Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 78

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 78
Ole Guldager unknown. The once thriving farms were left behind and forgotten. Eventually they tumed into insignificant and anony- mous piles of rocks and turf, still visible in the landscape today. But exactly where was the renowned Brattahlíð? For more than a century now, it has been a generally accepted fact among researchers that the remains of the farm are to be found in Qassiarsuk, situ- ated in the Tunulliarfík f]ord of South Greenland (Figure 1). A lot of new material has appeared during the last 100 years, however. Excavations and extensive surveys have been conducted, providing a much deep- er and more detailed understanding of the settlement and the lifestyle of the medieval Norse Greenlanders. With this more extensive material at hand, it seems that the old theory con- ceming the location of Brattahlíð has to be seriously questioned. A new, and more likely candidate is a very large farm site found in Qinngua, only 10 kilometres from the old location of Brattahlíð. Recent years' surveys also raise ques- tions about the theories of the settlement structure itself. It was previously believed that the farms with churches were the centres of the settlement and the places where the chieftains lived. It now seems as if the social stmcture was some- what more complex, each region having both a large chieftain farm and nearby, another farm with a church. This division of the prominent farms probably reflects a unique development of the Greenlandic society in comparison with the other Nordic countries - a society where the chieftains remained in control of both churches and their lands. A Historical Review Research into the Norse settlements in Greenland was initiated in the early 18th century, beginning with the arrival of the Danish/Norwegian priest Hans Egede in 1721. This recolonisation of Greenland was the first succesful venture of many attempts to re-establish contact with the lost colony in the North Atlantic Ocean, and the purpose of Egede's joumey was mainly to bring christianity back to the Norse Greenlanders (Egede 1738). Even though Egede visited quite a number of abandoned farms on his joumeys, he did not succeed in finding any living Norse Greenlanders. Nevertheless, he chose to remain in the country, and built a mission in the vicinity of the old Western Settlement on the west coast of Greenland. The hope of finding living Norsemen was not given up however, since the his- torical records stated that there used to be two colonies in the country, both an east- em and a western settlement. Logically, it was assumed that the Eastem Settlement was situated on the inaccessible east coast of the country. Consequently quite a number of expeditions were carried out, with the hope of fínding the lost Eastem Settlement (Egede 1738, Walloe 1787, Graah 1832, Holm 1889). None of these expeditions were successful, though - simply because the so-called Eastem Settlement was situated on the south- western coast of the country, and was vis- ited by Egede as early as 1723. This was realised by Heinrich Peter 76
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