Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 44

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 44
Ragnar Edvardsson, Sophia Perdikaris, Thomas H. McGovern, Noah Zagor & Matthew Waxman of Finnbogastaðir and other local farms, Jón Magnússon, owned three boats and parts in other boats on different farms. In total he owned 7 boats. Two of his boats were used for shark fishing and one for general fishing. He also received a por- tion of the catch from the boats that he owned with other farmers. Most farmers in the Ámes district were fishing for sub- sistence but the three richest were also fishing for commercial purposes, and access to boats and verstöð stations (along with rent income and labor serv- ice) were clearly key elements in the strategies of these (still rather poor) local magnates. The 18th century land registry also suggests that some form of specialization was taking place in the fishing industry in the area. Many farmers in the Ámes district owned boats that were specially outfitted for sharkfishing. At the Gjögur fishing station 9 boats were stationed in 1706, six of them were outfitted for shark fishing and 3 for general fishing (Ámi Magnússon, VII.). Three of the farmers fishing from Gjögur are not local farm- ers. Two of them come from the Kaldrananes district and one is from another district further away. These farm- ers were at Gjögur for sharkfishing or deep water fishing as their farms were probably located too far from deep water fishing grounds.This indicates that the fishing industry in the area was more aimed at shark fishing and that the ver- stöð at Gjögur was specialized in shark fishing with cod fishing playing a lesser role. Unfortunately shark bone is not well preserved and therefore it is impossible to make full use of zooarchaeology to assess its importance for the local econo- my. The specialization of verstöðvar (pl) is an important question. There is a strong possibility that the location of a verstöð in the landscape was the result of what species fishermen intended to catch from that particular site, a question that requires further collaborative investiga- tion. From the archaeological and histori- cal data we can draw some conclusions about the early 18th century economy of the area. While the traditional domestic stock still played a role in subsistence and rents were still partly paid in butter, it is clear from both the zooarchaeology and a close reading of the available doc- uments that the most important species for most of the people of the Ámes dis- trict were cod and shark with agriculture playing a lesser role. As the statistical analyses of the Jarðabók register demon- strate, poor tenants (like Brandur and his family) were very dependent upon marine resources to support their families and to buy necessities they could not pro- duce themselves while at the same time they were largely restricted to fishing from scattered heimrœði or as crewmen in boats owned by others. Middling ten- ants like Sr. Bjami had more options open, both in terms of stock raising and in the ability to access larger boats oper- ating from better fishing locations. The three richest farmers (like Jón) were in some ways mini-entrepreneurs, owning many boats and shares in others. These greater farmers thus had a wider social niche breadth and were paricipating in both inshore fishing, taking smaller sized cod species and offshore fishing, taking 42
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