Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 52

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 52
Frans-Arne Stylegar exception was along the boundary between different tax farms (a note on terminology: In W Norway, the term 'gard' (farm) had several meanings. A sin- gle farm was called a 'gard', and so was a multi-tenanted farm. Each of the family units on a multi-tenanted farm was called a 'gard'. To complicate the matter further, a 'gard' could be divided into two or more 'matrikkelgardar' (tax farms), with each 'matrikkelgard' still referred to as a 'gard'). When the 'innmark' of two or more different tax farms lay together, a dyke was in many instances marking the farm boundaries (however, there are indi- cations that these boundaries were not fenced until the post-medieval period, see Stylegar in press). The same bound- aries were not, however, marked by fences outside the hill dyke. The dyke dividing the 'innmark' of two farms must in many instances be a consequence of the so-called 'odalsskipte' regulated by the Medieval Gulatingslov (late 12th century), as these boundaries usually fol- low a straight line, as specified in this law (Ronneseth 2001:181-186). This kind of fence was constructed of either stone or turf, as were the hill dykes. Stone fences seem to have been almost exclusively used in more recent times, due to the nearly unlimited supply of boulders resulting from the use of heav- ier machinery and the cultivation of new lands associated with the improved agri- culture of the 19th century. In the Middle Ages, however, the picture is not so clear. Some interesting instances of earthworks which could date back to the Middle Ages, are known. The Fjotland farm in Kvinesdal was surrounded by an exten- sive earthworks (fencing oflf the infields from the outlands, as they can be recon- structed from an 1865 severance map), while really substantial earthworks are known from Outer Egeland, Kvinesdal, and Sangvik, Sogne, all in Vest-Agder county, SW Norway (on a smaller scale, it might be mentioned that Norwegian churches and churchyards known to have been abandonded in the Middle Ages already, often are surrounded by earthen walls, for examples, see Brendalsmo & Stylegar 2003). Farm boundaries outside the hill dykes were usually not fenced until the mid-18th century (Holm 1794- 95). This system was predated by a similar, but much more small-scale system in the Migration period (c. 350-550 AD). At some point, after c. 550 AD and maybe as late as the Viking Age, the hill dykes were moved and the infields made much larger. In several cases, the location of the farms also changed, and the total number of farms decreased (Myhre 2002:170-190). The Norwegian agrarian historian Ottar Ronneseth has argued that this restructuring is in fact a medieval phe- nomenon, that probably took place as late as by the period of the Landslov (AD 1274). He further claims that this restruc- turing, whereby the hill dykes were moved so as to incorporate large areas of meadow lands, also involved the appear- ance of farm boundaries in the form of straight lines, so that the lands of each farm would make geometrical figures. At the same time, the farms were matriculat- ed for the first time, so that each farm became an independent tax object 50
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