Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 57

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 57
Chris Callow FIRST STEPS TOWARDS AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF CHILDREN IN ICELAND In recent decades the archaeology and history of children and childhood have been an extensive focus of research in North American and westem European schol- arship. This article discusses issues appropriate for an Icelandic archaeology of children based on the evidence we have so far which is mostly for the medieval period. Reasons for the lack of early child burials are explored: selective female infanticide is ruled out as a likely cause. Further investigation of the nature of our existing evidence for early burial practices is needed, not least to try to find the ‘missing’ children. Excavated Icelandic children’s graves so far suggest a variety of attitudes towards their deaths yet later material evidence for play or toys are scarce. For all periods of Iceland’s history we will need to view the evidence of children’s Iives in its wider European and sub-Arctic contexts. Chrís Callow, Department of Medieval History, University of Birmingham, England Keywords: VikingAge, children, infanticide, Iceland, archaeology Introduction The last time I visited the Akureyri Muse- um in northern Iceland (Minjasafnið á Akureyri) I was struck by the display of twentieth-century toys which were piled up in one display case. One display case mostly contained a vast array of different kinds of dolls. The dolls were probably manufactured somewhere outside Iceland and were aimed at girls of about five to twelve years old in western Europe or Northern America. Besides the obvious museum interpretation issues about what kind of reaction (foreign) visitors were supposed to have to these toys, there are a number of other issues which we ought to consider as archaeologists of childhood or archaeologists of Iceland. My assumption, of course, was that these objects were important toys but they need not have been. Children often make use of all kinds of objects as toys. Yet who bought these mass produced objects, or gave them as gifts? Who really played with them? How widely available or affordable were they? How gendered was their use? How often were they played with and how often were simpler, home- made toys used? For the relatively recent Icelandic past many of these questions can be addressed by documentary and oral historians of the twentieth century. Yet in Icelandic archaeology, however, the bulk of our evidence is from the medieval period. The medieval archaeology can be compared with medieval written evidence but the latter is arguably more difficult to interpret than more modern documents and testimony. It is a fortunate coinci- dence that there has been significant inter- Archaeologia Islandica 5 (2006) 55-96

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Archaeologia Islandica

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