Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 29

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 29
Steffen Stummann Hansen and John Sheehan THE LEIRVÍK “B0NHÚSTOFTIN” AND THE EARLY CHRISTIANITY OF THE FAROE ISLANDS, AND BEYOND The best-preserved early church site on the Faroe Islands, locally known as Bon- hústoftin (English: prayer-house ruin), is located in the settlement of Leirvík on the island of Eysturoy. Although the site is well known it has neither been the subject of a proper archaeological survey nor has it ever been included in discussions of the nature of early Christianity in the Faroe Islands. The site was recently surveyed and described by the authors, and the results of this work are presented here. Other sites of related type, both in the Faroe Islands and elsewhere, are identified and the archaeological and historical contexts within which these sites should be consid- ered, including the evidence from Toftanes and Skúvoy, are discussed. Steffen Stumman Hansen, National Museum of the Faroe Islands (Foroya Fornminnissavn), Hoyvík, P.O.Box 1155, FO-110 Tórshavn. E-mail: Stummann@natmus.fo John Sheehan, Department of Archaeology (Roinn na Seandálaíochta), University College Cork, Ireland. E-mail: jsheehan@archaeology.ucc.ie Keywords: Christianity, Faroe Islands, Chapel Introduction Archaeology in the Faroe Islands was vir- tually non-existant until 1940 when Sverri Dahl (1910-1987) was hired as an assist- ant for Tórshavn-based local antiquar- ians. Before this time very few excava- tions had taken place, and those that had were mainly undertaken because of the efforts or support of Danish antiquarians and archaeologists (Stummann Hansen 2003). Dahl adopted a broad approach to the archaeology of the islands, and although his name is primarily inextrica- bly linked to a number of settlement sites of the Viking Age (Dahl 1951; 1958; 1971a; 197lb), he demonstrated interest in all types of monuments. For instance, one of his earliest initiatives, in 1940, was to excavate the few remaining burials associated with the medieval church site of á Luti in the settlement of Syðrugotu on Eysturoy (Dahl 1952). The church site at Gotu, lying on an exposed coastal location, was badly eroded, and as only a few graves were still preserved there, it proved difficult for Dahl to establish any firm idea of the site’s morphology. This possibility, how- ever, was afforded him by a number of, hitherto unregistered, church sites scat- tered around the islands. These sites gen- erally had place-names attached to them containing the Faroese term “Bonhús”, which may be translated into English as Archaeologia Islandica 5 (2006) 27-54

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