Thorfinn Karlsefni (born 980, Iceland—died after 1007) was an Icelandic-born Scandinavian leader of an early colonizing expedition to North America. His travels were recounted in the Saga of Erik and the Tale of the Greenlanders.
Thorfinn must have been given his nickname, Karlsefni, at an early age, since it means “promising boy.” About 900 his grandfather had led many Norwegians to colonize Iceland, and by 986 their descendants felt so hard-pressed for stock-farming land there that they followed the lead of Erik the Red and migrated to Greenland. Thorfinn, who was a successful trader and sea captain, reached what was known as the eastern settlement of Greenland with a group of colonists in 1003. There he married Gudrid, who was the widow of one of Erik the Red’s sons, Thorstein.
Thorfinn and Gudrid were persuaded by Erik to lead an expedition to Vinland (believed to be in the area of present-day Labrador, Nova Scotia, or New England), which had been discovered three years earlier by another of Erik’s sons, Leif Eriksson. About 1004 the couple set out with about 130 people in three ships and sailed westward, possibly making their first landfall on the North American continent at Baffin Island. They followed the coastline southward until they reached a heavily wooded region, perhaps some part of the Gulf of St. Lawrence shore, and settled there to engage in haymaking, hunting, and fishing. Thorfinn’s and Gudrid’s son, Snorri, born in Vinland about 1005, was the first European born in North America (excluding North America-associated Greenland).
That first winter the Scandinavian colonists met no people, but the next summer they were visited by friendly indigenous people who were probably Eskimo. The next summer they were visited by more numerous and less friendly indigenous people, and fighting ensued, which the Scandanavians won but at the cost of some lives. Three years after the landing, Thorfinn and the rest of the colonists abandoned Vinland and returned to Greenland. Later they returned to Iceland.