Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 79

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 79
Brattahlíð reconsidered von Eggers, who in 1793 published Om Grenlands Osterbygds sande Beliggenhed (On the true position of the Eastern Settlement of Greenland). Eggers was using the material from the fírst large scale surveys of the Norse ruin sites in this region, carried out only a few years earlier by Aaron Arctander and Andreas Bruun (Arctander 1793, Ostermann 1944). This material correlat- ed well with the information known from the historical records about the Eastem Settlement, and an attempt was made to identify the farms and fjords mentioned in the old records. Even though the identifícations were generally correct, Eggers made one mis- take, placing Brattahlíð in modern Igaliku, where the largest farm site known at that time had been found. The site has later proved to hold the remains of the Episcopal seat Garðar, but it took researchers almost a century to unravel the mistake made by Eggers. The research of the 18th century was dominated by two periods of intense sur- vey activity. In the 1830s and 1840s, Danish officials living in the region car- ried out investigations of the Norse farms. All of this material was included in the all-embracing work Granlands Historiske Mindesmœrker (Historical Monuments of Greenland) - GHM (1838-45), published by the Danish liter- ary commission, the Kongelige Nordiske Oldskrift-Selskab. This was the first time almost all of the known historical and archaeological material regarding the Norse settlements in Greenland was made available to the public. Still, the knowledge of the farm sites themselves was by far incomplete, and in 1880 it was decided to continue the sur- veys. The newly established Commisionen for Ledelsen af de Geologiske og Geografiske Undersogelser i Gronland (the Commision for the Direction of the Geological and Geographical Investiga- tions in Greenland) sent out a team, lead by Lieutenant Gustav Holm, in order to investigate the many farm sites (Holm 1884). The surveys were continued in 1894 by Lieutenant Daniel Bruun (1895) resulting in descriptions of almost 100 sites in the Eastern Settlement. At that time, it was also discovered that Eggers location of Brattahlíð was wrong. Herman Schirmer (1886) and Finnur Jónsson (1898) suggested that the farm site in Igaliku should be interpreted as the remains of the Episcopal seat at Garðar, and so Brattahlíð had to be situ- ated somewhere else. Using the new material made available by Holm and Bruun, Jónsson suggested that Brattahlíð might be found among the ruins in Qassiarsuk, in the Tunulliarfik ljord. Jónsson argued that “...Kagsiarsuk (sic.)... is the only place in Eriksfjord (Tunulliarfik) which has such a settle- ment and the ruins of such a major farm, as should be expected..” (author's transla- tion from Jónsson 1898, 293). Interestingly, this had already been suggested by Reverend Jorgen Frederik Jorgensen in 1840 in a letter to Oldskrift- Selskabet (Jorgensen 1841). This theory was apparently not taken seriously at the time, and was not included in the GHM III in 1845. In 1921, the responsibility of Norse research in Greenland was given to 77
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