 Oedd Yn Ymlaen adael Ysgrifennu America i'w gwylwg latan, ac mae'n ddysgrifio yw fod rhaid i'i gynnwys. Mae'r Llandnd, ac mae Tenon i'r cydyddaint ac mae hynny'n byw ganddiol. Gynnydd yn gyf original Columbus a'r effort wedi cael ei ysgrifennu isgwyl y Cymru yn ddwy'r Llandn o hwnol, ac mae'r Llandn o gwaith yn mynd ar NYG, ac mae o'r 1,000 oed yn y moddyll yma, mae'n hynny diodd yn cael gyf�ar cychwyn i gysylltu hebedd. fel mwy yw gweld i'r hynny. Ysloeddiad Sagar yn ystyried o'r gwaith a'r ddweud 500 ysgololi ar y cyflwyno. Mae'n gyfer yng Nghymru, y Prifysgol, y Prifysgol a'r Prifysgol o'r gyfer yw ysgolol newydd. Nawr, maen nhw'n gweld i'r gael ysgolol. Mae 900 yma, mae'r norys, y ferrys, bod wedyn yn lleol yng Nghymru, yw'r cadw i'r cynnwys i'r Gwylfaen Gwylfaen Gwylfaen Gwylfaen Gwylfaen Gwylfaen Gwylfaen steffingstones that brought them within range of the Canadian coast. From there, according to the oral reports of the time, written down two centuries later in the saga of the Greenlanders and the saga of Eric the Red, the Vikings stumbled upon their North Americans around 1000 AD, and over the next couple of decades they made several expeditions to this new to them world. The built homes harvested resources, they traded and clashed with the natives, then, as quickly as they arrived, they abandoned Vinland. The two accounts often differ in the saga of the Greenlanders after the accidental sighting of unknown western lands. Leith Erikson explores three distinct regions of Canada. Helylland, or the land of the Flatstones, which was probably the bar in Bathin Island. Markland, or land of forests, which was probably along the Labrador coast. And Vinland, a warm region in what is now the province of Newfoundland, where Erikson and a small crew wintered in the saga of Eric the Red. Erikson is the accidental discoverer of Vinland, and an Icelandic merchant named Forfinn Carlsfyn. Detailed aside, we now know these tales are at least broadly true. The Vikings did venture to North America in roughly the timeline in the sagas described, making them the first people to bridge the world's oldest cultural divide.