Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 36

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 36
Þóra Pétursdóttir bury themselves, we can not think of them as clay in the hands of the living. The ambiguous and demanding presence of the deceased during a Viking Age burial ceremony may have bestowed him or her with an ability to communicate and manipulate the living. The dead body may have silently insisted that the things that were part of the person’s identity in life - with and through whom it formed networks - should be deposited along- side it. That the animals, a dog and horse, which it loved, bred, played and worked with, be put to death and follow it in the grave. Through her ethnographic research Marilyn Strathem (1981, 219) has actu- ally recognized that funerals often “remember” the dead through the per- son’s reconfíguration. That is, by bring- ing together the parts he or she demon- strated in life and thereby unite or re- member an otherwise “distributed per- son”. Thus, the contents of an excavated grave cannot simply be conceived as “... osteological data, artefacts or symbolic resources, but as holding material agency influencing the selective remembering and forgetting of the deceased’s person- hood [italics added]” (Williams 2004, 263). Obviously, all the constituents of a grave were brought to the place of depo- sition by the living - they did not fall from the sky. But, not the body, the things, the animals, or other items were brought there as inert passive materials. And moreover, not one came into being at this moment, but brought with it a life history, “...a series of networks of sig- nificance, involving places, the personal histories of people, substances, skills and symbolic references” (Thomas 1996, 159). Presuming that it was the deceased’s relatives that handled the burial, it is Figure 3: A woman and horse resting in an undivided grave at Ytra-Garðshorn in Eyjajjarðarsýsla (Eldjárn 1966, 37). likely that they also knew the different constituents. Objects like the elaborate sword from the grave at Kaldárhöfði (Eldjám 2000, 324 (see Fig. 4)), the unu- sual spear from Tindar (ibid, 343), the oval and trefoil brooches from Ketilsstaðir (ibid, 360, 364), the tongue shaped brooches from Komsá (ibid, 370) and the lignite arm ring from Alaugarey (ibid, 390) are of such character or rarity that their identity, even their name, and their reputation may have been known by many. The fact that the corpus comprises very few such elaborate things can only strengthen such an argument. It is there- fore not difficult to see how the selection 34 1

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