Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2005, Side 106

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2005, Side 106
Birna Lárusdóttir, Gavin Lucas, Lilia Biörk Pálsdóttir and Stefán Ólafsson Figure 1. Aerial view of Kúvikur from Loftmyndir ehf. archaeological survey in the area have shown that nearly all such strips of low- land have been used or cultivated in one way or another and almost, without exception have some structures associat- ed with them, sometimes remains of farms or shielings (Lárusdóttir et al. 2005). Therefore, it is unlikely that structures belonging to the trading center were the first to be built on the site although today no obvious older struc- turés are visible on the surface. It has been proposed that some trading took place there before the monopoly, when English, Dutch and German sailors sailed to Icelandic fishing grounds (Líndal 1982, 378). During the Danish monopoly it was a custom that merchants sailed to trading centers each year and stayed there for only a few days each time. It is therefore unlikely that Kúvíkur had per- manent buildings during this era. The river that runs just west of the site is called Búðará (Booth River), an indica- tion of possible booths or tents. After the monopoly was lifted in 1787 a merchant settled permanently on site and took care of the trading as well as running a farm. Kúvíkur was inhabited throughout the 19th century and still growing in the beginning of the 20th century. A board- ing school was run there one winter and a slaughterhouse for a while but these developments toward the formation of a little village started to decline, especially after a herring factory was built in Djúpavík, some 3-4 km west of Kúvíkur in 1917. The settlement in Kúvíkur came to an end in 1949. Shark liver oil was the main merchandise Kúvíkur had to offer. The ports that were established in 1602 were classified into two main types, depending on the main goods in each place: Fish ports and meat ports. Kúvíkur was the only one classifíed as a liver oil port in the whole of Iceland. Liver oil was a sought-after product in Europe, mainly used for lighting in the ever expanding 104
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Archaeologia Islandica

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