Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Qupperneq 21

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Qupperneq 21
BUILDING AND KEEPING HOUSE IN 19TH-CENTURY ICELAND. DOMESTIC IMPROVEMENTS AT HORNBREKKA, SKAGAFJÖRÐUR During the approximately 60 years of occupation represented in the excavated deposits from phases 2 and 3 there was one major structural change event when the cattle byre was changed into a storage room, the corridor between the two rooms was blocked, and the walls and the stove in the kitchen were shored up with an extra course of stones. The laying of turf and possible scattering of ash on the floors, and the possible lighting of a small fire in the drain in the cattle byre, are indicators of more day to day upkeep of the buildings. The excavation at Hombrekka, similarly to the inspection records, portrays a building in need of frequent upkeep and repair. The ‘sistering’ of walls by building a new course of stones up against an older wall-face appears to have been common practice, noted both in the kitchen and in the cattle byre. This would have helped secure slumping or cracking walls and in the case of the wall in the cattle byre, appears to have served to significantly decrease the size of the byre by adding approximately 1 m of wall material to the existing wall. From the inspection records it is clear that the room that was rebuilt most often was the baðstofa. This is unsurprising as it would have been the room where most household members spent the majority of their time indoors and may therefore have taken priority with regards to refurbishments and upkeep (see Table 2). Hólmfríður Sölvadóttir, who lived at Hombrekka from the age of three until she was sixteen (1920-1934), remembered the building of a new baðstofa in 1927 well and recalled the new room as being very neat, warm and comfortable. It had a cooker in it and that is where most of the family’s meals were cooked. In the room there was a small table and two chairs, a book cabinet and two beds, one for Hólmfríður and her mother and the other for her step-father and her brother. In 1929 Hólmfríður’s parents adopted a little girl who took her place in her mother’s bed. Hólmfríður received a new bed, which was placed in the baðstofa, and blanket from her aunt and recalls fondly the excitement she felt at receiving it (Hólmfríður Sölvadóttir pers. comm.j.The parlour at the front of the house was seldom used, according to Hólmfríður. Although it had some fumiture in it, a table and a bureau, it was mostly used as a storage room. Even though it was intended for entertaining guests, most people were brought into the warmth of the baðstofa. Hólmfríður also remembered the house as having a very dark, long corridor with a small entrance room, a kitchen with a basalt stone stove, a pantry and a cattle byre that housed their two cows5. The kitchen with the basalt stone stove was not used for every day cooking during the time Hólmfríður‘s family lived at Hombrekka. Her mother baked bread there and used it for cooking especially odorous dishes such as lumpfish, and it was also the place where all the peat for lighting both the cooker and the stove was kept. The inspections only discuss the structural elements of the building. No furniture is listed or any decorative features or portable material culture like that recounted in Hólmfríður’s account. The excavated negative features in the 19
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Archaeologia Islandica

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