Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Side 76

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Side 76
Mogens Skaaning Hoegsberg A REASSESSMENT OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CATHEDRAL AT GARÐAR, GREENLAND The medieval Norse bishop’s seat of Greenland was located at a farm in the Green- landic Eastern Settlement called Garðar. The site has been the subject of archaeo- logical investigations since the 1830’s. The cathedral has been the primary target of much of the archaeological work and was fully excavated in 1926 by Danish archaeologist Poul Norlund. He proposed an interpretation of the building, consist- ing of two main phases. This paper takes a critical look at Norlund’s interpretation and suggests a slightly more complex development of the building, based only on the existing published material. The existence of three main phases is suggested, as well as a possible fourth phase entailing a reduction of the building. Mogens Skaaning Hoegsberg, Department for Medieval and Renaissance Archae- ology, University ofAarhus, Denmark. Email: markmsh@hum.au.dk Keywords: Norse Greenland, Garðar, bishop ’s seat Introduction The farm and bishop’s seat at Garðar in the Norse Eastern Settlement of Green- land has attracted the attention of anti- quarians and archaeologists for close to two centuries. Partly because it is the largest Norse farm ever found in Green- land, partly because it was the site of the bishop’s seat of medieval Greenland. In the 19th and 20* century it has been the subject of multiple archaeological investi- gations, culminating in 1926, after which only little archaeological work has been done at the place. Much of the interest has been concentrated on the ruin of the cathedral - the largest and architecturally richest of the Norse Greenlandic stone churches. For close to 80 years, since the excavation in 1926 and its subsequent publication by Poul Norlund in 1930, the interpretation of the cathedral and its development, as put forth by Norlund. has been virtually uncontested. This paper, based in part on the author’s MA-the- sis at the Department for Medieval- and Renaissance Archaeology at the Universi- ty of Aarhus, Denmark, aims to point out various problems with Norlund’s inter- pretation of the cathedral and to offer an alternative model of its development. The author believes that the cathedral under- went a more complex development than proposed by Norlund, and that the church ruin, if properly examined, can yield more information of value to the understanding of the site as a whole. Archaeologia Islandica 6 (2007) 74-96
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