Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Qupperneq 32

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Qupperneq 32
SÓLVEIG GUÐMUNDSDÓTTIR BECK hunt on privately owned land, most likely because the owners themselves made good use of them for meat and/or eggs. Ravens, falcons, plovers, curlews and other small birds could be hunted anywhere although raptors, and other carrion eating birds, were a forbidden food source. The Icelandic sagas contain very little information on bird exploitation but Landnámabók (ÍF I 1986, 330) for example tells of a man called Molda-Gnúpur who laid claim to land between Kúðafljót and Eyjará, an area called Álftaver in the south of Iceland. According to the text there was a large lake in the area at the time where swans gathered and were supposedly hunted. In Droplaugarsona Saga (IF XI 1950, 145) two brothers, Helgi and Grímur, go out together to kill someone under the guise of hunting for ptarmigan (see text box). Eider ducks have most likely been exploited (for eggs and possibly down) in Iceland at least since the early 12th century. Diplomatarium Islandicum tells of the people of Viðey complaining about their neighbours, Gufunesingar, hunting Eider ducks close to their territory around 1143 (DI I, 496-497). In 1253 down bedding was supposedly lost in Flugumýrarbrenna (Sturlunga Saga II 1988, 642) but whether they were made of eiderdown or other types of down and/or feathers is unknown. From the information Berglund (2009, 125-130) puts forth in her article “Fugela Feðerum in archaeological perspective” it can be inferred that collecting down and feather for bedding was likely well known in Norway by the end of the 9th century when Iceland was settled. So it is not unreasonable to suggest that the settlers already knew how to exploit the Eider duck when they arrived in Iceland. According to Þórðarson (1957, 33) as yet the oldest historical evidence of the export of Icelandic falcons is fforn 1169 during the reign of King Henry II. The falcon trade mostly petered out around the beginning of the Napoleonic Wars due to exorbitant transport costs and waning interest and in 1810 it was officially ended (Þórðarson 1957, 125-126, 128). “En um morgininn stóðu þeir [Helgi og Grímur] snimma upp. Gróa spyrr, hvat þeir skyldi þá. Þeir segja: “Rjúpur skulum vér veiða. ”” (ÍF XI1950, 145) Birds of a feather, plucked together Hunting and trapping Before guns became common in the 19th century (Jónasson 1945, 194; Magnússon 1995, 28-35; ÞÞ 6330) nets and snares seem to have been the most common tools in hunting smaller birds like ptarmigan and sea birds like e.g. Fulmars, auks and gulls (table 1). Ptarmigans were usually hunted with the help of a long rope (vaður), which was either made of hemp or coarser fibres of wool (Jónasson 1945, 194; ÞÞ 742). The rope was stretched between two hunters and positioned in the birds’ path during the hunt. In the middle of the rope there were usually two or three snares or a net. The snares were usually made of dark tail hair from a horse as they were more easily seen by the hunters
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Archaeologia Islandica

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