Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Qupperneq 18

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Qupperneq 18
AGUSTA EDWALD AND KAREN MILEK and no mention is made of any portable material culture such as crockery, chests, or tools for spinning and weaving. The main room of the house, the baðstofa, where people slept, worked and ate, was often reported to be unstable, with cracked or rotten walls in four of the six inspections. It was not inspected in 1881 as the tenants who were leaving had built it themselves, and therefore no surcharge (álag) was charged for it. In 1917 the baðstofa was described as fairly stable, although a wooden partition and windows were cracked. That room had been built in 1896 and was thus 21 years old when, the year after, in 1918, it was reported to be unstable (Table 2). The kitchen and the pantry were overall in a better state while the corridor was unstable, with old, slumping walls, in three of the six inspections (Héraðsskjalasafn Skagafjarðar (Municipal Archives of Skagafjörður), Sauðárkrókur, Iceland, inspection at Hombrekka, Höfðaströnd, 1868, 1881, 1896, 1917,1918, 1920). The inspections span just over half a century of the life of the farmhouse. It is clear from them that the rooms needed frequent repairs, beams were replaced, walls supported, and new roofs built, constantly altering the shapes and the sizes of the rooms. The majority of the rooms at Hombrekka had dirt floors and exposed stone and turf walls apart from the baðstofa, the room where people, ate, slept and worked, which had a wooden floor and panelled walls from 1881, and a half panelled parlour that was built around the tum of the century. The first mention of windows is in the 1881 inspection which lists one two-paned window in the baðstofa. The windows at the farm get larger throughout time and appear in more rooms. In 1896 the baðstofa has one four-paned window and one single paned, and there is also a small window in the pantry. In 1917, 1918 and 1920 these windows stay in place and the new parlour has one window. However, the panes in the baðstofa windows are consistently broken throughout the three last inspections. The excavation is consistent with the inspection records. The second most common artefact category after ceramics are various types of metal artefacts mostly made of iron. These artefacts were subdivided according to their function and the majority was classified as building materials, predominantly nails. These artefacts reflect the makeup and maintenance of the farmhouse. It is noteworthy that the amount of building material increased dramatically between phases and in particular as machine cut and wire round nails became available, especially after 1890. This increase is mirrored in the amount of window glass recovered which increases between phases (discussed further below). These items may reflect an increased buying power of the households at Hombrekka as well as the increasing availability of industrially produced and imported products. The second largest subcategory of metal artefacts was fumiture, i.e. various metal straps and scraps interpreted as originating ffom chests or other types of fumiture. The excavation, furthermore, revealed many instances of repairs and refurbishments of rooms, changes of 16
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Archaeologia Islandica

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