Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1991, Side 103

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1991, Side 103
Insects, Man and the Earliest Settlement of the Faroe Islands: a case not proven P. C. Buckland Introduction The time of the first settlement of the Far- oe Islands has been the subject of much discussion and the historical and archaeo- logical evidence has recently been extens- ively reviewed by Símun Arge (1989). Both the place name Faereyjar, islands of sheep, and the historical record seem to indicate settlement before the arrival of the first Norse settler, Grímur Kamban. The Irish monk, Dicuil, writing at the court of Charlemagne’s successors in France ca. 825, (Tierney, 1967) refers to islands two days sailing from the outer Scottish islands, once occupied by Irish monks (papar / culdees) but, by his time, abandoned to sheep and seabirds because of the activities of Norse pirates. His com- ments are usually taken to refer to the Far- oes, yet these papar remain curiously elus- ive in the archaeological record. The pal- aeoecological record, however, appears to have been more productive. The detailed pollen studies of Jóhannes Jóhansen have not only established the sequence of changes through the Holocene in the Far- oe Islands in some considerable detail (cf. Jóhansen, 1975; 1982; 1985), but also have provided evidence for the impact of Man since Landnám. Jóhansen (1971; 1979; 1985) has put forward arguments for the cultivation of cereals during a phase of Landnám, some two hundred years before the traditional date of Norse settlement in the ninth century. Despite the apparently conclusive nature of the palaeoecological record, the interpretation has remained contentious (Jóhansen, 1986; Krogh, 1986) . If the apparent historical reference is taken to refer to elsewhere (e.g. Arge, 1989; Krogh, 1986), then all rests upon the palynology, since any archaeological remains may have been obscured by subse- quent Norse activities. The Paper may have been so thinly spread as to be virt- ually undetectable in the archaeological record, and their artifacts are likely to be indistinguishable from most early Norse pieces. Similar problems exist in Iceland, where, despite references in íslendingabók and a further comment of Dicuil’s (Svein- bjarnardóttir & Buckland 1983), the early Irish settlers have likewise remained elus- ive in the archaeological record (Svein- bjarnardóttir, 1972; Eldjárn, 1989). Rec- Fróðskaparrit 38.-39. bók (1989-90): 107-113
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