Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 118

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 118
Orri Vésteinsson, Thomas H. McGovern, Christian Keller This site was traditionally identified as the seat of Eirik the Red, the leader of the Norse landnám in Greenland, and later contemporary written sources clearly identify Brattahlíð as the lawspeaker’s (assembly head, civil leader) farm in the later Middle Ages (Gad 1970). What are apparently full farms (with cattle byres and human living areas as well as sheep and goat pens) are clustered together in a pattern somewhat reminiscent of the elite site at the Brough of Birsay in Orkney (Morris ed. 1996). The Qordlortup valley region just to the north of the Brattahlíð complex was intensively developed, with a densely woven system of both lowland and upland farms and sheilings estab- lished by the time of fmal abandonment in the mid to late 15th century (Albrethsen & Keller 1986). The bishop’s manor at Garðar was the other major center for power in the Eastern Settlement, and its managers would appear to have created a local set- tlement pattem diametrically opposed to the dense cluster of holdings in the Brattahlíð area. Several scholars have noted both the large size of the farm buildings associated with the cathedral church and bishop’s manor and of its exceptionally large homefields served by a complex irrigation system (Krogh 1974) and surrounding pastures (Norlund & Stenberger 1934, McGovern 1992a). However Keller (1991, 134- 135) made use of a systematic modem pasture quality assessment (Ingvi Þorsteinsson ed. 1983) to argue for an exclusion zone of unusual proportions and quality surrounding the Garðar manor, demonstrating a surplus of pas- ture vegetation relative to settlement den- sity in the entire district around the epis- copal site. Instead of a cluster of hold- ings, the managers at Garðar seem to have favored one large household, which included enough manpower to service the 100-150 cows stabled in the byre complexes (the contemporary 14th-15th c. byres at the main farm at Brattahlíð would have held 30-40 cattle). The Brattahlíð strategy seems to have been to effect a full utilisation of natural resources by erecting new holdings in the vicinity of the original settlement, hous- ing free or dependent labor in multiple nearby farms. If Brattahlíð was initially claimed in a broad Skallagrímr strategy, this approach was subsequently replaced by a very different economic landscape with a number of more or less equally sized farms. Quite opposite to this, the strategy at Garðar seems to have been successful in at least maintaining a large piece of undivided land supporting an 116
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