Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Blaðsíða 83

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Blaðsíða 83
A REASSESSMENT OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CATHEDRAL AT GaRÐAR, GrEENLAND Greenland (Roussell 1941). Roussell participated in the 1926 excavation and also conducted his own excavations in Greenland in the 1930’s. Roussell seems to agree with Norlund regarding the inter- pretation of the cathedral, at least on the major points. After 1926, the church was left untouched for almost 50 years. In 1974-75 Knud J. Krogh appears to have excavated both inside and outside the cathedral. Unfortunately these investiga- tions have never been published and the documentation is difficult to interpret. A final discovery pertaining to the church was published as late as 1999 after the bishop’s skeleton had been radi- ocarbon dated (as presented below). This happened as part of a project that aimed to look at the Norse diet - particularly the relationship between terrestrial and marine components. This is significant since marine components may affect the results of carbon dating - the so called “reservoir effect” (Arneborg et.al. 1999, 157). This potential source of error was taken into account and the new datings were corrected accordingly. The results are discussed further in the following sections. The cathedral and its development The cathedral was one of the main targets of the 1926 excavation. It lay as a very disturbed ruin at the time, most of the stones having been used for new build- ings by local residents after the settle- ment at Igaliku was established in 1780 (Norlund 1930, 22, 29). Norlund states that actual masonry was only preserved in a few places, so the excavation aimed at exposing the foundations and excavat- ing the interior of the building. Based on this, Norlund provided his interpretation. He separated the two main phases, which he discerned, primarily by examining the nature of the foundations (Norlund 1930, 44^15). While this method may give some indications, it is by no means conclusive, and there are great problems attached to it. Norlund’s conclusion was that the cathedral had two main phases (fig. 4 and fig. 5), both built in the local red Igaliku sandstone. In the following, Norlund’s view of the two phases will be termed Garðar 1 and Garðar 2 respective- ly, although he never used these names himself. Garðar 1 had a Romanesque layout with a nave and smaller chancel. According to Norlund the church had been connected with a small enclosure to the south, with buildings on the east- ern, western and southern sides. Norlund believed that the enclosure and some of the buildings around it were erected at the same time as the church itself (Norlund 1930, 42^17). The enclosure and its sur- rounding buildings are completely unique in a Norse Greenlandic context. Two north-south oriented walls connected the church with an east-west oriented wall. Lying up against the western, southern and, possibly, eastern side of these walls, there were a number of buildings (fig. 4). The enclosure itself was roughly qua- dratic, although the eastern wall is rather skewed. The enclosure measured approxi- mately 7.5-8,5 by 8-9.5 meters (Norlund 1930, 46). Building no. 2, at the south-west- em corner of the enclosure, was interpreted by Norlund as a belfry, particularly due to the fact that it was the only building at the site where mortar of lime seems to have been utilized. Norlund took this to mean that the building had been of considerable height. It was this fact, combined with the small internal measurements that led 81
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Archaeologia Islandica

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