Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 81

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 81
ICELANDIC FARMHOUSE EXCAVATIONS: FlELD METHODS AND SITE CHOICES projects were started by the govemment and Reykjavík city council, at Bessastaðir and Viðey respectively. Both are sites of historic 18th century build- ings built on top of extensive farm mounds, Bessastaðir being the Danish govemors' residence since the 13th cen- tury and Viðey the site of a house of canons in the middle ages and later a hos- pital. At both sites renovation of the his- toric buildings and considerable redevel- opment of their surroundings required rescue excavations and at Viðey the exca- vations carried on for a number of years as a research project once the constmc- tion work had been completed. In both cases public funds were made available for major excavations on a scale until then unknown in Icelandic archaeology and in both cases the larger part of the remains were from the early modem period. This lack of bias towards recent archaeological remains has continued and is strongly reflected in the projects supported by the Millennium fund, set up in 2000 to fund amongst other things large-scale archaeological excavations to commemorate 1000 years of Christianity in Iceland. The largest projects are exca- vations of 18th century manors at both episcopal sees, Skálholt and Hólar, and amongst the others is an excavation of an early modem church at Reykholt, includ- ing 19th century foundations. There seem however to be limits as to how close to the present archaeological research is considered to be useful by Icelandic archaeologists. In 2003 the newly established Archaeological Heritage Agency decided to allow the removal of a late 19th century cottage on the site of a planned aluminium smelter without prior investigation despite hav- ing the legal means to enforce full exca- vation. This no doubt reflects a lack of appreciation of the role archaeology could play in the investigation of proto- urban and proto-industrial phenomena in Iceland. Site status Unlike periods, status has been a much less prominent concem for excavators working in Iceland. For one thing status has often been impossible to gauge until well into the actual excavation and this has resulted in a slightly more even dis- tribution than regarding periods and loca- tion. Before the 1940s there was no con- scious interest in site status and sites which now would be ascribed low status were considered important because of their supposed association with high sta- tus saga personages (e.g. Eiríksstaðir and Ljósavatn). The change in perspective during the 1930s and 1940s meant that an emphasis was placed on locating "nor- mal" farm sites, the middle class suppos- edly typifying the conditions of ordinary Icelanders - Gröf and Kúabót being the prime examples. Apart from this, an interest in status or its implications for a site's interpretation, are not a conspicu- ous aspect of the archaeological dis- course in Iceland. This is no doubt large- ly due to the persistent belief in Iceland that differences in status were negligible compared to other countries and there- fore not really a concem for scholarly 79
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