Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 97

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 97
FARMSTEAD RELOCATION AT THE END OF THE VIKING AGE. RESULTS OF THE SKAGAFJÖRÐUR ARCHAEOLOGICAL SETTLEMENT SURVEY moving the farmstead uphill to the edge of the ridge; however the original occupants of the farm were clearly aware of these conditions as they constructed the original longhouse on the best drained area. While localized environmental change cannot be ruled out as a factor influencing the movement at Glaumbær, it does not appear to a significant factor. Christian conversion and changing perceptions of the landscape Lucas (2009) has recently suggested that the relocation of the Viking Age farmstead at Hofstaðir in Mývatnssveit may have been, in part, a response to Christianization. Hofstaðir exhibits evidence for ritual practices with religious connotations such as feasting and animal sacrifice that may have been closely associated with the Viking Age farmstead site (Lucas and McGovem 2007). In this view, the original Viking Age hall at Hofstaðir may have been abandoned and ritually closed as a part of the negotiated transition between the old and new beliefs and practices (Lucas 2009:407-408). Many relocated sites are known to have medieval Christian churches and this association raises the general question of whether or not farmstead relocation reflected a need to distance the newly Christian households from the close association between pagan ritual practices and the farmstead. Christian conversion may have required not just a change in worldview but also a change in the physical landscape. Both the medieval farmsteads at Upper Stóra-Seyla and Upper Glaumbær had churches. However, in the study area there are instances in which farms that were established before the official conversion to Christianity, and that had churches in the medieval period, did not relocate. There is historical or material evidence for churches at Reynistaður, Geldingaholt, Holtsmúli, and Hafsteinsstaðir (Pálsson 2001). None of these farmsteads shows evidence for significant movement in the 11* century (or any other time before the 20th century), although it is important to note that these churches have not been excavated and it is unknown when they were established. At other sites, outside the survey area, excavations have confirmed pagan and Christian activities apparently associated with the same farmstead site. For example, at Keldudalur on Hegranes pagan era burials and an early Christian church and cemetery dating to the 1 lth and 12th centuries has been recovered (Zoéga and Sigurðarson 2010). Hrísbrú in Mosfellsdalur also has evidence for both pagan and Christian practices associated with the same farmstead location (Byock, et al. 2005). Perhaps most telling is that at Lower Seyla a Christian cemetery was established at the site of the Viking Age farmstead before it moved. The cemetery then appears to have been moved along with the rest of the farmstead in the late llth centuiy. While there is no evidence demonstrating pagan ritual or burial practices at Stóra-Seyla, the fann was established long before the general introduction of Christianity to Iceland and it seems likely that the early residents participated in practices appropriate to the pagan worldview prior to conversion. Either way, Lower Seyla had clearly been fully adapted to Christian practice before 95
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Archaeologia Islandica

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