Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 58

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 58
Frans-Arne Stylegar the Scottish Northern Isles and W Norway. The 'great chains' However, there is yet another common aspect of the dykes in Orkney and in W Norway that should be considered rele- vant for the Icelandic case, as well. A late 13th century charter from Iceland men- tions an earthwork fencing off the whole scattered hamlet of Selvogur in the SW part of the country from its outfield (Einarsson, Hansson & Vésteinsson 2003:70). And, indeed, dykes fencing off areas considerably larger than single farms are a feature common to W Norway and the Scottish Northem Isles. In Orkney, two or three townships could also be surrounded by a common dyke. There are a number of examples for this; the dyke encircling the town- ships of Netherbrough and Russland in Harray, Mainland, being one (Sandnes 1996:83). Such 'great chains' seem to have been a rather widespread feature of the Orkney landscape, as in many instances the hill dykes of several town- ships were connected, such as can be reconstructed from Murdoch Mackenzie's charts from 1750 (Stylegar in press). "The huge number of stone fences that is so striking for anyone who wisits Jæren, are almost all of them from the period after 1800. (...) The fences of olden days could mn for several kilometres, and had no obvious connection with the farm bound- aries of recent times. (...) They are usual- ly only visible as long ridges, and only sel- dom are any stones visible above the sur- face". (Aanestad 1911:555) Thus wrote the agronomist Sigurd Aanestad, looking back from his vantage point in 1911, at the very end of a period which had witnessed huge improvements in agricultural methods and practices and the resulting enormous changes to the settlement stmcture and the cultural land- scape of his native Jæren. These 'fences of olden days' were the hill dykes. In the more densely settled regions in W Norway, for instance in the lower-lying settlement districts in Jæren, the hill dyke of one farm might be linked to the hill dykes of a number of other farms, thus constituting a great chain that joined several neighbouring farms. In many cases, some or all of the farms within such a system of dykes had some sort of common arrangement for the exploitation of the different resources in the outlands - be it pasture, peat cutting, hunting, or fisheries. There are a number of good examples from Jæren, as well as from the other SW and W counties. When it comes to the question of common use rights, an inter- esting case in point is Vik in Sogn og Fjordane county, where c. 20 farms had their homelands within one 'bogard', i.e. hill dyke. In early spring and late autumn the gates in the hill dyke were thrown open, and the animals from all the farms were allowed to roam free and graze on the arable lands in this whole area. This system lasted until the 1860s (Frimannslund 1961). Some characteristic features seem to distinguish many of the areas within such 56
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