Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 63

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 63
Walrus Hunting and the Ivory Trade in early Iceland Conclusion Artefactual and historical evidence sug- gests that walrus ivory was harvested and worked on only a small-scale in medieval Iceland. The raw material finds from the country come at the very beginning and end of the walrus ivory market in Europe: the three Aðalstræti tusks from the mid- 10th to mid-llth century and the worked Gásir fragment from the 14th century. This suggests that Icelanders were doing more than simply storing walrus ivory in transit from Greenland to Scandinavia, but any ivory industry in Iceland was overshadowed by the output of their Greenlandic neighbours. However, the decline in popularity of walrus ivory in the 13* century and beyond was cata- strophic for Greenland (Roesdahl 1998: 43), while Iceland was relatively unaf- fected as the country was not dependant upon walrus ivory exports and was engaging in the emerging medieval físh- ing industry. Although the nature of the walrus ivory industry in Iceland is still not clear, new work on Viking Age sites around Iceland, such as Vatnsijörður in the West Fjords, should provide more evidence of the island’s role in Europe’s ivory trade. Acknowledgements First and foremost, thanks to Mjöll Snæsdóttir for not only discussing this topic with me early on and pointing me in the direction of several Icelandic sources, but also for her kindness to me and so many other students throughout the years. I am also grateful to my supervisor, Colleen Batey, for her suggestions and help with this article and my general research. Many thanks also are due to Óskar Gísli Sveinbjarnarson and Amanda Charland for their help with translations, and to Tom McGovern and Ramona Harrison for graciously sharing their knowledge and photographs. Thank you also to Guðmundur Ólafsson at Þjóðminjasafn íslands (National Museum of Iceland) for helping me to gather information on walrus ivory in the muse- um’s collection, and to the University of Glasgow for the Faculty of Arts Research Grant which allowed me to travel to Iceland to conduct this research. Finally, thanks to everyone at Fornleifastofnun Islands for their assistance and hospitali- ty. References Arneborg, Jette. (1992) ‘344 - Crozier head and fínger-ring’, in E. Roesdahl and D. Wilson (eds.), From Viking to Crusader: Scandinavia and Europe 800-1200, pp. 316, Uddevalla, Sweden: BohuslaningensBoktryckeri AB. Batey, Colleen. (2005) ‘From raw mate- rial to fmished product: Resources and resourcefulness in the North Atlantic’, in: H. Luik, A. Choyke, C. Batey, and L. Löugas (eds.) From Hooves to Horns, from Mollusc to Mammoth, pp. 351-358, Tallinn: University of Tartu. Beckwith, John. (1974) lvory Carvings in Early Medieval England 700- 1200, London: The Arts Council of Great Britain. Dennis, Andrew, Peter Foote, and Richard Perkins (trans. and eds.) (2000) Laws ofEarly Iceland Grágásll, Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press. Einarsson, Ámi (2006) ‘Natural condi- tions at the time of settlement’, in: O. Vésteinsson, H. Þorláksson, and Á. Einarsson (eds.), Reykjavík 871 ± 2: The Settlement Exhibition, pp. 88-93, 61

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