Catholicism was banned by the laws of Iceland and it was even banned even to enter Iceland for more than three centuries until the Lutheran people steadily stayed there. Many existing Northern European customs and customs have been transformed into Christian actions like children's baptism to help turn the Norwegians into Christians. When a child was born, Norwegians held numerous rituals. For example, a newly born baby is placed on the ground and then placed there until the father (or a close relative if he is not) picks up and places it in a mantle's fold.
Gudmundsson is known as "Jon the Learned" and was mentioned in the book "Icelandic Legends" published in 1866. An elf living in a mermaid and mermaid elf, a rock and a hill. In 1627, the pastor blamed his view on the elves, accused him of ignoring the command of the King of Denmark, banning magic, and wrote a paper that attacked scholar John as a wizard. Ten years later, Jon Learned will be expelled from Iceland for the practice of White Magic. Then the king pitied him and sent him to eastern Iceland apart from the failure of the Satan irrigation agreement.
On the day when Ólaf Tryggvason got on the Norwegian throne (995-1000), the efforts of Christianization in Iceland became increasingly intense. King Olaf sent the Icelandic Stefnir Öorgilsson to Iceland to convert to a fellow countryman. But Stefnir is not a wise man, but is an image of a pagan god in which he began to use violent destruction. This behavior made him a very popular Norwegian, so he eventually declared a gang. Iceland's adoption of Christianity has traditionally been attributed to the year 1000 (although most historians placed it in 999). The main sources of Christianity in Iceland are Alifior Gilson's "Icelandic Books", Icelandic family legends, and the first bishops and missionary churches.
Catholic and Lutheran religions and other religions have also been discovered, but the most important religion in Iceland is Protestant. Of course Viking had the Nordic gods they worshiped, but Christianity soon replaced the old religion. Clerics in Iceland graduated from one of two religious training schools, Holar in the north and Skaholt in the south. Border of Hora has great power and influence in Iceland, both Catholic and Protestant. The local church is led by a rural priest named Shira. Icelandic folklore gave magical powers to some of these priests. He was one of the first Icelanders studied in Paris and later became a pastor of Oddi in Rancharvellir in southern Iceland. Sæmund was welcomed as a cause of Hekla volcanic fires, and he sent a gold-plated heart to the Sachsen's witch.