Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 93

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2006, Side 93
The bishop’s beef. improved cattle at early modern Skálholt, Iceland Figure 6. Naturally polled cranium from Skál- holt that the Bishop of Skálholt or one of his household might have encountered this beef enterprise and new breed imports through the Danish nobility. Though the Scottish polled beef breeds would also seem to be good candidates for the cattle of unit 454, this would be pure specula- tion at this point. The cattle of unit 454 are more likely from the 17th century and the development of new breeds was not only an 18th century phenomenon. The Nether- lands were importing new breeds of cattle for breeding purposes throughout Europe by the 16th century (Thomas, 2005). It is just as plausible to suggest that these cat- tle might have been of originally Dutch origin. Regardless of the individual coun- try of origin, it is overwhelmingly likely that these cattle or the breeding technolo- gy that created them were an import from continental Europe. Early modern Icelandic culture and elements of early modern continen- tal European culture came together in the Bishop’s residence. The cows indi- cate that Skálholt was differentiated from the rest of early modern Iceland by more than just wealth. It was also culturally differentiated through its intellectual con- nections to early modern Europe. The Figure 7. Artificially polled cranium from Skálholt writings of improving farming theorists and the experience of practical farming experiments associated with the early Agricultural Revolution is one probable inspiration for decisions that resulted in the appearance of these cattle at Skálholt. Most agricultural historians agree that the essence of the Agricultural Revolu- tion was the major increase in cultivated land, and in new agrarian technologies, crops, and commercial animal breeds that appeared during the early modern period in Europe, especially in the Neth- erlands and in England. There is also a consensus that these new technologies and breeds led to increased agricultural production (Overton, 1996, pp. 1-9). Less agreed-upon is when this revolution began though it is generally agreed that it was in development throughout much of north-western Europe by the 17th cen- tury, and that it reached its height in the second half of the 18th century. A recent article on the zooarchaeology of animal husbandry improvement in England, sug- gests there was a gradual but consistent increase in the size of domestic animals starting in the mid-14th century (Thomas, 2005). Though the author does not claim this as the beginning of the Agricultural 91

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