Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 60

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 60
Christopher Callow ries. Recent excavations have included a handful of obviously Christian cemeteries which began before 1100 (Vésteinsson 2000: 55-6; Zoéga 2004). So far, 316 fur- nished burials have been found at about 160 sites. Most are in a poor state of preservation which limits their usefulness (Eldjám 2000: 258-61). Nevertheless they share similarities with those in the British Isles in as much as they are appar- ently exclusively inhumation whereas a significant percentage of Scandinavian graves of the same period are cremation burials (Eldjárn 2000: 290; cf. Byock et al 2005). The dead tended to be buried in individual graves, aligned roughly south- west to north-east (with the head at the south-west), the body supine and arms either by their side or on top of the body and the legs either straight or slightly bent. Graves tended to be simple earth-cut fea- tures but stone settings of various kinds do occur, as do some forms of small earth mound but of a less impressive kind than most from mainland Scandinavia. Five boat graves have also been discovered so far. The dead were probably buried clothed, to judge by the presence of occa- sional fragments of textiles and, for many women, brooches. Furnished adult graves sometimes contain a range of domestic objects (knives, cooking utensils, ves- sels, strike-a-lights) and jewellery beads which are not gender-specific. For adults, men were much more likely to be buried with weapons (swords, spears and axes and their fittings), weights or scales and with animals (dogs and, unusually com- monly compared with elsewhere, horses, of which 113 have been found), while women were often buried with brooches of types often found elsewhere in Scandi- navia - most commonly oval ones - and with bone combs. As for many societies, we do not have many medieval Icelandic chil- dren’s burials at all which raises inter- esting questions about the treatment of dead children. While the ‘viking’ expan- sion of which Iceland’s colonisation was a part, may have been a predominantly male activity, it must not have taken long for women and children to settle too; they may well have been present from Iceland’s initial discovery anyway. Of those 316 burials it has been possible to estimate the age of about 120 individu- als; just twelve of them were of children among which only nine have sound archaeological provenances (Gestsdóttir 1998a; Eldjárn 2000: 594). Assuming a death rate like many other pre-modern societies, there ought to be a far higher percentage of child burials (Guy et al. 1997: 222 table 2; Sellevold 1997). The problem is brought into focus when we look at the medieval Christian cemeter- ies. In the early Christian cemetery at Keldudalur in Skagafjörður, which con- tained invididuals without grave goods which are arranged around a space where a church or chapel very likely lay, about 50% of the burials were of children (Zoéga 2004). This figure still represents a significant difference from the accom- panied, non-churchyard burials. In this respect, the apparent contrast between pagan and Christian cemeteries fits the patterns observed elsewhere in Scandina- via (Wicker 1998: 215). The orthodoxy is that ‘pagan’ burial gave way to Christian practice fairly sharply during the elev- enth century although, given the limita- tions of our dating evidence generally, it is not impossible that accompanied, mainly adult burials were contemporary with early churchyard burial which was deemed more appropriate for children. 58

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