Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 45

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 45
THE LEIRVÍK “B0NHÚSTOFTIN” AND THE EARLY CHRISTIANITY OF THE FaROE ISLANDS, AND BEYOND played in their respective societies. Many of the Irish sites may have primarily func- tioned as monastic centres and these, by their nature, contained houses and huts. The North Atlantic sites, on the other hand, functioned as proprietary churches attached to major farmsteads and did not have a residential function. This single difference in the function of the two types of ecclesiastical site may well provide a satisfactory explanation for their differ- ence in scale. Finally, up until recently it could be argued that the Ireland’s Early Medie- val churches differed in one major respect from the typical churches of the North Atlantic region, being built of stone, or wood, rather than of turf. The turf-built construction of many of the churches from the Faroe Islands, Iceland and Greenland made them distinctive and contributed towards the conception of these buildings as almost representative icons of the dis- tinctive culture of Viking-age Christianity in the North Atlantic region; in a sense construction methods and materials com- bine to define a culturally definable form. While it is of course true that the archae- ology of early Christianity in the region is unique and distinctive in an overall sense, it is no longer possible to view these turf- built churches as truly unique cultural phenomena. This is due to the recent discovery of a pre-Viking Age turf-built church on the small island monastery of Illaunloughan, Co. Kerry (White Mar- shall and Walsh 2005, 23-27, 152-155, figs. 17-19) (Fig. 10). It has long been recognised that literary evidence exists for the construc- tion of sod or earthern churches in Early Medieval Ireland. In Tirechán’s late sev- enth-century Life of Patrick, for instance, there are two mentions of ‘acclessiam terrenam’ (Bieler 1979, 144, 158-159). The excavations on Illaunloughan, how- ever, have produced the first archaeologi- cal evidence for the practise. Here, it was revealed that during the primary phase of settlement, dated by both radiocarbon determinations and artefacts to between the mid-seventh and the mid-eighth cen- turies, three domestic huts and a small church were constructed, with sod being a primary component of each of the struc- tures (ibid, 11-36). A number of burials were also associated with this phase of the site, and the ecclesiastical settlement was enclosed by a low curvilinear wall. The walls of the church, which measured 2m N-S by c.6m E-W internally, were formed of sod retained at the bases by double rows of upright slabs. The evi- dence indicated that the roof may have been supported on posts at the gable ends, independently of the walls. Apart from including turf in its construction, of course, the Illaunloughan church is quite different in dimensions and structure from the North Atlanticchapels. It is also worth noting that the earliest Icelandic chapels (Þórarinsstaðir, Neðri Ás and Hofstaðir) were initially built of timber, with the turf walls being added later. Nevertheless, while the importance of the Illaunloughan excavation results are manifold, in the present context their relevance is simply that they demonstrate that a distinctive cultural characteristic of the churches of the North Atlantic region is not unique, finding broad paral- lel in earlier contexts in Ireland. It would be unwise to speculate on whether the church-building tradition of the North Atlantic region owes anything to Ireland on this evidence alone, however, though the possibility should not be dismissed out of hand. 43

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