
Watch an audio slideshow of how traditional Icelandic rhubarb stew is made. Rhubarb is one of the few vegetables that grows effortlessly in Iceland and for that reason it used to be a highly-valued addition to the traditional diet of fish and lamb.
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Associate professor of Icelandic Baldur Sigurðsson, who used to have a seat on the Icelandic Naming Committee, stated that the committee never makes whimsical decisions and that there was a sound reason for rejecting Blær as a female name.

Even though Blær exists as a woman’s name in dictionaries, it cannot be found in the registry of human names compiled by the committee in 1991. “Rare names and names like this that were out of the ordinary were left out,” Baldur told RÚV.
If a name was only carried by one or two persons it was not necessarily included, as in the case of Blær, he explained. “At the time only one woman went by that name […] and three to four men.”
Some years later, Blær was accepted as a male name. “And that marked a point of no return,” Baldur added, reasoning that according to law, only men can bare male names and women female names.
Baldur said that in spite of popular belief, the Icelandic Naming Committee hardly ever uses the provision in the law which authorizes the rejection of names on the basis that they may cause harm to the person carrying it.
“It is about as rarely used as the emergency brake on a train,” Baldur stated. “The provision was never used while I was on the committee and I only know of one incident: when permission for the name Satanía was applied for.”
Click here to read more about Blær Bjarkardóttir’s legal struggle to have her name approved by authorities.
ESA
On the way back to Reykjavík following this morning's news conference, at which the new government agreement was formally presented, the next Prime Minister of Iceland, Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson, and his assistant, Jóhannes Þór Skúlason, who was driving, were stopped for speeding.
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Leader of the Progressive Party, Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson, who held the mandate to lead coalition talks, presented the government agreement between the Progressive Party and Independence Party to the President of Iceland Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson at the presidential residence Bessastaðir this morning.
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The chairmen of the Independence Party and Progressive Party, Bjarni Benediktsson and Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson, formally presented the government agreement to the public at a press conference shortly after 11 am this morning.
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The party council of the Independence Party and central committee of the Progressive Party unanimously accepted the government agreement negotiated by their respective chairmen, Bjarni Benediktsson and Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson, yesterday evening.
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The 2013 April-May issue of Iceland Review & Atlantica has been released. Packed with informative and entertaining stories, highlights include an interview with outgoing Prime Minister Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir and the people who know her best, a photo essay of ice caves in Europe’s largest glacier and a colorful feature on life in the West Fjords.
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The 11th Reykjavík Shorts & Docs. Catch it while it lasts!
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