Ólafía : rit Fornleifafræðingafélags Íslands. - 01.05.2007, Qupperneq 116

Ólafía : rit Fornleifafræðingafélags Íslands. - 01.05.2007, Qupperneq 116
 different systems. Part of the cartographic process became mapping the progression of systems and trading routes over time from the early Viking Age to the late medieval period. This made the relationship between the core and the periphery, their individual roles and the understanding of what happens from one system to another clearer. At least it forced me to consider why the independent trade of the two sub- peripheral areas of Scandinavia and Eastern Europe merged into a more centralized and organized trading system of the Hanseatic area. This is clearly a very complex question including both political alliances and power structural issues, changes in demand amongst the European consumers and a change in trade commodities from luxury to bulk goods. I have no background inform- ation or intention to try to give an answer to why this happened but am more concerned with how this influenced the tusk trade and what this shift in trade can tell us about world systems. It is from the recognition of this change that one idea of how to define world systems sprung out, during a seminar presentation of this project. Orri Vésteinsson (pers. com.) suggested that a possible way of defining world systems could be as an area within which people are aware of each other from the one to the other end of the system, an idea I very much agree with and find very useful in an arc- haeological context as our find material, as mentioned is potentially able to define such areas. Trying to apply this idea to the context of the tusk trade it can be said; that even as early as 300 A.D. the walrus tusk was known in central Europe and it had most likely arrived from the north eastern hunting grounds. However, it did in all probability not mean that people knew much, if anything, of these distant arctic fringes. Proceeding into the Viking age, there was an increased awareness of the areas of which the trade extended and the knowledge of these regions increased alongside the seafaring culture and skills. This close contact and trade went along within the defined sub-peripheral zone existing in relation to the European world system, as did a similar eastern European sub-periphery which was in close contact with both the Scandinavian sub-periphery and on the other hand the middle eastern world system. Unfortunately there is not sufficient information on this eastern sub-system to explore it further using this theory but the Scandinavian system can exemplify parts of this idea. When the trade increased during the Viking age so did the amount of in- formation, cultural influences etc. and it is this degree of contact that became important during the medieval period as merchants increasingly became aware of the possibilities for demand and supply opportunities within the world system they continuously became a closer part of. Until the change in trading from luxury goods to bulk goods (primarily stock fish) in the medieval period, the actual contact and knowledge of the consumer concerning the product probably was not high. Changes in the European market proba- bly set a stop to the traditional goods on which the Scandinavian sub-periphery had developed from and some become Walrus Tusk and World System Theory __________ 116
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