Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Page 88

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Page 88
Mogens Skaaning Hoegsberg Fig. 7. The rectangular church ruin at the presumed Hvalsey farm. This is the bestpreserved Norse Greenlandic ruin. This type of church is believed to have been built after circa AD 1300. From Roussell 1941, 19. (Garðar 1) was largely correct when it comes to the church itself. The enclo- sure south of the church is another mat- ter. With regards to the church building, there are foundations which indicate the shape and size that Norlund ascribed to Garðar 1, including the oddly short chan- cel. Very short Romanesque chancels are, however, known from other Norse Green- landic stone churches and they seem to have been typical of the older generation of stone churches there (Krogh 1982, 123). One unclear point here, however, relates to the piece of foundation which runs across the opening between nave and chancel. Norlund believed this foundation to belong to Garðar 2 (fig. 5), but nowhere states why this must be so. This particu- lar piece of foundation remains one of the most interesting aspects of the cathedral because its presence can be interpreted in multiple ways. The first possibility is that it was an original feature of the building, meant to be a further strengthening of the arch between nave and chancel. While no such foundations are known from any other Norse Greenlandic churches, they are known from Europe (pers. comment, Thomas Bertelsen). The other possibility is that it was a later addition to the building. A drawing from one of Knud Krogh’s exca- vations in Igaliku in the 1970’s indicates that this might be the case. Krogh made a small excavation by the eastern gable of the nave, but the excavation only exposed a part of the foundation in the northern side of the building. For this reason the interpretation of the drawing remains inconclusive. Depending upon how one chooses to interpret the drawing, it could be taken to show that parts of the founda- tion were added later, seemingly proving Norlund’s theory. There is just one prob- 86
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Archaeologia Islandica

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