Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 106

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 106
Orri Vésteinsson, Thomas H. McGovern, Christian Keller saga accounts were written down 200- 300 years after the settlement period they describe, and were certainly shaped by later medieval factional biases and polit- ical struggles (Sveinbjörn Rafnsson 1974; Adolf Friðriksson & Orri Vésteinsson in press). The exact mix of transmitted tradition and later interpola- tion has been extensively debated (e.g. Jakob Benediktsson 1978, Durrenberger 1991, Vésteinn Ólason 1998), and the consensus appears to be that while 12th- 13th century descriptions of the 9th-10th century show an awareness that social and environmental conditions were dif- ferent in the settlement age, these later sources are in need of extensive testing against other types of evidence. While they can not be used as primary sources for the landnám period, medieval histori- cal writings like the Book of Settlements (Jakob Benediktsson (ed.) 1968, 31-397, translated in The Book of Settlements, Hermann Pálsson & Paul Edwards transl. Manitoba 1972) and the sagas may thus provide an impression of what the later authors thought had changed since settle- ment times, and thus indicate areas for further investigation. The highlighted portions of the text quoted above illustrate some of these recurring themes: - Weather was different somehow (out- door winter grazing, but in other sources there is also mention of hard times) - Deforestation. Forest once stretched from “mountains to the sea” (íslendingabók, Jakob Benediktsson (ed.) 1968, 5) - Rich strandage. Driftwood and stranded whales were more common - Abundance of wild foods, unwary animals were vulnerable - Large, complex households under direct chiefly control were common - Cultural landscape was created by chieftains Some of these issues are really only a matter of common sense, especially deforestation, which was still taking place in the high-middle ages. Other issues, particularly those which relate to aspects of the environment not affected by humans like climate and strandage, belong more clearly to a conception of things having been generally better (or at least more dramatic) “back then”. To what extent this idea is linked to the per- sistent suggestion in the sagas that the settlement process was dominated by chieftains who had control over a large number of people, is unclear. It is tempt- ing to think that this suggestion owes more to political developments in Iceland (and possibly also in Greenland) in the 13th century, when great magnates where taking over control of larger and larger regions, superseding an earlier system of political fragmentation (Orri Vésteinsson 2000a, 238-46). Even so, it is still possi- ble that at least some of these themes rep- resent memories of the settlement process. In particular it seems worth- while to investigate the proposition that the settlement and subsistence systems were created by chieftains or great men: whether the colonies were made up of a large number of isolated independent 104
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