Strong similarities in Holocene climate reconstructions derived from multiple proxies (BSi, TOC, δ<sup>13</sup>C, C/N, MS, δ<sup>15</sup>N) preserved in sediments from both glacial and non-glacial lakes across Iceland indicate a relatively warm early-to-mid Holocene from 10 to 6 ka, overprinted with cold excursions presumably related to meltwater impact on North Atlantic circulation until 7.9 ka. Sediment in lakes from glacial catchments indicates their catchments were ice-free during this interval. Statistical treatment of the high-resolution multiproxy paleoclimate lake records shows that despite great variability in catchment characteristics, the records document more or less synchronous abrupt, cold departures as opposed to the smoothly decreasing trend in Northern Hemisphere summer insolation. Although all lake records document a decline in summer temperature through the Holocene consistent with the regular decline in summer insolation, the onset of significant summer cooling, occurs ~5 ka in high-elevation interior sites, but is variably later in sites closer to the coast, suggesting some combination of changing ocean currents and sea ice modulate the impact from decreasing summer insolation. The timing of glacier inception during the mid-Holocene is determined by the decent of the Equilibrium Line Altitude (ELA), which is dominated by the evolution of summer temperature as summer insolation declined as well as changes in sea surface temperature for glacial systems particularly in coastal settings. The glacial response to the ELA decline is also highly dependent on the local topography. The initial nucleation of Langjökull in the highlands of Iceland starting by ca 5 ka, was followed by a stepwise expansion of both Langjökull and northeast Vatnajökull between 4.5 and 4.0 ka, with a second abrupt expansion ca. 3 ka. However, the initial appearance of Drangajökull in the NW of Iceland was delayed until after 2.5 ka. All lake records reflect abrupt summer temperature and catchment disturbance at about 4.5 ka, statistically indistinguishable from the ~4.2 ka event with a second widespread abrupt disturbance centered on 3.0 ka. Both are intervals of large explosive volcanism on Iceland. The most widespread increase in glacier advance, landscape instability, and soil erosion occurred shortly after 2 ka, likely due to a complex combination of increased impact from volcanic activity, cooling climate, and increased sea ice off the coast of Iceland. All lake records indicate a strong decline in temperature ~1.5 ka, culminating during the Little Ice Age between 1300 and 1900 CE when most glaciers reached their maximum dimensions.