Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 25

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 25
ICELANDIC VlKING AgE GRAVES: LACK IN MATERIAL - LACK OF INTERPRETATION? further examination or excavation dis- turbed this relation. The intention was in essence not to seek new knowledge but to confírm and illustrate the already existing historical record. An eminent figure in archaeological research at the end of the 19th century was philologist Kristian Kálund. He trav- elled around lceland between 1872 and 1874 gathering information on Saga sites which became the bulk of his book Bidrag til en historisk-topografisk Beskri- velse af Island a few years later. In 1882 Kálund published his article “Islands Fortidslævninger” in which he catalogued all the known Viking Age graves and grave goods in Iceland. His work is a mere description of the known graves and although detailed information is pre- sented, interpretation of the finds rarely follows. Neither does Kálund seem to have been very impressed by the Icelandic material corpus; Island, der ved sin ældre litteratur har sá stor betydning for studiet af Nordens oldtid, yder med hensyn til oldsager og andre fortidslævninger langtfra noget tilsvarende; og i henseende til fundenes mængde og de bevarede genstandes antal vil dette land vel altid stá betydelig tilbage for de fleste andre egne af Norden. [Iceland, which through its ancient written sources achieves such an important role in the study of Nordic antiquity, yields far from an equal share when it comes to antiquities and other archaeological remains; and in terms of the quantity of the fmds and the number of preser- ved artifacts, this country will proba- bly always stand far behind most other Nordic regions.] (Kálund 1882, 57; author’s translation). This scepticism towards the potential of material culture, apparent in Kálund’s statement, was to become a tenacious perception within Icelandic archaeology and even an inhibiting factor in the field’s development. The root of this scepticism is in essence twofold. On the one hand it is based in the continuous association of material culture and the historical record or Saga heritage. On the other hand it can be traced to the inclination of contrasting the Icelandic material corpus with that of other Nordic countries, without any con- sideration given to the integrity of such parallelism. A similar attitude is found in an article written by the Norwegian archaeologist Haakon Shetelig who visited Iceland in 1936 to study the collection of Viking Age artefacts in the National Museum in Reykjavík. Shetelig analysed the arte- facts by means of typology and came to the conclusion that they confirmed the known historical chronology of the set- tlement, as well as the predominant Norwegian origin of the settlers (Shetelig 1939, 10). At the same time Shetelig was very concemed with how the Icelandic burial tradition deviated from the Norwegian, for example in the absence of cremation burials and the “poor” and generally “unprepossessing” appearance of the graves. The Icelanders, Shetelig claimed, have in this sense been entirely devoid of any ambition, as it is the simple and modest type of burial that character- izes the period (Shetelig 1939, 8). This “poorness” of the graves, described by both Kálund and Shetelig, has since engaged most scholars address- ing the Icelandic pre-Christian grave material. Through parallelism with (mostly) the Norwegian material, empha- sis has been on explaining, by reference 23

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