Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 37

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 37
ZOOARCHAEOLOGY, HlSTORY AND LANDSCAPE ArCHAEOLOGY AT FlNNBOGASTAÐIR IN THE 18TH CENTURY strandage rights. However the fish so dominant in the excavated archaeofauna are only indirectly mentioned in the Jarðabók account, and the documentary account provides no means to further investigate the marine resources that must have sustained the households of Sr. Bjami and Brandur. The two types of evi- dence are complementary, and it may be more productive to synthesize their very different perspectives on the same eco- nomic strategies rather than to seek to privilege history over archaeology or the reverse. It will require a much larger bone sample than we now have to effec- tively reconstmct the sheep herding pat- tems so economically laid out in the land register, but even a relatively small archaeofauna such as the 1990 sample can quickly and effectively answer the question of the likely source of the miss- ing resources that provisioned the early modem farmers of Ámeshreppur - the sea. Our zooarchaeological evidence can also help fill in some of the missing pieces of the puzzle of how poor tenant farmers like Sr. Bjami and Brandur man- aged to survive, especially if we add archaeological survey and landscape analysis evidence. Explaining the critical role of marine resources at this 18th cen- tury tenant farm requires a broader, multi-disciplinary view of the contempo- rary social and environmental context. Rural Poverty, Environmental Change and Strategies for Survival By the 18th century most Icelanders were tenant farmers, and many were extreme- ly poor by any measure. The households of Sr. Bjarni and Brandur at Finnbogastaðir in 1706 may have repre- sented two ends of a spectrum of relative wealth, education, and access to the wider world of enlightenment Europe, but both were certainly poor and strug- gling tenants. However, the two house- holds on the Finnbogastaðir farm in the fall of 1706 (18 people in all sharing the same small site) were by no means the poorest of the poor. These were the land- less paupers and sporadically employed migrant farmhands who caused such offi- cial concem and inspired often draconian legislation aimed at controlling the potentially dangerous wandering poor (who tended to have the highest mortali- ty during times of famine, Vasey 2000). Most tenant farmers had single year leas- es, and would frequently move between farms (either voluntarily or driven by eviction). When a farmer moved a speci- fied number of cows and sheep stayed at the farm for the next tenant, along with any improvements to farm buildings, pastures, or other immovable property. Tenants were formally required to main- tain houses, fences, and farm buildings at their own expense. However, mainte- nance of structures on farms became a problem after 1700 because tenants moved so frequently that they considered it a waste of time and energy to rebuild farm buildings they could never own and would only briefly inhabit. Only mini- mum repairs were made to turf structures (which require annual maintenance and large scale rebuilding every 25-30 years), which caused many farms to become increasingly neglected and fall into ruin, 35
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