Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 102

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 102
Orri Vésteinsson, Thomas H. McGovern, Christian Keller body of charters and estate records from the 14th century onwards. The narrative sources allow for a general description of economic and environmental conditions in the country in the 12th and 13th cen- turies whereas the estate records and charters make a detailed analysis of land use, property divisions and ownership pattems possible by the early 1300s. These late medieval data can also be sup- plemented with extremely detailed human and livestock census data from the 18th century. In contrast hardly any documentary evidence survives from the Norse colony in Greenland. What little there is was preserved in Iceland, Denmark or Norway and only gives a skeletal outline of the colony’s relation with its neighbors and the main events in its political histo- ry, as well as some morsels on place names and church organization (Ólafur Halldórsson 1978). The archaeology of Greenland is however both rich and com- paratively well known. The Western set- tlement, which was the more northerly of the two main settlement clusters of the Greenlandic colony, was abandoned in the mid-14th century and its southern neighbor, the Eastern settlement, had become deserted a century later. These events have left a unique archaeological record which has only been minimally damaged by subsequent Inuit settlements and post-1700 Danish colonization. In Greenland there have thus been pre- served the remains of a complete late- medieval landscape with possibilities for comprehensive investigations into a large number of aspects of environmental interactions, economy and social struc- ture. Since Greenland was settled directly from Iceland, and since both colonies shared a common language and were integrated into the same Norwegian realm after AD 1264, possibilities for nearly direct historical analogy are apparently considerable. There is a long tradition of using Icelandic historical and ethnographic data to shed light on the archaeology of Norse Greenland (Bruun 1918, McGovem 1992a), as well as the Viking age period in general, often in a somewhat uncritical and confusing fash- ion. If we are to avoid the pitfalls of an a-historical and circular approach to complex historical and environmental interactions, we should be clear about the temporal boundaries of our different data sets, and about the degree of detail and resolution we can reasonably expect from them. For most of the westem North Atlantic, the whole of the Viking period (ca. AD 750-1100) was almost entirely prehistoric in terms of genuinely contemporary written sources. Direct evidence for the period of initial settle- ment is in fact provided only by archae- ology and paleo-environmental investi- gation. This type of evidence is growing rapidly, but remains limited. This direct contemporary evidence at present indi- cates strong continuities between 9th- lOth century patterns and the later medieval and early modem periods, but also indicates a growing number of dis- continuites in pattems of climate and vegetation, economic strategy and politi- cal structure. The prehistoric settlement phase in both islands had a different char- acter from the later historic phases, and 100
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