Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 16

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 16
Klavs Randsborg took over the North Atlantic traffic. In reality, this transfer of Norwegian power isolated Greenland even more from mainland Scandinavia - provided that the Norse settlement was still in existence by, say, 1450 or even 1500, which is highly doubtful. Nevertheless, Denmark of the Late Middle Ages was successful in protecting Scandinavia on two fronts - by keeping the English/British at bay in the North Atlantic, and the German continental powers in the Baltic. The Old Norsemen of Greenland were not entirely forgotten, although no concerted attempt was made at contact. Probably, the most likely explanation for this is that Copenhagen by then somehow knew, or at least strongly supposed, that the Greenland settlements had ceased to exist, for instance, no attempt was made after the Reformation in Denmark, 1536, to make the Catholic Greenlanders Protestant. Neither did the intrepid Christian IV, sending Danish fleets to the far comers of the Globe in the early sev- enteenth century, press to come to the rescue of the Greenlanders, in spite of his expedition to Hudson Bay in 1619-20. EARLY NORSE ARCHAEOLOGY IN GREENLAND The interest in the old Christian Greenlanders was nevertheless alive in Denmark during the Renaissance (overview in, e.g., Krogh 1967; Fyllingsnes 1990; cf. Gad 1984). The Renaissance provided an intellectual environment for historical speculations and cultural considerations, and the ques- tions of the Christian Norse in Greenland were still prominent in the discussions and eventually in the decisions to re- establish contact (cf. Egede 1741; etc.). Not encountering any Norse Greenlanders on their arrival, the new Scandinavian settlers of the eighteenth century imme- diately took to investigations and enquiries to gain knowledge. Thus, the "Apostle of Greenland", Hans Povelsen Egede, carried out an excavation in the beautiful ancient Norse church min at Hvalso (Qaqortoq) in 1723 (Eastern Settlement Site 83) (Fig. 1). The almost palatial Hvalso church was proba- bly erected around or even after 1300, although it shows no impact from the Gothic style. At any rate, it is probably later than 1261 when the Greenlanders accepted the sovereignty of the king of Norway. The church is known from writ- ten sources to have been in use for a wed- ding on the 16th of September, 1408 (as confirmed by two Greenland priests on April 16, 1409). In fact, this peaceful event is the last historical record of the Norse in Greenland with a degree of cer- tainty. The married couple left for Norway on what, to the records, was to become the "last ship out", namely in 1410 (cf. above). Incidentally, the year before (1407), a man had been bumed at the stake at Hvalso Church for seduction of a (high-ranking) married woman by "black magic", an event seemingly denoting at least a measure of legal nor- mality in the settlement at the beginning of the fifteenth century, however cmel the punishment. Certainly, nothing denotes the imminent decline of the 14
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