Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Qupperneq 36

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Qupperneq 36
Bruno Berson A CONTRIBUTION TO THE STUDY OF THE MEDIEVAL ICELANDIC FARM: THE BYRES Since the end of the nineteenth century numerous farm sites dating from the mid- dle ages have been excavated in Iceland. More than 50 have now been partialiy or fully excavated (Margrét Hermanns-Auðardóttir 1989). The focus has always been primarily on the dwellings, and while a number of animal shelters have been excavated their characteristics, development and significance remains poorly understood. This paper gives an overview of archaeologically investigated medieval byres in Iceland, discussing the nature and limitations of the evidence, the principal characteristics of the buildings and their value for research for medieval Icelandic society and economy. Bruno Berson, 60 rue Jules Charpentier, 37000 TOURS, France, bbno@wanadoo.fr Keywords: byres, medieval Iceland, animal husbandry The sites The first excavation of a byre took place in Lundur in Borgarfjörður in 1884 (Figure 2). The antiquarian Sigurður Vigfússon took interest in the ruin when he heard local traditions that it was a hea- then temple. He carried out a hasty exca- vation and became convinced that he had found the ruins of a Viking age temple (Sigurður Vigfússon 1885). More than fifty years later, in 1939, a Scandinavian archaeological expedition investigated a number of sites in Þjórsárdalur and Borgarfjörður. The site at Lundur was chosen for re-excavation, led by the Finnish archaeologist Jouko Voionmaa (1943). Voionmaa came to the conclusion after carefully excavating the structure that it was not a temple but an ordinary farmstead dwelling. Based on the exca- vation of a similar structure at Gröf, which clearly was a byre with attached bam, Kristján Eldjám proposed in 1964 that the structure at Lundur was neither a temple nor a dwelling, but a byre con- nected to a barn (Kristján Eldjám 1964). This identification has since been gener- ally accepted. The structure was built of stone-lined turf walls and divided into four rooms. The byre was in the south part of the building, measuring 9 x 3,5 m on the inside. It had three aisles, the central one being fully paved from the north to the south and sloping toward a doorway on the south end gable. The stalls were along the walls on each side of the paving, but divisions Archaeologia Islandica 2 (2002) 34-60
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Archaeologia Islandica

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