Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 35

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 35
ZOOARCHAEOLOGY, HlSTORY AND LANDSCAPE ARCHAEOLOGY AT FlNNBOGASTAÐIR IN THE 18TH CENTURY Mvvatn 1712 Revkiadalshr. 1712 Árneshr. 1706 Farms 18 61 35 Milking Cows 66 199 50 Milkewes 962 2323 322 wether/old wether 680 1532 132 total 1708 4054 504 Major stock per farm 95 66 14 Table 2. Comparison of livestock in three regions based on historical records. inland higher altitude). It seems clear that while all three districts kept the same mix of stock, both absolute numbers of ani- mals per farm and the proportion of stock maintained dififer across 18th century northem Iceland. Not only do the farms in the NW keep far fewer domestic animals, but their mix is tilted much more heavily towards food production rather than wool production, with a proportionally higher percentage of milk cows and milking ewes relative to wethers. Sturla Friðriksson (1972) estimated that under conditions of tradi- tional Icelandic agriculture (before the mid 19th century) it took the product of 9 ewes to sustain one adult, with 6 ewes equaling one cow. If we use these figures as a rough guide, it is possible to show that in the Ámes district the total number of animals could not possibly sustain the number of people actually living on the farms in 1706, but the number of domes- tic animals in the Mývatn and Reykjahlíðar districts should have been able to sustain the number of people that were living in the area. Further analysis indicates that only about 26 - 30 % of income for farms in Ámes in 1706 were based on agriculture while the ratio is much higher for Mývatn - and Reykjahlíðar districts, about 60% in 1712 (Edvardsson 2003). These analyses indicate that the people of Ámes district in the early 18th century could not live on agriculture alone and must have based their income on resources not fully quantified in the land registry or any other historical source. Finnbogastaðir in the Jarðabók Land Register In the 1706 land registry Finnbogastaðir appeared as a fairly typical farm in its district, valued at 16 hundreds, which was a mid-range farm for the NW area. Compared to the rest of Iceland the farm would be classified among the poorer farms (Appendix 1). The farm values are somewhat prob- 33
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Archaeologia Islandica

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