Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 75

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 75
ICELANDIC FARMHOUSE EXCAVATIONS: FlELD METHODS AND SITE CHOICES that such analysis is a precondition for a successful re-interpretation of the sites (Lucas 1998). In 2000-2002 a joint Icelandic - Danish - Norwegian project called Vestnordisk byggeskikk i vikingtid og middelalder focused amongst other things on the archaeological expeditions to Greenland and Iceland in the 1920s and 1930s - particularly the Nordic expe- dition to SW Iceland in 1939 - and how this early research has shaped the current paradigm of West-Norse building cus- toms. Analysis of the field records and limited re-excavation of one of the sites (Skallakot - see below) suggested that the current paradigm is as much shaped by early 20th century culture-historical atti- tudes as empirical fieldwork, and that in fact the fieldwork often served primarily to substantiate previously conceived ideas and was as a rule remarkably limit- ed as an investigative endeavour. In this introduction a summary of Icelandic farmstead archaeology to date will be presented. First the geographical, temporal and status distribution of exca- vated farm sites will be discussed, and a brief description given of the state of publication of the excavated material. Following this an outline will be given of the main developments of field methods from the inception of Icelandic archaeol- ogy to the present, concluding with a summary of the representativeness of the Icelandic excavation material. Distribution by period If we begin to look at the distribution of the sites by period it becomes immediate- ly clear that the majority of the sites are from the earliest period. More than half of all Icelandic farm sites that have been excavated are from the Viking age or have Viking age levels. This figure becomes even more striking if the eight Þjórsárdalur sites are considered to be of late Viking age date as traditional schol- arship has claimed. If they really are so old - and not from the high middle ages as was originally thought and some recent critics have proposed anew - then the Viking age can claim 28 out of 36 datable sites. The two sites with uncer- tain dating are also most likely of an early date emphasising this bias even more. Sites with high- and/or late medieval levels (i.e. AD 1100-1600) are somewhat fewer (11) although if the Þjórsárdalur sites are added to this number it becomes more respectable (19). Early modern sites are the most rare at 8. While early modem sites are numeri- cally much fewer than the medieval and Viking age ones, they completely over- shadow the latter in terms of excavation time and in terms of number of artefacts recovered. In other words much more time has been spent on the relatively few early modem sites than the majority of the early sites and the excavation archives of the recent sites are vastly larger. This is primarily due to trends in site-choice and excavation methods dis- cussed below. There are distinct trends as to which periods have been most favoured by excavators. The earliest concentrated exclusively on sites considered to be from the Commonwealth period (930- 1262), with an emphasis on sites with an 73
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