Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 62

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 62
Elizabeth Pierce only be estimated. While some objects such as the crosiers may have been made in Iceland, others probably arrived through trade. Pieces held by the National Museum include a 3.5 cm tall fígure of a man on horseback that is dated 1300-1600 and was acquired in 1877 (National Museum of lceland 1877-438), and two 3 cm by 1.5 cm dice, one of which is described as pink- ish-white and the other light brown (NMI 1883-322). Some of the bone gaming pieces from a 10th century burial at Baldursheimur (NMI 1863-2) may be made of walrus ivory, but closer exami- nation of the pieces is necessary to con- firm this. Other early medieval pieces include one possibly medieval gaming piece, a whalebone or ivory tablet from Grímsstaðir, and a board carved with Christian scenes from Breiðabólstaðarkirkja in Flj ótshlíð (Kristjánsson 1986: 101-102). From Tusk to Art Unlike the elephant tusk, which is solid ivory aside from a small nerve channel, walms tusks are smaller with a thinner layer of workable dentine and an inner core of discoloured, granular material that carvers avoid exposing (MacGregor 1985: 18-20; Finken et al. 1989: 1-2; Stratford 1997: 40; Roesdahl 1998: 13; 2005: 184). Elephant ivory was the pre- ferred medium for ivory carvers, but it became rare in northem Europe after the collapse of the Roman Empire until the mid-13th century (Beckwith 1974: 11; Sawyer 1984: 45; Gaborit-Chopin 1992: 205; Stratford 1997: 39). Objects of wal- rus ivory from earlier than the llth cen- tury are rare; but there is a sharp increase in the number of preserved ivory pieces around the year 1000, roughly the same time Greenland was settled (Roesdahl 2003: 146; 2007: 92). To compensate for the differences in walrus ivory, new prac- tices evolved in Romanesque carving such as carving in low relief and building large objects out of several smaller pan- els (Gaborit-Chopin 1992: 204; Roesdahl 2007: 92). Walrus ivory hunted in the North Atlantic came mainly from Greenland and was transported via Iceland or Norway to markets throughout northem Europe, a reflection of Scandinavia’s growing commercial and political inter- actions (MacGregor 1985: 40; Roesdahl 1998: 40; 2003: 146). Ivory was usually carved, but pieces were also known to be stained, coloured, gilded or embellished with silver, gold, precious stones or col- ourdetail(Finkenetal. 1989: 6; Roesdahl 1998: 13). Most surviving examples of walrus ivory objects are religious, but secular objects such as gaming pieces have also been preserved (Roesdahl 1998: 16). Some of the best-known piec- es from the North Atlantic in this period are the Lewis Chessmen from the Isle of Lewis, Scotland and the crosier from the bishop’s seat of Garðar in Greenland (Ameborg 1992: 316; Stratford 1997; Roesdahl 1998: 29). However, walrus ivory’s popularity as a craft material did not last. Around the second quarter of the 13th century, the trade routes that provided elephant ivory to Europe had once again opened, this time through Norman and Flemish ports (Gaborit-Chopin 1992: 205). Elephant ivory’s advantages in carving and its availability drove walms ivory from the market, and circa AD 1400 there was a temporary collapse in demand for all types of ivory (Roesdahl 1998: 45; 2003: 146; 2005: 187). 60

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