From Iceland — Lemúrinn: The Graf Zeppelin Visits Reykjavík

Lemúrinn: The Graf Zeppelin Visits Reykjavík

Published September 12, 2013

Lemúrinn: The Graf Zeppelin Visits Reykjavík

“On Thursday, July 17, at around 11:00 AM, the citizens of Reykjavík looked up at the sky in astonishment as the magnificent German airship Graf Zeppelin sailed towards the city. Slowly and majestically it approached, its grey body shining in the sunlight. It flew very slowly over the city in a circular pattern and its beauty captivated everybody who witnessed this great sight. It was a truly unforgettable scene as Iceland has never had a more distinguished airborne visitor.” (Fálkinn, August 1930)
Reading this caption today, it’s as if the small village of Reykjavík had been visited by an alien spaceship. In 1930, Iceland was still a very remote and obscure island nation struggling to keep up with the pace of modernisation in Northern Europe. Pessimism was on the rise as Iceland’s fragile economy had been severely affected by the onset of the Great Depression the year prior. Airplanes were an uncommon sight, so it must have been “a truly unforgettable scene” when that elegant German airship appeared above Reykjavík in July 1930.
The Zeppelins navigated the globe to demonstrate and test the airships. The Zeppelins transported passengers and mail on transatlantic flights in the 1930s before the Hindenburg disaster in 1937, and other political and economic issues, which hastened the demise of the airships. Iceland was visited a second time in 1931.

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