Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 84

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 84
George Hambrecht THE BISHOP’S BEEF. IMPROVED CATTLE AT EARLY MODERN SKÁLHOLT, ICELAND This article presents results of a preliminary analysis of mammal bones from one context in an early modern midden at the Episcopal farm of Skálholt, headquarters for one of two Episcopal sees of Iceland (AD 1056 to 1785). Since 2001, excava- tions by the Institute of Archaeology in Reykjavík have produced large collections of early modern, i.e. early 17th to late 18th centuries, artifacts and bone from a complex of structures which included the Bishop’s house, a boy’s school, and the domestic infrastructure of this large, proto-urban manor and associated middens. Excavation and analysis continue, and this paper is an interim report of the grow- ing archaeofauna of this important site. This paper reports analysis of context 454 which was dominated by cattle bones (92% of the NISP 1,616). These bones come from adult, but generally not aged animals, and include very few newbom calf bones. This pattem is a strong contrast to other Icelandic archaeofauna (9th—19th c) which contain high percentages of newborn calves and generally older adults. In contrast to such typical “dairy” survivorship profiles associated with North Atlantic farm economies, the majority of these cattle were slaughtered at their peak age for meat return, sometime before the second half of their third year of life. This assemblage represents an exceptionally high cost, and high value, beef-cattle strategy probably associated with the status and scale of the Skálholt manorial household. Furthermore these cattle were of a new breed. The majority of them are naturally polled, and the two exceptions are artificially polled. This suggests that the management of the Skálholt farm were engaged in the import of new breeds and in animal husbandry improvement from an early date relative to the Agricultural Revolution. George Hambrecht, CUNY Graduate Center, Hunter College Department of Anthropology, 695 ParkAve, NY, NY, 10021, (ghambrecht@gmail.com) Keywords: Skálholt, Cattle, Zooarchaeology, Agricultural Improvement Animal husbandry is as much a reflec- tion of culture as architecture, ceramics, or jewelry. Zooarchaeology in Iceland has made significant contributions towards understanding the contexts behind deci- sion making in Iceland from Landnám into the early modern era (Vésteinsson et al., 2002, McGovern et al, 2001, for example). Domestic animals have always been dynamic elements within culture. We can breed them to our needs and desires. In the early modern period the level of random chance in animal breeding in Europe dropped dramatically as breeding technologies advanced (Russell 1986). The assemblage discussed in this article reflect the impact of the technological innovations in animal breeding and the impulse towards improving agriculture characteristic of this period in Europe and the Americas. After the earthquake in 1784, Archaeologia Islandica 5 (2006) 82-94

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