Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2015, Qupperneq 9

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2015, Qupperneq 9
Orri Vésteinsson EDITORIAL In the final piece of this eleventh volume of Archaeologia islandica the former edi- tor, Professor Gavin Lucas, translates and publishes an interview with Gordon Chil- de taken by renowned Icelandic historian Björn Þorsteinsson in 1956. It comes out clearly that Icelandic archaeology had not made much of an impression on Childe, and the two scholars found more common ground talking about politics than the past. Yet 1956 was the very year modern Icelan- dic archaeology can be said to have come of age. It was the year Kristján Eldjárn pub- lished and defended his doctoral thesis, Kuml og haugfé - which is still the hand- book of Icelandic Viking Age archaeology - and the year when the Viking congress visited Iceland for the first time. The pro- ceedings, published two years later (Þriðji víkingafundur - Third Viking Congress, Reykjavík 1956, Reykjavík 1958), contained what amount to mission statements by the most influential scholars of Icelandic archaeology at the time: Kristján Eldjárn, Sigurður Þórarinsson and Jón Steffensen. All three were applying modern, scientific methods to new fields of inquiry, discard- ing the old discourses of earlier generations of antiquarians with hardly a backward glance and boldly staking claims to new kinds of knowledge and reasoning. How any of this struck Gordon Childe we do not learn from the interview and it seems that the view, prevalent at the time, that there was no prehistoric phase in Iceland, meant that no one, himself included, felt that Childe could be expected to have an opinion on, or more than polite interest in, Icelandic archaeology. However, as Björn Þorsteinsson is at some pains to point out in the interview, prehistory mattered. In Björn’s view this was not so much because there was any prehistory in Iceland, but be- cause Icelandic history and origins could only be understood by considering it in the context of the prehistory of northern Eu- rope. Icelandic history did not begin and spring out of nothing; it had an Iron Age, northern European context that could and should be explored by Icelandic scholars in order to throw light on the Icelandic case. This is a view few would disparage nowa- days although it surprisingly rarely guides actual practice. To the generations of archaeologists that came after Kristján Eldjárn and his
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Archaeologia Islandica

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