Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 125

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2002, Side 125
Enduring Impacts: Viking Age Settlement in Iceland and Greenland larger parts of its area would have been covered in forest at the time of the land- nám. One explanation of this pattern could be that during the initial phase, while people were still establishing the livestock economy and exploring the land, they tended to settle in groups or at least clusters which allowed for co-oper- ation and provided security against any real or imagined threats. Once this sort of clustered settlement had been estab- lished, a prospective leader who could not establish direct control over his fel- low settlers might instead opt to create a new settlement on adjacent, as yet unoc- cupied land, which even if it was of less- er quality could support a much Iarger household simply by making it larger than any of the farms in the original set- tlements. Hjaltastaðir was clearly a very successful settlement but other similar ones, like Stóra Steinsvað and Hóll which also had churches associated with them probably belong to the same phase in the settlement process. This particular district is dominated by its two main settlement clusters and the three large simple settlements but inland from these there is a small number of small farms of fairly even size and economic capability. These units do not look like they were established by people who chose to limit the size of their hold- ings in this manner. On the contrary they look like planned settlements, i.e. settle- ments defined and allocated by someone like the local leader at Hjaltastað who wanted to fill the neighboring landscape with dependant tenants. Each of these planned settlements can support a single household but they are seriously restrict- ed in their access to a number of resources, indicating their secondary standing: Hreimsstaðir and Rauðholt have hardly any summer pasture and had to rent it from others, Hrjótur and Ána- staðir have little meadows, poor hay fields and bad pasture for cattle and hors- es (Birna Gunnarsdóttir et al. 1998, 10- 17). In Barðaströnd and Rauðasandur on the northern shores of the great bay Breiðafjörður in Western Iceland the landscape is very different from that of Hjaltastaðaþinghá. With very limited lowland the settlements are strung along the strip of land between mountainside and seashore, normally only I -2 km wide but intersected by somewhat broader alluvial plains. This area is not known as particularly favorable for agriculture but it has excellent access to a large variety of wild resources, in particular seal, wild birds and eggs in the cliffs of Látrabjarg and fish on rich off-shore fishing grounds. In many ways one would think that this would have been an ideal place for the first arrivals in Iceland to start out. In fact 13th century tradition has it that one of the earliest explorers overwintered in Vatnsijörður which was full of fish and that he and his crew spent all summer hunting and fishing and forgot to procure winter fodder for their livestock which subsequently all died in the following winter (Jakob Benediktsson (ed.) 1968, 38-39). The three places in this region best suited for early settlements, where easy access to hunting coincides with good meadows, each later became domi- nated by a large complex settlement, which unlike the complex settlements in 123
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