Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 119

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 119
Enduring Impacts: Viking Age Settlement in Iceland and Greenland exceptionally large central household probably consisting largely of paid or unfree labor, and coordinated by a formal administration after the first bishop’s arrival ca AD 1127. It would appear that several different settlement trajectories could be followed by powerful magnates in the later Middle Ages, and these may be rooted in a greater complexity of initial settlement pattern at landnám than anticipated by a narrow interpretation of the “Skallagrímr effect”. As we shall see similar patterns are found in medieval Iceland which strengthen the impression of complex processes at work in shaping the settle- ments of the two islands. Icelandic Settlement Patterns Unlike Greenland there is nowhere in Iceland direct access to a medieval, let alone settlement period, landscape. Most habitable lowland areas remain in agri- cultural use and those areas that have been abandoned at one time or another are as a rule marginal and untypical of the settlement structure as a whole. However, by viewing the existing settle- ment structure as a relic of decisions made in the settlement period and by making use of the rich documentary evi- dence which has survived from the Late Middle Ages and early modem times to “peel away” the effects of post-landnám settlement changes, it is possible to build a coherent picture of the initial settlement pattern. This can only be done in detail in areas where archaeological surveys have been carried out; where possible early sites are known, and where medieval charter bounds have been traced in the field and compared to the modern evidence. This sort of systemat- ic surveying has only been undertaken in Iceland since 1994 but already consider- able evidence has been collected from several different regions, among them Borgarijörður, Vestur-Barðastrandar- sýsla, Eyjaljörður, Fljótsdalshérað and Grafningur (see Fig. 1). These data are in many important aspects different from the Greenlandic ones. In particular, assessments of which farm-sites derive from the landnám-peri- od are usually not based on archaeologi- cal remains but on circumstantial and often less secure evidence like property value, size and shape of the farmland, and associations with a church or chapel. Thus a statement that a given farmstead dates from the landnám-period is often only based on it having a high property value, that it covers a variety of good land (i.e. rich meadow, summer and win- ter pasture, access to sea or freshwater fishing et c.) and is shaped so that it is likely that neighboring properties were carved from it (particularly when these have a less variety or quality of land) and that there was a church attached to the farmstead (the argument being that churches or chapels were built for more or less every independent farm in the country in the early llth century, giving an idea of settlement patterns a century and a half after the landnám - Orri Vésteinsson 2000a, 45-57). Furthermore the locations of heathen burials can give indications of settlements in the 9th-1 Oth centuries. It is however exceptional that a large enough number of burials has been found in a single area to give indications 117
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