Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2005, Qupperneq 100

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2005, Qupperneq 100
Garðar Guðmundsson, Gavin Lucas, Hildur Gestsdóttir and Sigríður Þorgeirsdóttir broad base, straight sides and a pitched top, to a regular polygon (either hexago- nal or octagonal, Types 1, 2 and 4), this change occurring over the 19th century. There is no doubt that further research is needed here, and that it is only archaeology that can provide the answer, through stratigraphically controlled exca- vations of churchyards. The best - and only comparable study - is that of the cofftns from Skálholt (Eldjárn 1988: 138-42). Although these are elite burials, the sequence Eldjám describes more or less confirms that given here. Summarizing Eldjám, there were 3 phas- es/types at Skálholt: A - dated c. 1650-1720 - a simple box coffin of four sides, usually narrowing towards the feet, but sometimes just rec- tangular. Secured with iron and/or wood- en nails, and fítted with iron handles. The earliest dated example is from 1696, the latest from 1707, but Eldjám says that this type is the principal form represent- ed in the pre-1650 graves at Skálholt and probably has medieval origins. B - dated to c. 1700-1850 - aroofed cof- fin, either with a domed roof (Bl) or more commonly a hipped roof (B2), and narrowing towards the feet. Also secured with iron and/or wooden nails, and with iron handles. This type, Eldjám says is probably the same as Jónasson's “lantem- shape” (i.e. Hólskirkja Type 3); the earli- est known example is from 1707 and the type probably continued into the mid- 19th century. C - dated to c. 1730-present - a hexago- nal coffin, usually elaborately made with flaring sides and finely planed and moulded planking (see Fig. 13; Hólskirkja Type 1). As with other types, it narrowed towards the feet. No iron handles were found on any of these coffins, but many had velvet or silk lin- ings, were blackened and had various decorative, chiefly pewter or silver shields. Eldjám is clear that the chrono- logy at Skálholt needs to be read in terms of both intemal variation within Iceland according to status and more generally, extemal variation within the Nordic/ Scandinavian world. He suggests for example that Type C may not have become common among all sections of the population in Iceland until the mid- 19th century but, moreover, the type first emerged in Scandinavia in the later 17th century - the earliest example from Sweden dating to 1636 (Eldjám 1988: 142). At Hólskirkja, only Eldjám's types B(2) and C were identified from the excavated test pits, which are equivalent to Types 3 and 1 respectively, and sup- ports the dating of the Hólskirkja burials as principally 19th-early 20th century. Types 2 and 4 were not found at Skálholt but it seems likely that both were con- temporary with Type 1, perhaps as cheaper versions. In ending, it is worth making some remarks on coffin fumiture. The excavated coffíns generally were lined/stuffed with wood shavings - a fea- ture also mentioned by Jónasson, as was the blackening of coffms (ibid.: 304-5): many of the excavated coffins at Hóls- kirkja were stained black. Apart from the carved crosses and leatherwork, there was no other decoration, and there was no evidence of painted crosses although these would have probably come off in the soil over time. Little survived of tex- tile, but in coffin 7.1, the infant was cov- 98
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Archaeologia Islandica

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