Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 104

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 104
Orrj Vésteinsson, Thomas H. McGovern, Christian Keller nerable to volcanism (Edwards et al. 1994), epidemics and starvation in bad years (Ami Daníel Júlíusson 1990, 1996, Vasey 1997). Compounding this the last 1100 years have seen a loss of over 40% of the soil present at landnám in Iceland, induced primarily by over-grazing by sheep (Ólafur Arnalds et al. 1987; Dugmore & Erskine 1994). Increasingly well documented climate change (Mayewski & O’Brien 1994, Barlow 1994, Barlow & Jennings 1998) certainly played a significant role in these events, but there is widespread evidence that human environmental impact predated later medieval cooling and there is a growing impression that settlement choices of the landnám created signifi- cant vulnerabilities to later changes (McGovem 1994). Skallagrímr’s Heirs While archaeology and environmental science have greatly increased their con- tribution to the investigation of early set- tlement in Greenland and lceland, the rich documentary heritage of Iceland, and especially the famous Icelandic saga literature (see Clover & Lindow eds. 1985), retain a hold on the imagination of workers in all disciplines. An often cited passage from Egil’s saga describing the establishment of the settlement of the chieftain Skallagímr in Borgarljörður in SW Iceland may suggest why this is so: Skallagrim was an industrious man. He always kept many men with him and gath- ered all the resources that were available for subsistence, since at first they had little in the way of livestock to support such a iarge number of people. Such livestock as there was grazed free in the woodland all year round. ...there was no lack of driftwood west of Myrar. He had a farmstead built on Alftanes and ran another farm there, and rowed out from it to catch fish and cull seals and gather eggs, all of which were there in great abundance. There was plen- ty of driftwood to take back to his farm. Whales beached there, too, in great num- bers, and there was wildlife there for the tak- ing at this hunting post: the animals were not used to man and would never flee. He owned a third farm by the sea on the west- em part of Myrar. ... and he planted crops there and named it Akrar (Fields). ... Skallagrim also sent his men upriver to catch salmon. He put Odd the hermit by Gljufura to take care of the salmon fishery there ... When Skallagrim’s livestock grew in number, it was allowed to roam mountain pastures for the whole summer. Noticing how much better and fatter the animals were that ranged on the heath, and also that the sheep which could not be brought down for winter survived in the mountain valleys, he had a farmstead built up on the mountain, and ran a farm there where his sheep were kept. ... In this way, Skallagrim put his livelihood on many footings. Egil’s saga, ch. 29. Transl. in Viðar Hreinsson ed. 1997, vol. 1, 66 (emphasis added). This passage has influenced many recent authors (e.g. Keller 1991, Durrenberger 1991, Smith 1995, Amorosi et al. 1997) with its powerful evocation of the role of a chiefly land-taker organizing the provi- sioning of his large household, using ini- tially concentrated household labor to bring in different wild resources and making use of different portions of an exceptionally broad land claim extending from offshore islands to mountain pas- tures. The saga’s Skallagrímr seems to have had both a good eye for landscape and been able to grasp the virtues of wide 102
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