- Guðríður Símonardóttir
Guðríður Símonardóttir (1598 –
December 18 ,1682 ) was one of 242 people abducted from theWestman Islands ,Iceland in 1627. [ [http://www.nat.is/travelguideeng/plofin_saurbaer.htm Saurbaer ] ] The attacks byBarbary Pirates came to be known asthe Turkish abductions and Guðríður became known as Tyrkja-Gudda.Life
Guðríður was the wife of a fisherman and a mother. After her abduction, she was sold by the pirates as a
slave andconcubine inAlgeria . She was among the very few who were bought back by KingChristian IV of Denmark , returning to Iceland almost a decade later.She was then sent to Denmark along with some other former slaves to relearn her religion and native tongue. There, she was taught by
Hallgrímur Pétursson , who was then a theology student. After getting pregnant by him, and finding out that her husband had died, she married Hallgrímur. The other Icelanders looked down on Guðríður and saw her as a whore and heathen. She was twice as old as Hallgrímur, which was considered a disgrace.In art
Jakob Jónsson wrote an epic play about Tyrkja-Gudda in 1952. [http://www.leikskald.is/leikrit/enska/jajtyrkj.html]In 2001,
Steinunn Johannesdottir wrote a book on her exploits called "Reisubók Guðríðar Símonardóttur" ("Gudridur's Journey"). The book was on the bestseller list in Iceland for months.References
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