Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 99

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2011, Side 99
FARMSTEAD RELOCATION AT THE END OF THE VIKING AGE. RESULTS OF THE SKAGAFJÖRÐUR ARCHAEOLOGICAL SETTLEMENT SURVEY interpretation of the early status of these farmsteads finds some support in the fact that when they later appear in the historical record many of the small, late farmsteads are owned by their larger and earlier neighbors (Bolender 2006). Farmstead relocation required a significant investment of labor to build new infrastructure. Smaller farming households may have lacked the labor reserves, or the ability to draw on social networks for additional labor, to relocate an entire farmstead. The development of homefíelds may have restricted farmstead relocation also. Intensified homefields represent a large accumulation of landesque capital (cf. Blaikie and Brookfield 1987). These field systems became most productive starting in the llth century (Adderley, et al. 2008; Bolender 2006). Productive homefields were an essential part of farm production and proximity to the farmstead core was important in terms of the economics of the farm. Relocating the farmstead away fforn the homefields made little sense and the resources necessary for re-establishing homefields may have been as much or more of a hurdle for small farms as reconstructing the farmstead buildings. Also tenant farmers had limited rights over their farms. Historically, new buildings or major repairs on a tenant fann required the permission of the landowner, which may have been difficult to obtain (Dennis, et al. 1980:341). If land status really was a factor limiting the later relocation of farmsteads, the question of why so few early, and presumably independent, farms relocated remains. The SASS project was designed conceptually and methodologically based on the assumption that first farms, coming into a largely unknown and rapidly changing environment, would have been fully abandoned or relocated with a high degree of frequency as the new Icelanders altered the social and environmental landscapes. Instead, a relatively high degree of spatial and social stability characterizes the initial settlement and subsequent division of Icelandic lands. In addition to asking why some farmsteads relocate perhaps we should be asking why do so many early farmsteads stay in the same location and why do farmsteads stop moving after the 1 lth century. Conclusion For the time being, farmstead relocation appears to be caught in a paradox: the evidence indicates that it is a relatively rare phenomenon on a local level but at the same time there are examples from around Iceland. The fact that relocations seem to be largely restricted to the Viking Age also suggests some unifying dynamic yet it is not obviously reducible to a universal underlying cause. Any or all of the factors discussed could have played into the decision of an individual household to abandon one site and rebuild their farmstead in a new location. The large size of many relocated farmsteads suggests that land rights and the availability of labor, both within and outside the household, may have been requisite conditions for relocation but they do not constitute a motive for relocation. Farmstead relocation, while uncommon, may be very important for our 97
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Archaeologia Islandica

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