Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 87

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 87
FARMSTEAD RELOCATION AT THE END OF THE VIKING AGE. RESULTS OF THE SKAGAFJÖRÐUR ARCHAEOLOGICAL SETTLEMENT SURVEY new. For the moment, we leave aside the broader question of what might be called farmstead reorganization and its relationship to farmstead relocation, while acknowledging that the more obvious examples of farmstead relocation may represent a limited dimension of a much larger question of changing spatial practices on Viking Age farms. The Langholt Region in the Viking Age The survey focused on Langholt in Skagafjörður, a long (10 km) low hill running south-north parallel to the valley, and an adjoining area to the north including the prominent estate at Reynistaður. The area is geologically similar and farms generally have access to the same range of resources: low-lying wetlands along Héraðsvötn on the east, a drier rise approximately 10-40 meters above seas level on which almost all of the fannsteads are situated, and expansive pastureland to the west that follows the rise of Langholt up and over to Sæmundarhlíð. The one exception to this pattem is Meðalheimur, which was located west of Glaumbær near the crest of Langholt. Communal grazing lands are located in the highlands to the west. Much of the area was probably wooded at the time of settlement but cleared by the early llth century (Einarsson 1961, 1963; Hallsdóttir 1996; Trigg, et al. 2011). In general, the survey results confonn to the historical account of the settlement, beginning in the late 9th century - there is no evidence of occupation under the Landnám tephra dated to AD 871 ±2 (Grönvold, et al. 1995). The process of farm creation followed a regular pattem as smaller farmsteads infilled the spaces between earlier and larger farmsteads (figure 1). Almost all farms in the survey area, including all historically identified full farms, were established by the end of the llth century, and the majority was established by the end of the 10th century. Only a small number of historically identified dependent farms (Geitagerði, Jaðar, Kjartanstaðakot) were established after the Hekla 1104 emption. Most of these appear to date from the early modem period. In the survey area there is no evidence that any full farms were ever permanently abandoned prior to the 20th century and most farms appear to have been occupied more or less continuously from the time of their original establishment. There are a number of small sites dating to the Viking Age with domestic refuse - ash, charcoal, bones, turf - that were abandoned. Currently we know little about these sites or if they represent separate farms or special activity areas belonging to another farm. These sites are quite small compared with the other Viking Age farmsteads (< 1000 m2) and are roughly the same size as the post-1104 dependent farmsteads. In each case, these possible domestic sites are relatively close to established farmsteads (ca. 100-400 meters), a distance also similar to the later dependent farms. They may represent cottages, failed dependent farms, or the presence of multiple households on the same farm but they are unlike the other known farmsteads from the Viking Age. Almost all of the farmsteads are located where they were first established, 85
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Archaeologia Islandica

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