Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 32

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 32
ORRI VÉSTEINSSON mouldering which could be detrimental to the health of the inhabitants. This evidently changed and people stopped digging out floors unless pavings or wooden floors compelled them to. The reasons for this are no doubt complex but two factors can be identified which undoubtedly contributed to this develop- ment. Floor maintenance as habitus Just like keeping our modem floors clean is a habitus, something we do because it is done, and we certainly tend to do more frequently and better than required by strictly practical considerations, then it is likely that the digging out of floors in Viking age halls was so too. This is espe- cially likely if it was a regular task, e.g. performed annually as a part of spring cleaning. It might also have been done less frequently but then probably in rela- tion to other maintenance of the building. Little is known about how prevalent turf architecture was in the regions which the people colonising Iceland came from, but even if they were all used to living in turf buildings (which is unlikely) it is inevitable that such buildings will have turned out to “behave” differently in Iceland than in the regions of origin. Not only was the building material, the turf in its composition, different but the build- ings will have responded differently to the different climate in Iceland. This is likely to have affected maintenance and repair rates, increasing them, possibly by an order of magnitude. If we imagine that digging out the floors was conceived of as a measure contributing to the longevi- ty of a house, say, because it was expect- ed to last for 200 years, then the realisa- tion that in the new country houses only lasted a fraction of that time, may also have affected how people defined their housework priorities. Add to this that it is likely that the people who moved to Iceland were as a rule not used to living in turf-houses. Then a floor maintenance habitus which demanded that the floor be dug out peri- odically will have been unfamiliar to many (e.g. those raised on clay floors) and less ingrained in others, not least because the general house-holding and building-maintenance paradigm will not have been transferred intact. In other words, digging out the floors may have been a habitus in Viking age Iceland but it may have been less immutable than many others. In particular it is likely that such a habitus may have lost some of its force when other elements of the general house-holding paradigm had to be adjust- ed to new realities. Changes in farmhouse layout Although much remains to be understood about architectural developments in Viking age Iceland it is clear that once a basic type of dwelling had become gener- ally accepted in the new society (Orri Vésteinsson et al. 2006, 116-18) it began to develop its own characteristics, both in terms of building technique and layout. The most important change in the present context is the development of multi- celled structures, where separate rooms were added on to the halls. These were in effect separate buildings with their own timber-frames, but they were connected to the halls (and each other) with corri- 30
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