Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Side 18

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Side 18
Elín Hreiðarsdóttir The most common type of wound beads (around half of the col- lection) found in post Viking Iceland are monochrome beads of simple form. These beads are usually between 5-10 mm in diameter and are most commonly in blue tones although white, green and reddish beads have been found (see for example Hólar, unregistered nr. figure 3, nr 4). Eight wound beads are mono- chrome with a complex form. Three of these are so called melon beads with five, six and nine ridges. Two of these come from Skálholt (an orange bead SKH-1567 - see figure 3, nr. 6 -, and a light grey/ colourless bead SKH04-6498) and one from the church farm at Reykholt (tur- quoise colour bead RKH1988-214-262). Two of the melon beads are tightly dated to the 17th—18th centuries. Two wound beads have been found of similar form, which consists of eight faceted surfaces. Both are found in the same area, one dur- ing excavations in Skálholt but the other is a stray find from the farm of Steinsholt 16 km east of Skálholt. The Skálholt bead (a blue bead SKH-1665) is dated by context to 1784-1896, but the bead from Steinsholt (a colourless glass bead Þjms. 10596) can only be presumed to be ear- lier than the abandonment of the farm in 1803. The latter bead was actually found during erosion with another bead (Þjms. 10595 - see later) and a Viking age ring pin and the find was therefore classified as Viking age, but both beads are clearly of 16th-l 9th century types. The other glass bead from Steinsholt also has a parallel in Skálholt. Both are so-called raspber- ry beads of dark blue colour. Although the colour, make and probable origin of these beads are alike they are not iden- tical. The bead from Steinsholt (Þjms. 10595) is slightly larger, has more nodes and is better made than her uglier sister from Skálholt (SKH-673 - see figure 3, nr. 7). The last wound bead with altered shape comes from Hólar (Þjms2002-37- 116 - see figure 3, nr. 8). It is a conical dark blue bead. Five wound beads with deco- rated surfaces have been found from later times in Iceland. One (Þjms. 5996) is orange with a very unclear decoration consisting of black fuzzy lines. The others have more distinctive decoration. Two of those come from Skálholt, one dark blue with a yellowish wavy line decoration that wraps three times around the bead (SKH-674 - dated by context to 1784- 1896) and the other is black with a similar but singular line decoration (SKH-3200 - dated by context to 1630/50-1784). Another black wound and decorated bead comes from Hólar (unregistered nr. - see figure 3, nr. 5). It is elongated with four white stripes, a beige/golden line in the middle (all running parallel to the hole) and a yellow dot in between. No informa- tion was available about the date of the bead but it bears strong resemblance to Venetian beads from the late 19th century (Karklings 1985:60-63). The last of the wound, decorated beads is a stray find from Árnessýsla (Þjms. 1964-202 - see figure 3 - nr. 9). That bead is a highly decorative, mosaic bead with a turquoise base and an abstract multicoloured pattern consisting of, among otherthings, chevron stars. The bead likely originated in Venice and is no older than the end of 19th cen- tury. These beads were sometimes called “End of the day” beads as it was claimed that they had been made at the end of the glass beadmaker's day frorn scrap glass left on the factory floor, but they could have been more intentional than this story implies (Dublin 1998:128). 16
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