Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 59

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 59
A Contribution To the Study of the Medieval Icelandic Farm: the Byre byre, 70 and 80 m respectively. In all these cases the byre seems to have been inside the homefield and one expla- nation that suggests itself for this arrangement is that the inconvenience of having to walk a long way to the byre was offset by the benefits of not having to carry the manure a long distance from the byre to spread it on the field. In those cases where the byre may have been at the edge or even just outside the home- field it is possible that keeping the ani- mals, grazing and trampling away from the homefield may have been a consider- ation. At Herjólfsdalur and Bergþórshvoll the byres are closely associated with the dwelling and at Þórarinsstaðir and Laugar the byres actually form a part of the dwelling complex. The latter sort of arrangement is common on Norse sites in Greenland and was also prevalent in many parts of Iceland in early modern times. At Herjólfsdalur the byre (IV) and the dwelling (V) were connected by a passage and at Bergþórshvoll the byre may have been connected to the dwelling complex. The benefits of this arrange- ment are mainly ease of communication between byre and dwelling, allowing easy access for milk maids and cowboys to go about their tasks. It is also possible that the preservation of heat from the ani- mals played a role, especially if there were second storeys on these buildings - an eventuality which the evidence cannot preclude but does not support either. Related to this may be those byres, both those connected to the dwelling like Herjólfsdalur VIII and those far removed from it like Goðatættur and Hvítárholt, where there is evidence for human habi- tation in one end of the byre. In none of these cases is the evidence for human habitiation extensive and on all these sites are there other more substantial dwellings for the humans. It would therefore be rash to interpret these hous- es as combined dwellings and byres of the type commonly found in Iron and Viking age contexts in Scandinavia. The similarities are however striking and they suggest a degree of affmity and/or conti- nuity of a construction heritage between the Icelandic settlements of the Viking and high middle ages and the Scandinavian Iron age. It is possible that the phasing of the Herjólfsdalur site could be seen as an indication of a devel- opment from a combined byre-dwelling (as in structure VIII) to separate but con- nected byre and dwelling (as in structures IV and V). As most of the sites where the byre is separated from the dwelling are dated to the llth century or even later it might be argued that this represents an even more recent development. If that is so, some particular Icelandic conditions must have dictated this development - the importance of manuring infields being the one that springs most readily to mind. The exceptions - Þórarinsstaðir and Laugar - would then be explained by their marginal locations and high altitude which meant that the farms were snow- bound for many months every year mak- ing it troublesome in extreme to locate the byres far away from the dwellings. 57
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