Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Qupperneq 93

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2007, Qupperneq 93
A REASSESSMENT OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CATHEDRAL AT GARÐAR, GREENLAND drals. Since he believed the enclosure to be contemporaneous with the church, it was natural for Norlund to believe that Garðar 1 was erected soon after the bishop’s seat had been established. This would place the building sometime after the mid 1120’s. This is not necessarily the case. As I have tried to argue, the enclo- sure could very well be a later addition to the church. If this is the case, the church could have been standing before the bish- op’s seat was established. Although it is natural to assume that the enclosure had a connection with the church as cathedral it does not necessarily mean that it was added immediately after 1126. Whenever it happened it is intriguing as a material expression of the change of status that took place at Garðar - that the farm now also housed the bishop’s seat. Unfor- tunately we are still unable to date the enclosure more precisely. The only thing that remains certain is that it must have been added before the final extension of the church (phase 3). The addition of the enclosure seems to presuppose an ecclesiastical presence at Garðar and probably would not have happened if a bishop was not there. In this connection it is relevant to men- tion Jette Arneborg’s article The Roman Church in Norse Greenland (1991). She points out that none of the Greenlandic bishops are explicitly said by the Ice- landic annals to have gone to Greenland before Helge in 1212 (Arneborg 1991, 145). This presupposes that Grænlend- inga Þáttr is incorrect since it clearly says that Arnald, the first bishop, made his bishop’s seat at Garðar (Halldórsson 1978, 105). Arneborg suggests that the picture painted by Grænlendinga Þáttr and which gives credit for the establish- ment of the bishop’s seat to the Green- landers, is false. She instead suggests that the establishment of the Greenlandic bishopric was an expression of church policy and as such was instigated by the archbishopric in Lund (Ameborg 1991, 145). Such an attempt to install an eccle- siastical elite is likely to have been very unpopular amongst the church-owning Norse Greenlandic chieftains and the bishops may not have been welcome at all. It should be pointed out that Arneborg’s line of argument is based on negative evi- dence, as she herself acknowledges in the article, and that, while the overall results may well be correct, no real conclusions can be drawn in this manner. From the written sources we also know that several of the Green- landic bishops of the 13th and 14th centu- ries spent considerable amounts of time abroad if they even went to Greenland at all, and after 1378 none of the appointed bishops ever went out to their diocese (Ameborg 1991, 144-145). Reading the Icelandic annals to mean that no bishop before Helge went to Greenland in 1212 may be going too far. Indirect evidence does exist that Arnald, at least, went to Greenland. The Icelandic annals mention him as being present in Iceland in the 1120’s which is in accordance with the story as related by Grœnlendinga Þáttr (Grenlands Historiske Mindesmœrker III, 6-7). The thought is worth having in mind, though, since it could have a bear- ing on the interpretation of the church and its extensions. A post 1212 dating for the addition of the enclosure seems too late, however, and if there is truth in Arneborg’s theory it seems more likely that Arnald at least reached Greenland and oversaw the erection of the enclosure south of the church in the years after 1126. This would leave the possibility open that the final 91
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Archaeologia Islandica

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