Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1978, Side 70

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1978, Side 70
78 Forn búseting í Føroyum SUMMARY Old, settlement in the Faroes. From the time of the first seetlement until the end of the 19th century life in the Faroes was based on farming and its sidelines (fishing, fowling and the hunting of pilot whales etc.) which became linked together into an economic whole in which the produce was divided according to the rights of ownership or use of land. Therefore, matters of the land were decisive for all society and have, among other things, governed the pro- c.ess of settlement. Research into place-names suggests that original estates of the time of settlement included several villages and, in some cases, whole islands. These large estates were, however, quickly divided up with the result that one estate comprised one village. Further division of estates formed several estates in the same village, but still standing on their own, and the foundation was laid for býlingar. Chr. Matras estimates that this step was taken about 1300, while Róland Høgnesen estimates that by the period 1300—1400 only half the villages had been founded. Further divi- sion of the býlingur-estates formed several farms (houses) in the same býlingur, and Chr. Matras estimates thas this took place after 1600. The pattern of settlement in the middle ages becomes thus formed of scattered estates, one in each býlingur. This corresponds to the usual archaelogical conception of Norse medieval estate. In this article I have endeavoured to show by the coordinated handling of archaeological, historical and philological sources that the above-menti- oned division of estates must have gone ahead much more quickly than has hitherto been accepted. In the Viking age we already have firm archaeological indications that several estates existed in the same village (i. e. that býlingar had already been formed in the Viking age) and in a smgle case the possibility that several households lived on the same estate. The oldest acceptable documentary source material shows that by the 16th century the division of býlingar into smaller farms had already come a long way and a similar example of division has even been found in a source from 1412. It is conceivable that the division of býlingur-esta.tes into smaller farms, which prepares the economic foundation for several houses in the same býlingur, began early in the middle ages and was a direct continuation of the regular process which in the Viking age divided up settlement estates into villages and villages into býlingar. This regular historical process was based on the system of inheritance in force, which is found justified in the oldest preserved Norse legislation, and is still today practised in Faroese villages where modern legislation concerning registration and division of land is not yet in force. However, in the middle ages, the Church, the King and foreign nobles,
Side 1
Side 2
Side 3
Side 4
Side 5
Side 6
Side 7
Side 8
Side 9
Side 10
Side 11
Side 12
Side 13
Side 14
Side 15
Side 16
Side 17
Side 18
Side 19
Side 20
Side 21
Side 22
Side 23
Side 24
Side 25
Side 26
Side 27
Side 28
Side 29
Side 30
Side 31
Side 32
Side 33
Side 34
Side 35
Side 36
Side 37
Side 38
Side 39
Side 40
Side 41
Side 42
Side 43
Side 44
Side 45
Side 46
Side 47
Side 48
Side 49
Side 50
Side 51
Side 52
Side 53
Side 54
Side 55
Side 56
Side 57
Side 58
Side 59
Side 60
Side 61
Side 62
Side 63
Side 64
Side 65
Side 66
Side 67
Side 68
Side 69
Side 70
Side 71
Side 72
Side 73
Side 74
Side 75
Side 76
Side 77
Side 78
Side 79
Side 80
Side 81
Side 82
Side 83
Side 84
Side 85
Side 86
Side 87
Side 88
Side 89
Side 90
Side 91
Side 92
Side 93
Side 94
Side 95
Side 96
Side 97
Side 98
Side 99
Side 100
Side 101
Side 102
Side 103
Side 104
Side 105
Side 106
Side 107
Side 108
Side 109
Side 110
Side 111
Side 112
Side 113
Side 114
Side 115
Side 116
Side 117
Side 118
Side 119
Side 120
Side 121
Side 122
Side 123
Side 124
Side 125
Side 126
Side 127
Side 128
Side 129
Side 130
Side 131
Side 132
Side 133
Side 134
Side 135
Side 136
Side 137
Side 138
Side 139
Side 140
Side 141
Side 142
Side 143
Side 144
Side 145
Side 146

x

Fróðskaparrit

Direkte link

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: Fróðskaparrit
https://timarit.is/publication/15

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.