Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Qupperneq 62

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Qupperneq 62
Christopher Callow Carol Clover, who has made the most extensive case, bases her argument mostly on the Sagas of Icelanders and legal texts, where child exposure is explic- itly mentioned, as well as archaeological evidence from mainland Scandinavia (1988: 150-5). For the written evidence the real issue is whether either literary or legal texts contain genuine evidence of beliefs from the tenth century or whether both are misleading, giving us twelfth- or thirteenth-century views of pre-Christian Iceland. I would suggest that it is most likely that where Sagas of Icelanders mention children being exposed it is an almost romanticised view of the past as barbaric and ‘other’. The written stories may well form part of a tradition of sto- ries about infanticide but the age of that tradition and its relationship to a real situ- ation are difficult to gauge. This might be especially true where characters go so far as to claim to want to expose a baby girl and not a baby boy (cf. Clover 1988: 156, 158). The legal evidence is perhaps more valuable, if we assume that prohibitions against child abandonment represent a fear of the Church which was based on a known practice at the time of writing. Again, how real that fear was is difficult to judge, either for Norway or Iceland where the legal sources mention aban- donment (Mundal 2005). The legal texts seem to show a genuine concern for the possibility that Icelanders and Scandina- vians would expose babies although it is impossible to say how real this was. It is difficult to know to what extent the kill- ing of children in Scandinavia, rather like cannibalism more generally, or atrocities associated with medieval Jews (including infanticide itself as well as male men- struation) was one of those rumoured barbarisms which attracted the attention of ill-informed or gullible Christian writ- ers (e.g Johnson 1998). This is not to deny the possibility of selective female infanticide having taken place in early medieval Scandinavia, but to suggest that the written evidence we have is not necessarily a good guide to its nature and prevalence. Other arguments about male anxieties over a shortage of women have been put forward as an explanation of much of the conflict recorded in those sagas which recall events in Iceland. Certainly their male writers do seem to display generalised anxieties about pow- erful women - the women who incite their menfolk to violence - but misogyny in the medieval period was not unique to Iceland. Sagas’ focus on men and men’s concerns is best seen as a product of their male writers’ interests rather than the result of them not having any women to talk about. For example, we hear about the childhoods of remarkable figures like Egill Skallagrímsson and Grettir Ásmun- darson because they were remembered as heroes and not because saga authors did not know that there were vast numbers of girls growing up to become women. Finally in this connection we ought to note that other societies also produced literature about infanticide but little other evidence of the practice actu- ally taking place on a large scale. In later medieval England, for example, there was a literature which, like the sagas, occasionally delighted in tales of adults or parents killing children, yet contempo- rary court records (of a kind lacking for Iceland in the thirteenth century) identify barely any evidence of even accusations of infanticide (Sandidge 2005: 294-306). No doubt if we had court records from earlier on in Iceland we would not have 60
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