Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Qupperneq 64

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Qupperneq 64
Christopher Callow der is even more difficult to determine, also muddies the waters considerably. For the Icelandic accompanied burials of the tenth century, though, the overall adult male:female ratio is about 2:1 (including both more and less certain identifications; Gestsdóttir 1998a: 5, 10- 17). This is certainly disproportionately weighted towards males. Yet taking into consideration the age distribution, the problem of the ‘missing’ women is per- haps not so acute or rather ought to make use a pose other questions of the data. The imbalance between males and females is greatest for the age category 46 and over within which, out of 29 burials, only one certain and one possible female were identified, as opposed to over 20 male burials (Gestsdóttir 1998a: 10-17). In other words, the ratio of over 10:1 for the oldest age category completely skews the aggregated Icelandic data. Even allowing for our current paucity of data, the real question for early Icelandic accompanied cemeteries is where all the older women were buried, or, just as likely, how we identify them archaeologically given the difficulties of determining the sex of bur- ied, older individuals. The relative lack of older women is difficult to explain either as the result of the migration process or of selective female infanticide; there are a significant number of younger women in the burial population (40% or so for ages 18 to 45). Women therefore prob- ably did migrate to Iceland in sizeable numbers in the tenth century and then die there but, using even the most up- to-date techniques, it is difficult to iden- tify their graves. The ratio of about 1.5:1 among younger age categories, however, still appears to show a strong imbalance between men and women but a number of factors might explain this rather than selective female infanticide. It could be that older women were less often buried with grave goods or with fewer of them, as elsewhere in early medieval western Europe (Halsall 1996) and thus their graves have been found less often, or that some older females have been identified as male. Archaeology-related arguments, however, can suggest some reasons for children’s under-representation among the earliest, accompanied burials. The poor survival of children’s bones in the ground is still one very likely cause of their absence, despite the evidence cited above, and especially given that we are dealing with the very oldest burials (Guy et al 1997; Buckberry 2000; Gestsdóttir 1998b: 4). Another explanation might be that the Icelandic burials that have been discovered are not a typical cross section; the large numbers of single, iso- lated, adult burials which have been dis- covered are of a type which have been readily found by accident. It is possible that isolated burial mounds were delib- erately placed close to property bounda- ries as a means of claiming ownership, but equally such burials may just have been the most visible ones in a cemetery (Eldjárn 2000: 591; Friðriksson 2004). Many burials, perhaps those less clearly marked above ground and/or closer to buildings, are likely to have either been destroyed over the centuries and now are no longer there to be found, or else have yet to be discovered. Child burials are more likely to be among this category if the earlier, furnished burial tradition of fifth- to seventh-century western Europe can be used meaningfully for comparison (Halsall 1995). In many parts of early medieval western Europe, babies have even been found buried inside or adja- 62
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