Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Qupperneq 92

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Qupperneq 92
DOUGLAS J. BOLENDER, JOHN M. STEINBERG AND BRIAN N. DAMIATA Glaumbær is the most anomalous farm in the survey area in terms of the overall settlement pattem. Unlike other farms that are consistent with the interpretation of a region-wide process of land division with ever smaller fanus, filling in the interstitial areas between earlier and larger farms, Lower Glaumbær is too large, too late, and too close to its nearest neighbors. The earliest evidence for domestic occupation dates from the late lOth or early llth century. Other farmsteads established during this period are all significantly smaller than the farmstead at Lower Glaumbær. At approximately 7100 m2 it similar in size to the earliest farms in the area (see table 1). The farm also has a distinctly curious relationship with its two neighbors: Marbæli and Meðalheimur. These two farmsteads, located to the north and west of Glaumbær, were established significantly before Lower Glaumbær; radiocarbon and tephra evidence suggests early in the 10th century. They are both large farmsteads in the Viking Age and fit well with the spatial distribution of the other large farms from that time period. But when these two farms enter the historical record Glaumbær was a parish center and one of the most prominent farms in the region whereas Meðalheimur was a dependent farm belonging to the Glaumbær estate (Pálsson 2001:267). Like Lower Glaumbær, Meðalheimur is unusual in a number of ways. It is the only known farmstead located on the crest of Langholt, approximately 1300 meters away from the main line of farmsteads. The pre-1104 deposits are extensive, covering approximately 4600 m2 (table 1). The anomalous history of Glaumbær and Meðalheimur present a problem of historical explanation. It could indicate an earlier and more dramatic relocation of the farmstead from its original location high on Langholt (Meðalheimur) to the Viking Age location along the main strip of farms on Langholt, perhaps a scenario similar to the one that Vésteinsson (1998) suggests for early farms that chose easily developable land over intensifiable land. After the move, the old farmstead at Meðalheimur simply may have been reincorporated into the farm property as a dependent farm. This possible relocation illustrates one of the practical complications in identifying farmstead relocations in the archaeological record. The two farms are separated by over a kilometer, about the same spacing as other early farms in the survey area. Furthermore there are no clear property boundaries that indicate the extent of the property belonging to either Glaumbær or Meðalheimur during the Viking Age. To further complicate matters, there is no clear evidence of abandonment at Meðalheimur until the late 17th century. Altematively, Glaumbær may represent the potential impact that land sales and transfers could have on settlement pattems. In the Saga of the Greenlanders, Þorfinnr Karlsefni and his family, Guðríðr far-traveler and son Snorri, spent a year in Norway after the failed venture in Vinland and then retumed to Iceland, and bought the land at Glaumbær (Hreinsson 1997, vol. 1:32). Regardless of the historical accuracy of the account, it raises the possibility that farms could undergo significant changes in status. Of course, Glaumbær may simply 90
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Archaeologia Islandica

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