Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Qupperneq 51

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Qupperneq 51
Some Notes on Earthworks and Dykes in Iceland and in the North Atlantic the pre-improvement period (i.e. the peri- od before the first phase of severance leg- islation in the 1820s) the so-called hill dyke (ON utgardr) was the only kind of fence used in both these regions (Marwick 1939:2-3; Ronneseth 2001:102-114). In both cases, the hill dyke separated the farms' and townships' homelands, consisting of arable and meadow, from the grazing areas outside the fence. Still, the age of this system is not at all clear, and the history and devel- opment of dykes in the areas in question is a rather complex one. Some of the similarities between the traditional farming landscape in Orkney and Shetland and in W Norway stem from the fact that both these areas were located in the heath landscape so charac- teristic of Europe's Atlantic coasts. Over much of this region variants of the infield-outfíeld system were present in the medieval period. The infield was a relatively restricted area of arable land kept under permanent cultivation by the liberal application of manure to it each year (Fenton 1978; 0ye 2002). This sys- tem was present wherever animal hus- bandry predominated and there was abundant land for grazing. The farming systems in Orkney and in W Norway were both variants of the open field system. According to one def- inition, the open field system consisted basically of four elements: First, arable land was divided into strips owned or tenanted by various people each of whom farmed a number of these scattered about the fields. Then, both arable and mead- owland were pastured by the stock of the same farmers after the harvest and in fal- low years. Thirdly, the pasture and waste were used by the farmers for grazing their stock, often with strict control on the numbers of animals allowed. Finally, all these activities had to be organised by a formal meeting of the farmers, either at a manorial court or at a village assembly (Taylor 1975:71; cf. Dodgshon 1980). A formal meeting of the farmers has recent- ly been shown to have been an integral feature also of W Norwegian multi-ten- anted ('mangbolte') farms (Seland 1996). Farming in the heath landscape of Atlantic Europe required that an equilib- rium was found and maintained between, one the one hand, arable land, and on the other, meadow land. It is this delicate balance of forces that makes the hill dyke 'a line of fundamental importance' (Thomson 2001:322). The hill dyke was 'not a fortress wall that encapsulated the community, not a dividing line, but a link between the elements of the township' (Fenton 1978:89). W Norway In traditional W Norwegian farming, there were no dykes in the 'innmark' (homelands). Small, raised stones in each end of the strip marked the divisions between different farmers. In some areas (i. e. areas where the stock was moved to and from the byre each day) stone-lined cattle-roads (geil) leading from the farm buildings and to the hill dyke could be seen. Outside the hill dyke, a number of enclosures for tending animals might be found. But, as a rule, dykes were not used to separate different belongings. The 49
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Archaeologia Islandica

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