Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 23

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 23
THE ÍDEA OF LANDSCAPE IN ICELANDIC ARCHAEOLOGY ciative landscape based on memory and tradition, towards a more objective study on the science of space, particularly asso- ciated with the geosciences. Throughout this journey it has maintained close links with history mainly demonstrated by the preoccupation of visiting and giving landscape context to sites mentioned in the Sagas. The approach still fuels con- temporary research agendas particularly with the excavation of high status sites as opposed to ordinary ones, and a preoccu- pation with the Viking and Medieval peri- ods. The issue is partially connected with the ties of the Icelandic culture and society and the recognition of the archaeological discipline as implicitly connected to sites mentioned and associated with historical texts. The earliest researchers, either intentionally but mostly unintentionally, studied the archaeological landscape, and this is characterised by their regional approaches and contexts that they used, usually based on histories but also the topography which were used to add com- mentary on the archaeology. Brynjúlfur Jónsson’s work characterises the con- vergence between a sense of place and archaeology. The foreigners who came to Iceland in the latter part of the nine- teenth century possibly already had fixed notions about the landscape from their discussions with Icelanders and from their reading of texts. This would have biased there approaches to landscape but was nonetheless more objective as it is argued that they were not so associated to landscape at a local knowledge scale, therefore being distanced from the ide- ologies of the Icelanders themselves. However, they were influenced heavily by the Saga narratives and the consequential literary analogies that were created from them (Adolf Friðriksson 1994, 12-16; Wyatt 2004, 274). Modern practitioners have focused on the strengths found in geo- sciences, particularly tephrochronology as well as other soil sciences, in recon- structing the fragmented evidence for environments and landscapes to contex- tualise the detailed excavation work. This has resulted in research agendas on the broad issues of environmental change and impact that this had on society and the landscape. Others major themes have been centred on settlement, particularly ninth to fourteenth century, as well as the abandonment of landscapes. But a cursory glance suggests that many of the archaeo- logical explanations about the dynamics of change are usually based on external, usually natural, factors rather than local social ones, though there are exceptions (e.g. Vésteinsson 1998). Towards a modern practice of landscape archaeology It is clear nonetheless that settlement and environment, the two exemplars in archaeological research in Iceland, are the most important themes in understand- ing past landscapes, but there are many other opportunities that lie beyond these. Returning to the issue of defining a land- scape study referred to at the beginning of the paper, the range of research out- lined here suggests that beyond the site is most dominant and recurs through all the examples used. What is perhaps less clear and more interesting are the themes explored (as above environmental change and settlement) and their connection with the environment and topography (or the in the convergence between culture on the one hand and nature and countryside on the other). In many respects the antiquar- 21

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