Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 72

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 72
Christopher Callow issues, to being to ready to see Icelandic uniqueness or of wishing to see Iceland fitting into general European or sub-arc- tic pictures. The references to phenom- ena outside Iceland in this article are designed as indications of some possible connections rather than anything more definitive: we lack the data everywhere to be too dogmatic. There is also further debate to be had between historians and archaeologists of Iceland in connection with childhood. Iceland being relatively isolated and having a relatively unchang- ing economic system, there is no doubt more to discuss about common practices over time rather than just looking ‘side- ways’ for illumination from contempo- rary or near-contemporary Europe. Acknowledgments The author would like to thank colleagues in the Institute of Archaeology of Antiq- uity, University of Birmingham, whose interest in the archaeology of children has fostered mine; earlier versions of this paper to the IAA Childhood semi- nar in November 2004 and at a Leeds International Medieval Congress session in 2005. I am very grateful to Martin Smith, Hildur Gestsdóttir, Gavin Lucas, Sally Crawford, Gillian Shepherd, Megan Brickley, Charlotte Mejsholm, Adolf Friðriksson, Simon Mays and Erlend Hindmarch for discussing issues relating to this paper, in some cases quite exten- sively. Guðný Zoéga, Hildur and Gavin kindly provided reports and images in advance of publication. I am also grate- ful to Helen Fisher, Gavin, Hildur and an anonymous reviewer for comments on and suggested improvements to versions of the paper. Any remaining errors of fact and interpretation are my own. References Anon. (2003). “Forn helgistaður undir gjóskunni”, Morgunblaðið, 10th Au- gust 2003. http://holar.is/~fornleifar/ frettir/fornhelgistadur.htm. Anon. (2004). “Fornt leikfang á Hólum”, http://holar.is/~fornleifar/frettir/ forntleikfang.htm Arcini, C. (1999). Health and Disease in Early Lund (Investigationes de antiquitatibus urbis Lundae VIII), Lund: Medical Faculty, Lund Uni- versity. Arnold, C.J. (1997). An Archaeology of the Early Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms. New Edition. London: Routledge. Baxter, J.E. (2005). The Archaeology of Childhood. Oxford: Altamira Press. Bonnichsen, R. (1973). “Millie’s Camp: an experiment in archaeology”, World Archaeology 4: 277-291. Brickley, M. and S. Buteux, with Adams, J. & Cherrington, R. (2006). St. Mar- tin ’s Uncovered: Investigations in the churchyard ofSt. Martin ’s-in-the-Bull Ring, Birmingham, 2001. Oxford: Oxbow Books. Brogiolo, G. (1989). “Brescia: Building transformations in a Lombard city”, in Randsborg, K. (ed.) The Birth of Europe, (Analecta Romana Instituti Danici 16), 156-165, Roma: L’Erma di Bretschneider. Buckberry, J. L. (2000). “Missing, Pre- sumed Buried? Bone Diagenesis and the Under-Representation of Anglo-Saxon Children”. Assemblage 5, http://www.shef.ac.Uk/~assem/5/ buckberr.html Byock, J., P. Walker, J. Erlandson, P. Holck, D. Zori, Magnús Guðmunds- son and M. Tsveskov. (2005). “A Viking-age Valley in Iceland: The 70

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