Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 85

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 85
FARMSTEAD RELOCATION AT THE END OF THE VIKING AGE. RESULTS OF THE SKAGAFJÖRÐUR ARCHAEOLOGICAL SETTLEMENT SURVEY signifícantly affected our understanding of land claim, land division, and the creation of hierarchies among farms. They also provide an opportunity to consider why some farmsteads relocated while others stayed in the same place as originally established. Farm abandonment versus farmstead relocation Farm abandonment has received considerable attention in archaeological investigation and discussion, much of it related to highland environmental degradation toward the end of the Viking Age (Dugmore, et al. 2007; Einarsson 1994; Rafnsson 1977; Stenberger and Roussell 1943; Sveinbjamardóttir 1992; Vilhjálmsson 1989). Farmstead relocation has received considerably less attention. In sorting out the difference between farm abandonment and relocation it is important to make a conceptual distinction between the farm and the farmstead. The farm, as a property that supports social and economic reproduction, consists of a central concentration of turf structures, the immediately surrounding infields, the outfields, pastures, and other resource locations that are owned by a specific fanuer (Amorosi, et al. 1998; Urbanczyk 1999). In this sense the farm is simultaneously a physical and social entity tied to one or more households (Bolender 2007b). These properties are difficult to reconstmct for a variety of reasons: they are extensive and consist of diverse land use and activity areas, their boundaries may be unmarked or have changed, some parts of the property may not be contiguous, and they may have been organized differently in the past (Aldred 2008; Berson 2002; Einarsson, et al. 2002; Jónsson 1993, 2002; Jónsson and Dýrmundsson 2000; Júlíusson 2000; Milek 2006). We use the term farmstead in the more restricted sense to refer to the cluster of buildings central to the operation of the farm, including the domestic residence of the fanuing household. Farmsteads, because of their circumscribed nature, are much easier to identify, define, and date than the larger farm and therefore, we used the farmstead as our basic archaeological unit in the survey. Following from the distinction between the farm and the farmstead, farm abandonment refers to a fanu that no longer is the residence and primary production site of a household. Farmstead relocation assumes the continued occupation of the farm as a physical and social entity while the core buildings and central activities that make up the farmstead - in other words the key archaeologically identifiable elements of the farm - are moved ífom one place to another on that land. Relocation assumes that spatially and temporally distinct fanusteads, in fact, belong to the same farm. Archaeologically, farm abandonment is indicated by the abandonment of all domestic stmctures and the cessation of domestic midden development anywhere on a fanu property. Farmstead relocation, as seen in archaeological survey, is suggested by the movement of domestic stmctures and midden development to a spatially discrete but nearby location, within what is inferred to be the same farm property. 83
Side 1
Side 2
Side 3
Side 4
Side 5
Side 6
Side 7
Side 8
Side 9
Side 10
Side 11
Side 12
Side 13
Side 14
Side 15
Side 16
Side 17
Side 18
Side 19
Side 20
Side 21
Side 22
Side 23
Side 24
Side 25
Side 26
Side 27
Side 28
Side 29
Side 30
Side 31
Side 32
Side 33
Side 34
Side 35
Side 36
Side 37
Side 38
Side 39
Side 40
Side 41
Side 42
Side 43
Side 44
Side 45
Side 46
Side 47
Side 48
Side 49
Side 50
Side 51
Side 52
Side 53
Side 54
Side 55
Side 56
Side 57
Side 58
Side 59
Side 60
Side 61
Side 62
Side 63
Side 64
Side 65
Side 66
Side 67
Side 68
Side 69
Side 70
Side 71
Side 72
Side 73
Side 74
Side 75
Side 76
Side 77
Side 78
Side 79
Side 80
Side 81
Side 82
Side 83
Side 84
Side 85
Side 86
Side 87
Side 88
Side 89
Side 90
Side 91
Side 92
Side 93
Side 94
Side 95
Side 96
Side 97
Side 98
Side 99
Side 100
Side 101
Side 102
Side 103
Side 104
Side 105
Side 106
Side 107
Side 108

x

Archaeologia Islandica

Direkte link

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: Archaeologia Islandica
https://timarit.is/publication/1160

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.