Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 30

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 30
Þóra Pétursdóttir N Figure 2: Elaborate horse grave at Hrífunes, V-Skaftafellssýsla, encircled by an unusual oblong stone setting (Eldjárn 2000: 245). ed in the grave (Eldjám 2000, 138). As with dogs deposited, the proximity between horse and human is often great and in some instances such that the two cannot possibly be disentangled and viewed separately. Exclusive horse graves, where a horse is buried alone and in no direct relation to a human grave, occur in at least nine instances (Eldjám 2000, 308-309). These horse graves have, however, invariably been interpreted as belonging to a known or unknown human grave in their vicinity. Yet, even if there usually is a human grave close by, the distance between the two var- ies from less than 2 m up to at least 14 m. Whether the horse should be considered as belonging to a human burial rite, or be perceived as part of the grave goods of the individual in the closest grave, is therefore not at all self-evident. Not the least when considering the fact that the horse is often equipped with grave goods itself, a saddle and/or bridle. This most evident characteristic of the Icelandic corpus has not been given much thought by scholars but more often explained away as an incidental and meaningless trait reflecting the general poorness and simplicity of the graves. In an article on the Icelandic horse in 1981, Eldjám proclaimed that the abundance of horses in Icelandic graves could most likely be explained by the large quantity of horses from early on in the settlement, which had made it economically favora- ble to deposit them in the graves with the dead (Eldjám 1981, 4). More recently, a similar opinion has been expressed by Vésteinsson (2000, 170). Reducing the abundance of horses to economic condi- tions is, however, far too restrictive. And, clearly it would have been practical to get rid of a dead horse but if that alone was the impetus it would hardly have been done so carefully and elaborately as evi- dent in some of the exclusive horse graves, as e.g. grave 1 at Hrífunes (see Figure 2) — not to mention the common deposition of saddles and other “valua- ble” equipment which contradicts a gen- eral reluctance to “forfeit” objects as grave goods (as proposed by Eldjám 1956, 243). 28

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