Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Side 17

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Side 17
Medieval and early modern Beads from Iceland of some sort. Most of these beads come from excavations at the episcopal manor and school at Skálholt but an occasional bead of this type has been found in other excavations across Iceland. Where tightly dated they always come from a 17th—19th century context, except a single bead from the monastic site at Skriðuklaustur that was dated by context to the 16th cen- tury. Two drawn beads with surface decoration have been found in Iceland, both in Viðey, a monastic settlement and later official residence. One (V90-995) is brown with three stripes of white base and a blue line on top and the other one (V87-46385) is see-through glass with fine white stripes. Neither of these beads come from a tightly dated context. Three drawn, compound (multilayered) beads have been found in Iceland. The small- est one (SKH-1664) comes from Skálholt and is dated by context from the end of 19th to the first half of the 20th century. This bead is very similar to the simple, drawn beads mentioned earlier. What dif- ferentiates it from the latter is the fact that it is compound (multilayered), made up of a white core and a red outer layer. The other two multilayered beads are larger and more complex. One is reported from a midden at the assembly site of Kópavogur (Kóp.gler. 21) but it could not be located during the research. From an available photograph it looks like a chevron bead. Its main colour is blue but towards the ends it has brown, white, red and colour- less chevron lines. The other multilayered bead was found about 4 km to the west of the first mentioned one, in the excavation of the Governor’s residence at Bessas- taðir (Bessastaðirl987:772 - see figure 3, nr. 3). This is a typical chevron bead (sometimes also called Rosetta or a Star bead) with five layers (counted from the core and out) of colourless, white, red, white and blue glass. The end has been ground down so the section of each layer (except the core) makes a twelve-pointed star. The surface has also been ground down causing the body to have the appear- ance of dark blue and paler blue stripes. Chevron beads are often considered the fanciest of all drawn beads. The making of chevron beads started in Venice around 1500 and a century later in Holland. The Bessastaðir bead is most likely from the 17th or 18th century. Wound beads Wounded beads (sometimes also called spiral, wire wound or turned) are on the whole larger than the drawn ones. They are made from a solid glass cane and each bead is made individually. About a quar- ter of all identifiable glass beads from later times found in Iceland are wound. Wound beads were made by reheating glass canes around a metal rod on an open fire, oil lamp or gas lamp (hence these beads have sometimes been called lamp- beads). When the beads cooled down they were taken off the rod, which was often covered with chalk, clay or graphite to prevent the beads getting stuck and either worked further or finished. The beads could be worked further for example by adding decoration with a different col- our glass thread or adding layers of thin sections of mosaic rods on top, and then finally reheated and finished. These types of wound beads are sometimes called “fancy” or “polychrome” beads (Sprague 2000:208-210). Wound beads are gener- ally considered to have been strung, for example as rosaries but some are very small and could have been part of embroi- dery work. 15
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