Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 54

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 54
Frans-Arne Stylegar single farms, the biggest of which were of township-size (Thomson 2001:315ff). The settlement structure within each township could be very complex. Grimeston in Harray, Mainland consisted of 'several smaller towns or districts, such as Isbister, Horraquoy, Beneath the Dyke etc' (Sandnes 1996:66). This last ’district' was actually surrounded by a separate dyke. The farms Vola, Nistaben, Behind the Town, and Windywa's belonged to Beneath the Dyke (ibid.). The hill dyke divided the township from the common moors (Clouston 1932:350). It has recently been proposed, for Shetland, that the medieval manors were breaking up in the late 13th century, and that their fragments became discrete farms, with free tenants, in the process (Smith 2000:1-15). Satellite farms, that may have provided labour on the manor farm, from then on paid a separate rent. This interpretation have obvious similar- ities with the suggested trajectory in W Norway (above). In Orkney too there are indications that townships at some point have been expanded. As Thomson writes, 'in a number of townships there are references to an inner dyke known as 'the auld bow'. We find the term being used in two senses; primarily it was applied to the dyke itself, and less frequently it was used to describe the land enclosed by the dyke (the old bu, the old farm). The sec- ond usage seems to imply that there was a stage of township expansion when the hill-dyke had been "flitted out" to take in the grassland of the backs. By the time the "auld bow" was recorded, the dyke seems invariably to have been ruinous, and sometimes its very location was uncertain. Inner dykes of this kind are not unique to Orkney; a similar old dyke is a regular feature of Shetland townships, and indeed an inner dyke was sometimes found in Scotland. The inner dyke, as long as it remained intact, created an intermediate zone, inside the hill dyke but distinct from the arable land; it allowed the backs to be used as a series of peripheral grazing enclosures' (Thomson 2001:328). What about the dating for the re-loca- tion of the hill dykes and the expansion of the Orkney townships, then? Much of the more substantial evidence for the age of the different types of dykes in the Scottish Northem Isles is from Shetland. The small island of Papa Stour, where large-scale archaeological investigations have been carried out in recent years, can serve as a case in point. Here, it is clear that the present day two-fold division of the island, marked by a stone hill dyke, was established by c. AD 1300 (Crawford & Smith 1999). At that time, documentary, place-name and archaeo- logical evidence indicate that settlement was limited to the eastem half of the island. In earlier periods settlement in Papa Stour was more widespread. Remains of prehistoric settlements are found both in the hills and within the hill dyke (Carter & Davidson 1998:130). Another Shetland site, that of the abandoned farm of Kebister in Mainland, have yielded more information relevant to this discussion. Here, several radiocar- bon dates from dykes are available. A number of dykes were found at Kebister, including some that are being interpreted 52
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