Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Side 23

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Side 23
Medieval and early modern Beads from Iceland Figure 5. Scatter plot showing distinction between Viking and later amber beads based on ratio of perforation to diameter. of the 19th century. In the beginning of 20th century the Prussian government bought back the rights for mining amber and mining has continued to the present day. It is likely that most, if not all of the Icelandic amber beads are made from Baltic amber, which dominated the Euro- pean bead market in the medieval period. It is possible to identify the provenance of amber through absorption spectra tests, but this only gives a broad provenance and it does not of course reveal where the amber was worked. Style is equally unhelpful as amber beads are fairly sim- ple in manufacture. Usually a bead was roughly cut out with a knife, then a hole was drilled (often from both ends) before any fine carving or polishing took place (see for example Egan and Pritchard 2002:307). The Icelandic amber beads from medieval and early modern times are almost all relatively simple in form and shape (see for example Hólar2004- 37-4299 - figure 4, nr. 1 and Stbl987- 79 - figure 4, nr. 2). None of them have any carving or decoration and only three have a special shape. The vast majority are simple, oval or global in shape even if some are elongated. Three of the amber beads differ slightly in this regard (SKH- 2229, Þjms2003-37-3000 and SKH04- 6503), and they are all similar to each other. They have the same polyhedral shape, comprised of eight facets. Two of these beads come from Skálholt, where they are dated to the 18th-19th centuries, and one from Hólar. The simplicity of the vast major- ity of amber beads makes it difficult to say much about them, their development or chronology. Nevertheless when tak- 21
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