Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 98

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 98
Orri Vésteinsson the basis of saga references and place names, often supported by local tradi- tions. The sites considered in this way were all supposed to be from the saga period (Viking age), but are in fact usual- ly difficult to date as dating evidence was as a rule not found in these excavations. The dating, from literary reference, sup- ported by place name and local lore, was the reason for, not the outcome of, such excavations. When uncovering became the main method of excavation the aims of the archaeologists had become more scientif- ic in the sense that the excavations were meant to produce new evidence, if only new evidence to support established hypotheses. Their aims can broadly be classified as illustration on the one hand and comparative analysis on the other, with a wide degree of overlapping. Some excavations (e.g. Bergþórshvoll, Bólstaður) were explicitly started to unearth pictorial evidence to illustrate saga texts and works of history. In this field the development was away from the particular - the actual farm of a certain personage - to the general - a typical farmhouse of a certain class/region/peri- od. Advances in excavation techniques were to a large degree prompted by a concem to provide increasingly detailed information to accompany the text based history writing. Comparative analysis emerged as an independent aim of archaeological excavations in the 1930s, principally with the goal of defining a typological lineage for Nordic farmhous- es from prehistory to present times. While the evolutionist theory behind this approach is now considered obsolete, it is important to recognise that this was the first tentative step by Icelandic archaeol- ogy towards creating its own discourse, more or less independent of historical sources. The introduction of the section reflects not only a significant methodological advance but also a sense of empower- ment among Icelandic archaeologists. They felt empowered to engage in much more complex excavations than previ- ously attempted but also to question long held assumptions based on historical evi- dence, in particular the dating of the landnám, the initial settlement of Iceland. Dating was to become the principal issue in Icelandic archaeology in the 1970s and 1980s with a small but vociferous group of archaeologists claiming that their sci- entific methodology made them much more qualified than historians to pro- claim on such issues as the dating of the landnám. While the dating of the landnám emerged from this debate pretty much unscathed its main effect was that by the 1990s Icelandic archaeologists felt liber- ated from the yoke of the historical record (see Einarsson 1994b and Friðriksson 1994 who both reflect this in very different ways) and were no longer only concemed with illustrating, proving or disproving ideas from the historical sources. Several lines of independent inquiry were beginning to emerge, and relating to excavation methods these have all required a greater emphasis on site formation and more complete recov- ery strategies. As for the usefulness of the available archaeological evidence on Icelandic 96
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