Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Qupperneq 54

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Qupperneq 54
ADOLF FRIÐRIKSSON AND ORRI VÉSTEINSSON categories. Critical examination of the evidence therefore needs to take account of the research history, the context in which the data have been accumulated and interpreted so far. Only by building on existing knowledge can we hope to proceed from the dichotomous view of the present to a more comprehensive view that sees religion as a reflection of burial rather than the other way around. In this paper we will examine the two categories, evidence of pagan and Christian burial locations, in order to propose a hypothesis about the development of cemetery distribution from the Viking age to the late middle ages. We will begin by demonstrating the contrast between the pagan and Christian paradigms of burial location as they can be reconstructed from the available evidence and follow this with a discussion of how this difference came about and what it means. The pagan paradigm of burial location Recent research has shown that pagan burials can be grouped in two in terms of their relationship with settlements (Friðriksson 2004a; 2004b). On the one hand pagan burials are frequently found just outside homefíelds and on the other they can be situated íurther away, often close to or on boundaries between farms. What these locational types have in common is that they are liminal and they are also frequently, possibly always, associated with routes. The significance of these associations has been called in to question by the lack of apparent monumentality of the burials - it has not been evident that they would have been visible to passers-by at all - but recent open area excavations of pagan cemeteries at Litlu-Núpar (Roberts 2008, Pálsdóttir & Leifsson 2010) and Ingiríðarstaðir (Hreiðarsdóttir & Roberts 2009) in NE-Iceland have revealed that many burials had superstructures of timber that would have ensured their visibility, potentially for decades after their erection. Another intriguing aspect of pagan burial location that has become evident through recent research is that the cemeteries are frequently (although not always) out of sight from the settlement to which they belonged. As we shall see this makes the contrast to the Christian paradigm of burial location even sharper. It is possible that there is a chronological signifícance to the two types of locations and it has been suggested that the burials closer to settlements represent an earlier stage while those on or close to boundaries are later (Friðriksson 2004a, 2004b). It is certainly possible that there was more than one burial location associated with each settlement, as suggestedby multiple burial locations associated with the farms of Álfsstaðir (Eldjám 2000, 79-81), Stóri Klofi (Eldjám 2000, 63-64) and Fellsmúli (Eldjám 2000, 65) all in S-Iceland as well as Hrollaugsstaðir in E-Iceland (Eldjám 2000, 226-27). In some of these cases (in particular Fellsmúli and possibly Álfsstaðir) it is possible that one of the locations is in fact a Christian cemetery. The question then arises whether such multiple locations are in fact real (they might actually relate to other settlements since disappeared), or whether they reflect relocations of the settlements or recalibrations of their relationships with other settlements (the relocation of routes and boundaries), chronological developments or some other distinctions, perhaps of class or family. These are issues we hope to throw light on in our 52
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Archaeologia Islandica

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