Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 18

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 18
Klavs Randsborg Figure 2. Small stone with a runic inscription mentioning a Norse expedition found at Kingittorsuaq near Upernavik (after Magnusen & Rafn 1838-45). 1:1. of expeditions attempting comprehensive descriptions of the Norse ruins (cf., e.g., Thorhallesen 1776; andthe detailed work by Aa. Arctander in the 1770s). In fact, more energy was put into this question than into most antiquarian matters in Denmark during the late eighteenth cen- tury. At the beginning of the nineteenth century the Royal Commission of Antiquities in Copenhagen, in particular the Royal Society for Northem Antiquities, took a very strong interest in the Norse settlement sites, its mins and other monuments as well as artefacts from Greenland. Very many archaeologi- cal finds (as well as ethnographica, cf. below) from Greenland thus entered the collections in Copenhagen (Magnusen & Rafn 1838-45; cf. Arneborg 1989), including a tiny Norse stone with a mnic inscription from Kingittorsuaq at Upemavik found in 1824 and mentioning Norse expeditions to Northem Greenland (for hunting and trading) (Danish National Museum, now Ethnographic collection, MCCXII) (Fig. 2). This "mne- stone" reveals, as do the recorded trips to America/Canada (possibly also for tim- ber), Norse hunting and trading activities far from the home settlement in the South, expeditions which with certainty brought the Greenlanders in close contact with the Inuit/Eskimo. EARLY INUIT/ESKIMO ETHNO- GRAPHY Few "ethnographica" from Greenland reached the collections in Copenhagen before the early nineteenth century, although some did, no doubt through whalers and others operating in the North Atlantic, as is evident in the lists and illustrations pertaining to the museum of Ole Worm (1588-1654), which held a kayak (cf. Randsborg 2001). Other Inuit/Eskimo items of European interest were accessories. Some renewed contact between the two countries Greenland and Denmark must, as indicated, have existed at least from about 1600 on, if not earlier. 16
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Archaeologia Islandica

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