Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 36

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 36
Raonar Edvardsson, Sophia Perdikaris, Thomas H. McGovern, Noah Zaoor & Matthew Waxman lematic as they were probably calculated at an earlier period, sometime around AD1100. From the period 1100 to 1706 a number of things have changed and some farms may have lost parts of their values. However, the sources indicate that the farm values for most farms have remained the same from their original calculation. Statistical analysis of the farm values suggest that they were calcu- lated from the number of domestic ani- mals and all benefits that the farm had, driftwood, stranding, etc. (Edvardsson, Ragnar, 2003). The Jarðabók entry reveals some pat- tems common to much of 18th century Iceland. A complex pattem of absentee land ownership was not unusual, in this case a four tiered structure extending from the actual occupants up to the King of Denmark, with a local farmer (Jón Magnússon from Reykjanes), providing oversight within the hreppur. Multiple tenant households within the same farm were also common in this period, with up to four sharing the same holding (not necessarily all occupying the same stmc- ture). The two tenant households occupy- ing the farm at Finnbogastaðir in the late fall of 1706 were clearly of different eco- nomic (and probably social) status. The larger household was of Sr. Bjarni Guðmundsson, the local priest. Sr. Bjami maintained four servants (both male and female) as well as his wife and four chil- dren (it was not uncommon for poor ten- ants to have still more impoverished landless servants living in their house- holds). Sr. Bjami has a mix of milk cows, wethers, milk ewes, and two horses as well as younger cattle and sheep appar- ently being maintained over the winter with an eye to stock renewal. He also owned some additional stock maintained at the nearby church farm Ames. The smaller household was that of Brandur Bjömsson, who had only his wife and six children to support, but who also only had a single cow and five milk ewes. If we apply the Friðriksson provisioning formula, both households appear to have had a provisioning shortfall: Sr. Bjami had approximately 5.3 human rations to maintain his ten household members while Brandur had only 1.1 human rations to feed his family of eight. The households of early 18th century Finnbogastaðir, like the great majority of their contemporaries in Vestfirðir, must have relied on other resources to main- tain bare subsistence. We are informed that seal hunting is sometimes successful and that both households have access to boats for fishing, but the register typical- ly makes no attempt to quantify non-agri- cultural production. Jarðabók and Zooarchaeology The bone assemblage recovered from Finnbogastaðir corresponds in most respects with the information on stock keeping provided in the land registry. All animals mentioned in the registry are present in the assemblage and the ratio of cattle to caprine bones (1:9.96) in the archaeofauna matches the overall ratio of cattle to sheep in the registry (1:9.43). The seals mentioned in the entry appear as bones in the midden, and whalebones correlate with recorded (disputed) 34
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