Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Qupperneq 78

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Qupperneq 78
Orri Vésteinsson association to the Sagas and the heathen periodbefore 1000. Different excavators had somewhat different agendas; Þorsteinn Erlingsson (active in 1895) was primarily interested in constructing a house typology so that Norse remains in America could be recognised; Daniel Bruun (active 1896-1908) prioritised sites he considered to be pagan temples while Matthías Þórðarson (active mainly in 1920s and 30s) dug farms considered to be the abodes of famous saga person- ages. Conspicuously absent from the tar- get sites of the early fieldworkers are sites associated with initial settlement, the landnám farms. The early fíeldwork- ers obviously selected single period sites where they would not have to spend time or energy on removing more recent deposits. At Bergþórshvoll in 1926-28 Þórðarson was the first Icelandic excava- tor who had to deal with more recent remains overlying the deposits he was really interested in. While Þórðarson's excavation methods were neither meticu- lous or particularly up to date for his time he did excavate the whole farm mound more or less equally badly, giving no less attention to early modem layers than medieval or allegedly Viking age ones. By the 1930s Scandinavian settlement archaeology had reached considerable maturity, not least with extensive excava- tions of 14th-15th century farmsteads in Norse Greenland. This new field made no distinctions between periods, empha- sising in equal measure prehistoric and medieval building customs and making good use of modem ethnographic evi- dence to inform the new theories. These theories were evolutionist in character, treating the development of domestic architecture as a reflection of social and economic change through the centuries. Thus the theoretical conditions for an interest in more recent archaeology had been created by the 1930s and this, as well as the growing influence of Marxist thought on many Scandinavian historians and archaeologists of the mid 20th centu- ry, was the background for a definite shift towards excavations of late medieval and early modem sites in the post-war era. In Iceland these new currents and the- oretical frameworks were suddenly revealed in 1939 with the joint Nordic archaeological expedition to Þjórsárdalur and Borgaríjörður (Stenberger ed. 1943). The majority of the sites excavated were at the time considered to have been aban- doned around 1300, neatly filling the gap between the later medieval Greenlandic sites and the largely Viking age settle- ments from Scandinavia. While Kristján Eldjám, who was to become the most influential Icelandic archaeologist of the late 20th century, received his field training in Greenland and Þjórsárdalur his first independent efforts are more reminiscent of earlier times. His first site, Klaufanes excavated in 1940 (see Hreiðarsdóttir this volume), was selected because of its supposed connection to a personage in one of the sagas of Icelanders. It is however per- haps significant that Eldjám also sug- gested that the building was that of a pri- mary settler, this first such claim in Icelandic archaeological literature. In 1942 Eldjám excavated a min at Foma- Lá on the grounds that it might be a pagan temple - also a somewhat old fash- 76
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