Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Síða 57

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Síða 57
LANDSCAPES OF BURIAL: CONTRASTING THE PAGAN AND CHRISTIAN PARADIGMS OF BURIAL IN VIKING AGE AND MEDIEVAL ICELAND almost without exception on the farm mound, at one end of the farm-houses or directly in front of them. An ongoing survey of the location of churches and chapels has revealed that there was slightly greater variation in the location of chapels and annex churches in medieval times. Out of 338 sites which have been identified and classified 220 churches or chapels were situated on the farm mound, 102 elsewhere within the home-field and only 16 outside it - some of these are roadside chapels which may not have been associated with burials. Some of the chapels and churches inside home-fields but not on the farm mounds were still fairly close to the farmhouses, in the order of 10-30 m, but in other cases they were further away, in a few cases more than 100 m. There are only 14 cases where the chapel or church was adjacent to, although always inside, the home-field boundary. There are therefore distinct differences in the character of Christian and pagan burial location. While pagan cemeteries are as a rule outside the homefield (although there are 3 possible exceptions to this), out of sight and on a border of some sort, Christian cemeteries are as a mle inside the homefield, and usually strongly linked with the farm-houses, well within sight of residents as well as visitors approaching the farm. Another major difference is revealed when the distribution of Christian cemeteries is compared to value categories. In the case of Christian cemeteries the problem is rarely the association between cemetery or farm but rather that the existence of cemeteries must be assumed ffom evidence for chapels and churches. There are good grounds to do this: graves are as a mle found in association with church or chapel stmctures when excavated and no convincing case has been recorded of an ordinary church or chapel with no associated cemetery. The two exceptions are churches outside the parochial system: the merchants’ church at Gásir (Vésteinsson 2009) and the roadside chapel in Kapelluhraun (Eldjám 1957) where no graves were found. In addition human bones have frequently come to light at sites where churches or chapels are known to have existed (e.g. Eldjám 1974, 142); in the ongoing survey mentioned above evidence for burial has been recorded at more than 150 chapel and church sites. It is therefore justifiable to expect that wherever evidence of a chapel or a church can be found this also indicates the existence of a cemetery. As we shall see below there is strong evidence to suggest that in many, perhaps the majority of cases, burial ceased at chapels and lesser churches in the course of the high and later middle ages, but as evidence stands presently it seems safe to assume that all such stractures were associated with burial in the 11 th century. The next problem to solve is that although a healthy number of early churches and chapels have been excavated, that number obviously does not represent anything like the total number or distribution of these buildings in the earliest period of Christianity. No lists are available of chapels or churches in the llth century and while written evidence exists for a few scores of churches in the llth and 12th centuries (Vésteinsson 2000a, 37-45) it is only in the 14th century that the source material allows comprehensive assessment of the number and distribution of these stmctures. Archaeological evidence suggests that the late medieval churches and chapels invariably trace their origins 55
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Archaeologia Islandica

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