned manuscripts.[1] The first reference to Vigur in the written record is 1194 but it may well be referenced earlier than that under a different name.

A windmill, built in c. 1840, is also located on the island.[2] It is the only surviving historic windmill in the country and possibly the northernmost windmill in the world.

Each year around 3,500 nests of the Common Eider are found on Vigur. The nests are lined with Eider Down which is collected by the farmer once eggs have hatched and chicks vacated. The Eider Down is dried, sorted and cleaned by hand using methods passed down through generations.

Vigur is home to one of the largest puffin colonies in Iceland as well as a rare colony of about 1,000 Black Guillemots.[3] It also hosts vast numbers of Arctic Tern (880 breeding pairs) and other Arctic seabirds.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Páll Eggert Ólason, Íslenskar æviskrár: Frá landnámstímum til ársloka 1940, 6 vols (Reykjavík: Hið Íslenzka Bókmenntafélag, 1948–76), III (1950): 433–44.
  2. ^ "Vigur". Nordic Adventure Travel. Retrieved 23 December 2016.
  3. ^ a b Milesi-Gaches, David; Lhériau, Alexandre (2022). "Census of breeding seabirds in Vigur Island, Westfjords, Iceland in 2021". Bird Census News. 35 (1–2): 10–20 – via HAL.

External links[edit]