Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 37

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 37
ICELANDIC VlKING AGE GRAVES: LaCK IN MATERIAL - LACK OF INTERPRETATION? of artifacts for intemment (remember- ing), and the disassociation of others (forgetting), would have contributed to the collective displayed, as well as the memories evoked (Williams 2005, 254). However, it is hard to imagine that the presence of such rare and elaborate things, or their performative significance in the open grave, would have been of symbolic nature only. Although gender, status or power may have been signaled through their placement on or by the deceased’s body, their presence was not symbolic but material. And it was in fact through their materiality that their value was gained. The immediate significance of the object or animal was therefore not related to some extemal essence but to its literal presence - the fact that just this sword, horse or brooch was there, was seen and was recognized, and could thus evoke memories, emotions or strengthen relations. Rather than being a metaphor for something absent, I believe it was the object itself and its life history of gath- ered relations that was of significance, and brought meaning to the collective material memory it became part of. Invisible parts of the collective So far I have emphasized the demonstra- tive power of the burial and the signifí- cance of the elements seen, separately as well as in relation to each other. However, not everything was visible during the ceremony. The contents of pouches or small bags carried in the belt, document- ed in several instances represent such a case. Another example is the contents of small wooden chests documented in a few graves, albeit in both instances the visibility of the container may have evoked thoughts among those present and furthered the degree of secrecy. The content of pouches is usually a collective of a few small items, often everyday things, like strike-a-lights with pieces of flint or jasper, combs, weights, spindle whorls, knifes and whetstones, but also items of a less obvious function as small stones of unusual color or form, conches or broken beads. In his description of the Selfoss grave, Eldjárn declared that the various small items found in the person’s pouch, a few dark pebbles, one transpar- ent and a few unusual stones and a conch, were nothing but worthless reflections of eccentricity and superstition (Eldjám 1966, 10). In his doctoral thesis (Eldjám 1956), as well as in its re-publication (Eldjárn 2000), these items are com- pletely ignored. However, a brief study of the corpus reveals that such items are actually among the most commonly found grave goods. They are documented in 21 graves, but are most likely under- represented as they can easily be over- looked or ignored during excavations. It is tme that the worth and utility of these small items may be less apparent than for example that of an exclusive sword, a brooch or a cauldron. I would nevertheless argue that their value was signifícant although in a different way and on a different level. During the burial these items were not meant for display and hence, their identities or meanings were not really open to consideration or negotiation. The reason may have been that their life histories were known and entangled with the biography and identity of one person only, whom they now accompanied in death as they had through life. Maybe these invisible small items as contrasted with those displayed in the grave, refer to different sides of being a person and constructing an identity in Viking Age Iceland. On one side you 35

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Archaeologia Islandica

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