Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 39

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 39
ON FARM MOUNDS the dwelling now became concentrated inside it, while the inside space was reor- ganised so as to give certain tasks, or groups of tasks, their own separate and more clearly differentiated spaces. An interesting aspect of this is that the annexes very often could only be accessed by going past the hall’s central hearth (see íurther Price 1995). This adds a further dimension because it suggests that that centralisation was not just about increased proximity of task-spaces, but that there was also increased centralised control and oversight of the household’s activities. It is very tempting to interpret this as a reflection of increased authority of the household manager, presumably the housewife. Centralisation meant that she could more easily and effectively supervise tasks which previously had been carried out outside or in detached buildings accessed from outside. Differentiation can then be seen as an outcome of such increasingly effective control vested in a single person situated in the epicentre of household activities. It is in the interest of more effective control to clearly demarcate where different activities take place and to separate them one from another. With the maid chum- ing the butter in the pantry, with no escape except past the central hearth, and the servant boy plucking feathers from ptarmigans in front of the fire, the house- wife can monitor both and can make sure they do not interrupt each other or are interrupted by others. The hall with annexes therefore can be seen as a kind of panopticon, architecture of control. It is possible that this hypothesised change in the authority of housewives reflects an improvement in the status of women in the late Viking age, but for now I will limit my claims to suggesting that they reflect increasing hierarchiza- tion within the household structure, relat- ing both to increased permanence of households and, more importantly, a cul- tural emphasis on that permanence and its beneficial effects. To sum up: Farm-mounds did not begin to form in Iceland, and by inference not in the Faroes either, at the start of set- tlement but rather in the late Viking age, in the late 10th century at the earliest, when halls began to spout annexes. This impor- tant development, which I suggest had its roots in changes in household stmcture and ideology, led to a change in building maintenance whereby floors were no longer dug out regularly, and it is this that set off the build-up of farm-mounds. Bibliography Albrethsen, Svend Erik & Guðmundur Olafsson 2001. Bygningsanalyse af GUS. Gárden under sandet 1991-1996, Unpublished report. Nationalmuseet og Þjóðminjasafn íslands. Aldred, Oscar 2010, ‘Merki og magdalenukökur. Félagslegt minni og landsháttafomleifaffæði. ’ Upp á yfirborðið. Nýjar rannsóknir í islenskri fornleifafrœði, ritstj. Gavin Lucas, Kristborg Þórsdóttir & Orri Vésteinsson, Reykjavík, 99- 111. Arge, Símun V. 1997, ‘í Uppistovubeitinum. Site and settlement.’ Fróðskaparrit 45, 27-44. Arge, Símun V., Guðrún Sveinbjamardóttir, Kevin J. Edwards & Paul C. Buckland 2005, ‘Viking and Medieval Settlement in the Faroes: People, Place and Environment.’ Human Ecology 33(5), 597-620. Bertelsen, Reidar & Raymond G. Lamb 1993, ‘Settlement mounds in the North Atlantic.’ C. Batey et al eds. The Viking age in Caithness, Orkney and the North Atlantic, Edinburgh UP, 544-54. Bjami F. Einarsson 1994, The Settlement of Iceland; A Critical Approach. Granastaðir and 37
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