Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Qupperneq 83

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Qupperneq 83
FARMSTEAD RELOCATION AT THE END OF THE VIKING AGE. RESULTS OF THE SKAGAFJÖRÐUR ARCHAEOLOGICAL SETTLEMENT SURVEY et al. 2001). Changes in the landscape and farmstead production practices would likely favor different locations. Other models of the settlement also suggest biases against a high degree of stability in early farm location. Various researchers have looked to saga accounts of early land claims, such as the one found in Egil’s Saga, as a model for farm establishment (Durrenberger 1991; Herschend 1994; Smith 1995). There the original settler in Borgarfjörður, Skallagrím, established outposts in diverse ecological zones, each contributing a specialized product to the farm as a whole. These specialized outposts are seen as the seeds for later farms. Others have seen evidence in place names for the origin of farms in specialized activity areas (Carter 2010:268; Tetzschner 2002). Whether or not these are apt models for early land division and fann establishment in Iceland, it seems unlikely that a site originally chosen to contribute a product based on the exploitation of a specific ecological niche would be well situated as a standalone farmstead. It also seemed unlikely that the distribution of farms resulting from the initial settlement would transition smoothly into the more densely settled and politically hierarchical society of medieval Iceland. All of this added up, in our minds at least, to compelling evidence that hidden under the contemporary landscape, and inaccessible to traditional survey methods, there was a largely unknown Viking Age Iceland. After years of methodological innovation and survey we can say that, while many things were very different in the Viking Age, for the most part, our assumption was wrong. Based on the SASS survey, it appears that the overwhelming majority of farmsteads are located where they were originally established and that somewhere deep undemeath most contemporary farms-mounds there is the original Viking Age longhouse. In fact, in most cases the date and size of the Viking Age farmstead is predictive of the value and productivity of the farmstead in early modem inventories. In general, the earlier the farm was established the larger it was in the Viking Age and the more valuable it was in the early 18th century (table I). If the systematic survey in Langholt has confirmed that, with certain important caveats, much of the medieval settlement pattem can be pushed back into the Viking Age, it has reinforced the idea that the sites most accessible to archaeologists are atypical. For some reason these sites were abandoned or relocated. In cases of abandonment archaeologists typically recognize these farms as belonging to a special class of environmentally vulnerable farms, primarily in the highlands (Einarsson 1994; Sveinbjamardóttir 1992; Vésteinsson 2003). The survey in Langholt suggests that unlike the highlands, the abandonment of Viking Age farms in the lowlands was a rare event. In fact, there is no evidence that any farms in the survey area were abandoned during the Viking Age and that very few farms were ever permanently abandoned. However, two major fannsteads relocated toward the end of the Viking Age. These sites are important in part because leaving the Viking Age component of these fanns out of the settlement sequence would have 81
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Archaeologia Islandica

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