Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 92

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 92
George Hambrecht 90 Cattle Long Bone Fusion * # of elements 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 14* Femur D 3.5-4 Figure 5. Cattle long bone fusion one of the artificially polled examples, infection set in after the removal of the horn (Fig. 7). There was a very low ffequency of naturally polled cattle occurring in the Icelandic cattle population ffom the Set- tlement Period to the introduction of new breeds in the nineteenth century, so it is statistically unlikely that these polled cattle were the product of this rare mutation. It follows that this particular breed of cattle of unit 454 were either introduced ffom conti- nental Europe by the Bishop’s household or bred by them ffom Icelandic cattle. It is impossible to say with any great certainty at this point in the research where exactly these cattle came from, but it is the case that during the seventeenth and eighteenth century Europeans were developing some of their first polled breeds of cattle, including the Scot- tish Galloway and the Aberdeen-Angus breeds that were created and raised solely for beef production (Van Bath, 1963). It is also accepted by livestock and agrar- ian historians that the first dedicated beef economies in Europe were formed at this time. Scotland supplied Galloway, Angus, and Highland beef cattle in large numbers for the Edinburgh and London markets (Trow-Smith, 1951, 151-153), while the Danish nobility supplied the Netherlands with large numbers of beef cattle in the eighteenth century(van Bath, 1963, 286). The latter may have been the source of the bishop’s polled cattle as there was already a precedent for a beef cattle economy coming from Denmark. It is also likely that Denmark imported new varieties of beef cattle after the cattle plague of the 1740’s destroyed as much as half of the Danish cattle population (Kjærgaard, 1994, 27-28). It is entirely possible, though not yet investigated, 90

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