• Landnámssýningin / The Settlement Exhibition, Reykjavík, Iceland. 2,360 likes · 12 talking about this · 2,571 were here. Í Aðalstræti 10 og 16 geturðu...
  • 'The Settlement Exhibition Reykjavík 871±2' focuses on archaeological finds from the earliest period of habitation at Reykjavík, and scholarly research on them.
  • Address: Tryggvagata 15, 101 Reykjavik The Settlement Exhibition is part of Reykjavik City Museum: One museum in five unique places.
  • If you are looking to visit The Settlement Exhibition you can book this tour via Visitors Guide with excellent offers.
  • Reykjavík, from settlement to the present day: The Settlement Exhibition – step into the Viking Age. An open excavation where Viking ruins meet digital technology.
  • The Settlement Exhibition. In 2001, an excavation in central Reykjavik revealed the ruin of a Viking home, thought to be one of the first houses on the island.
  • The Settlement Exhibition, Reykjavik - This exhibition features an excavated longhouse from the 10th century. Included are relics dating back to the settleme...
  • Besides the hall, The Settlement Exhibition has various artifacts from the earliest settlements of Reykjavik.
  • The Settlement Exhibition. Step into the Viking Age. ... The Settlement Exhibition is part of Reykjavík City Museum: one museum in five unique places.
  • The Settlement Exhibition 871±2 in downtown Reykjavik is small but fascinating. The museum’s main attraction is the ruins of a longhouse from the 10th century.
  • The Settlement Exhibition is part of Reykjavík City Museum – one museum in five unique places.
  • Free for children, seniors, disabled, and city card holders. The Settlement Exhibition is part of Reykjavík City Museum: One museum in five unique places.
  • It is an exhibition on the settlement of Reykjavík, Iceland, created by the Reykjavik City Museum. A longhouse from the tenth century was also discovered during...
  • The Settlement Exhibition - Reykjavik 871± 2 is an exhibition that built around ruins of a Viking longhouse in Reykjavík City Museum.