Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 15

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 15
BUILDING AND KEEPING HOUSE IN 19TH-CENTURY ICELAND. DOMESTIC IMPROVEMENTS AT HORNBREKKA, SKAGAFJÖRÐUR studied, most notably by Hörður Ágústsson (1987). This work focused on changes in the form of the farmhouse and its architectural properties rather than its relationship with its inhabitants. Building and inhabiting are, however, intimately related and it is impossible to discuss one without the other; activities within the house during its habitation are ultimately what create its form. However, we wish to make a distinction between interpretations that take the form of a building as a starting point to interpret behaviours within it and those which look at the process of building-and-inhabiting as one and the same. Archaeological investigations are particularly well placed to discuss such an entangled process as the episodes of routine upkeep and refurbishments, such as the scattering of ash on the floor, and the sistering up of walls (where a new wall is built up against an earlier wall face), leave a clear archaeological trace. Such actives combined with an analysis of material culture assemblages associated with the building (further discussed in the next section) create a nuanced picture of ‘peopled’ and embodied life within the farmhouse, which can inform discussions on Icelandic turfhouse architecture. We would, furthermore, suggest, that an analytical distinction between building and inhabiting has its roots in the discourse of the modemization of ‘vemacular’ architecture, which emphasised a Togical’ way to build to a design thus creating a house that could be considered fmished at a given moment in time. About half a century earlier than the date of the earliest excavated phase at Hombrekka, in 1790, the building practices of Icelandic farmers were criticised by Guðlaugur Sveinsson, who promoted a change ffom more ad hoc building and mending practices to building a whole new house with advice ffom skilled builders [byggingaforsmiðir (lit. building foresmiths)] and with the aid of strings and pegs that should be laid out on the ground following a preconceived plan - a design. He emphasised the importance of starting with a flat, compact ground surface, that foundations should be dug, and that all older building materials should be removed ffom the site, rather than being built on top of or next to them. Sveinsson’s article can be marked as being one of the first instructions on the modernization of houses in Iceland. Its recommendation on following advice from professional builders, using strings and pegs, following clear designs for simple intemal divisions and symmetry, sought to bring the Icelandic vemacular building style in line with developments in Europe. Sveinsson’s article signalled an important change in the way buildings were to be constmcted and lived in. Sveinsson criticised various aspects of turf houses, which can be interpreted as resulting from the way they were constantly being built and rebuilt: the different orientations of rooms within the same building complex, which lead to asymmetrical fagades, and the accumulation of old building material around houses, as single rooms were demolished or refurbished. According to Sveinsson it was common practice for mins of previous rooms or buildings not to be flattened or removed before a new one was built, but rather to be used to form or 13
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Archaeologia Islandica

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