Ný saga - 01.01.2000, Side 100

Ný saga - 01.01.2000, Side 100
Summaries Sigurður Narfi Rúnarsson Boxing in Iccland. A brief history of boxing lcading up to its prohibition in 1996 (Hnefaleikar á Islandi. Ágrip af sögu íþróttarinnar og aðdraganda linefaleikabanns) On May 13th 2000 the Iceiandic parliament rejected a bill proposing legalization of amateur boxing which had been prohibited by law since 1956. Boxing was introduced in Iceland in the first years of the 20th century but had a mixed reception. Many found it vulgar and foreign to Icelandic cultural traditions. The first public boxing tournament took place in 1928 and in 1933 the sport was accepted by the Icelandic Sports Association, leading to the first national championship tournament in 1936. Considerable activity followed in the next 10-15 years, although shorlage of good trainers and facilities was always a handicap. As a result ol' better knowledge of the dangers of the sport and mounting criticism, especially from doctors, box- ing fell inlo disrepute and in 1956 a bill was passed without opposition in parliament banning all forms of boxing. Karl Grönvold The timing of the settlenient ash layer (Aldur Landnámslagsins) The volcanic eruption which occurred in Iceland just at Ihe time of earliest settlement produced a distinctive ash layer, the settlement layer (Landnámslag). No menlion ol' this eruption and the formation of the ash layer is made in histori- cal records and radiocarbon age determinations are uncertain (plus/ntinus a few decades). Signals from Icelandic volcanic eruptions are, however, preserved in the Greenland ice, and in ice cores the annual layers can be counted with the accur- acy of only two or three years. The signal in ice is both in the forrn of acid precipitation caused by interaction of volcanic gasses with the atmos- phere and wind carried ash particles. The ash par- ticles can be chentically analysed and their chem- ical composition can be used to trace individual ash layers to separate volcanoes and volcanic areas in Iceland. The source of the settlement layer is the Vatnaöldur eruption in the Torfajökull area in South Central Iceland. Ash from this eruption is made up of two distinct components, one rhy- olitic and the otlier basaltic. Both components are found in the GRIP ice core, leaving no doubt as to the identification. The ice core age is 871 CE +/- 2 years which coincides closely with the date givcn by historical sources for the earliest settlement (Ari fróði in Islendingabók). In two cases there is a turf wall and a turf l'ence that may predate the setllement Iayer and in one case cereal pollen predates the settlement layer. No other archaeological finds underlying the settlement layer have been recorded. BOOKS (AF BÓKUM) Gunnar Karlsson A task accomplished (Verkið sem tókst að vinna) In the article professor Gunnar Karlsson reviews a new four volume work, The History of Christianity in Iceland (Krislni á íslandi), which was written by five historians, Hjalti Hugason, Gunnar F. Guðniundsson, Loftur Guttormsson, Þórunn Valdimarsdóttir and Pétur Pétursson. Rósa Magnúsdóttir The Origins of a Cultural War: The Establish- ment of Soviet and Anierican Friendship Socie- ties in Iceland. (Menningarstríð í uppsiglingu. Stofnun og upphafsár vináttufélaga Bandaríkjanna og Sovétríkjanna á íslandi) The early Cold War years saw the establishment of Soviet and American cultural and friendship societies in Iceland. The competitive spirit of the Cold War was highly visible in the years leading up lo the establishment of such societies and dur- ing the early years of their activities. Soviet and American foreign policy makers considered cul- tural diplomacy an important strategy when com- peting for the support and respect of the Icelandic public. Their ultimate goal, however, was to influence Icelandic politics but there is no evidence that they succeeded in doing so. On the other hand the Icelandic public appreciated the cullural events. The period under discussion, 1948-52, shows how the launching of the friend- ship societies and the cultural competition between the two super-powers, became a high- brow cultural war. Torfi H. Tulinius Snorri and his brothers. The ascendancy of the sons of Sturla in the social space of llie Icclandic Coniinonwealth (Snorri og bræður hans. Framgangur og átök Sturlu- sona í félagslegu rými þjóðveldisins) Concepts developed by French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu are used to elucidate the relationship between power struggle and cultural activity among the aristocracy in Iceland during the earli-
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