Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 20

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 20
Klavs Randsborg English/British in the demise of the Norse Greenlanders holds true, it is also a country which ultimately fell victim to the capitalist expansion of Europe. APPENDIX The description below is by Missionary Hans Egede. It concerns the fíne Medieval Hvalso church (Qaqortoq), Southern Greenland in 1723 (Egede 1738, 113f.). The description is arnong the earliest of the Norse sites and ruins in Greenland and set in a scene of a joumey by boat from the present-day Nuuk/Godtháb area at the Norse Westem Settlement southwards to the Eastem Settlement. From the strait where we were laying, more than 150 people were following us the whole day. The weather was nice and calm, and we travelled inside of some beautiful flat and green islands, and after 3 miles’ [1 Danish mil/mile = 7.533 km] joumey towards the evening, we came to a place towards the East in a small fiord where our old Norwegians had lived, and by the Greenlanders [Inuits/Eskimos] called Kakoktok, and [which] was a very lovely site and a fine grass meadow. On this same site were to be seen two walled stmctures, of which the one has been a church, and was 8 favne [1 Danish favn/fathom = six Danish fod/feet = 1.88 m] long and about 32 fathom wide inside, and the wall almost one fathom thick. In height it was 2 to 3 fathoms. It had two doors on the southem side, and one large door in the westem end. In the northem side there had only been one window, but in the southem side four, wide towards the interior, and n arrow outwards. In addition, even one large window in each gable. The wall was still strong, but except for the southem comer it was cracked, and some stones, as well as parts of the gables, fall- en down. The stones in the entire stmcture were for a part very large, smooth and even, as if they were hewn, and the whole building well and artfully built, although without decoration. The church was sur- rounded by a large and wide churchyard wall, and was fully covered and over- grown by a coppice of juniper trees. The other walled stmcture was six fathoms long and three fathoms wide on the inside, with a single door, and was in a poorer state than the above. Apart from these two, there was further away in the fíeld another building of stone to be seen, but [this] was quite mined and collapsed. 18
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Archaeologia Islandica

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