Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 45

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 45
A NOTE ON THE REGIONAL DISTRIBUTION OF PAGAN BURIALS IN ICELAND Figure 2. Burial sites (find locations) as a percentage of the number of tax-paying farmers by quarter in c. 1100 and 1311. were exempt from paying the tax and it is conceivable that this proportion differed ffom one quarter to the next. Although the 1311 figures seem to be based on an actual count, with 264 farmers in one region and 268 in another, the rest of the numbers are given in rounded tens and, more worryingly, there is a mismatch between the totals given for the quarters and the sums of the numbers given for the regions within each quarter.1 The mismatch is small enough that it does not affect the overall credibility of the 1311 figures, which are also in broad agreement with both the 1100 and 1690s numbers, but it serves as a waming that their accuracy cannot be relied on. Like the 1100 figures the ones from 1311 only include those farmers who paid tax, leaving out an uknonwn number of households which did not. Comparison with data from around 1700 suggests that the 1100 and 1311 figures represent lögbýli, assessed farm units, rather than households, which in 1703 were nearly two to each fann. These figures are therefore primarily useful as a guide to the relative population levels between quarters and regions. As these must ultimately relate to the productive capacity of the land (and sea) it is reasonable to assume that the same proportions applied in the Viking age. Looking first at the proportion of pagan burial sites (N=170, see Friðriksson & Vésteinsson this volume) to the later population proxies, a well known pattern emerges. Against both the c. 1100 and 1311 data, the highest proportion of burial sites is in the North and the lowest in the West although the difference is greater in 1311 (three times as many sites in the North than West in c. 1100 as opposed to four times in 1311). The other main 1 Bjöm M. Olsen (1907-15, 303-307) tried to argue the mismatch away by suggesting that the largest discrepancy, that of tax-paying farmers in the south, was due to a failure of a scribe to translate the arabic numeral 500 correctly to long hundreds, but even if this was right it would not explain the smaller inconsistencies in the figures for the northem and westem quarters. 43
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Archaeologia Islandica

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