Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 24

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 24
AGUSTA EDWALD AND KAREN MILEK Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Phase 4 Earlier Laterph. ph. Midden Midden Stoneware ■Porcelain ■ Whiteware ■Pearlware Creamware ■ Coarse earthenware Fig 8 Percentages of ware by phase at Hornbrekka (sherd count). generally sit at a set dining table until the first decades of the 20th century. Instead it is likely that individual vessels differentiated with a variety of pattems and decorative motifs were given to their owners with their portion of food. The absence of a dining table may, furthermore, increase the frequency of breakages, as a ceramic vessel balanced on the lap is less stable than one on a table. Significantly, the unfamiliarity with ceramic materials around the middle of the 19th century, and how to clean and store them, may have further increased the ffequency of breakages as ceramic vessels require more frequent and delicate washing methods than more durable wooden vessels. In his seminal work on Icelandic folk traditions, Jónas Jónasson has, notably, suggested that the late adoption of ceramics was party because people thought that ceramic vessels broke too easily (Jónasson [1934] 2010, 51). Although ceramics have remained the main artefact category that archaeologists have used to access changing ideologies concerning improvement and the domestic sphere, a wealth of other artefacts and practices can help further illustrate such changes. Tarlow (2007) has aptly illustrated the role of other types of artefacts in improvement ideology, such as window glass and bleached textiles, both of which mark an increased desire for cleanliness and brightness. Whiteness is strongly associated with cleanliness and hygiene and the desire for brighter houses and whiter fabrics is a clear indication of an improvement ideology alongside the preference for white ceramics. Window glass was present in deposits from all phases of the building as well as in both phases of the midden (Table 3). It was more abundant in the later deposits, 4 Before window glass became common windows were made of amniotic sacs from animals, which had tendencies to burst and were only semi-translucent. 22
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Archaeologia Islandica

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