从景观的角度重新审视西部岛屿上的北欧人

Viking Pub Date : 2021-11-19 DOI:10.5617/viking.9056
Joseph Thomas Ryder
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引用次数: 0

摘要

从历史上看,由于古挪威地名比皮克特时期的地名更普遍,而且考古记录很少,所以对西群岛的北欧人和皮克特时期人口之间关系的研究主要集中在地名证据上。地名学者和考古学家传统上分为两派:“战争派”和“和平派”。战争学派认为,考古和地名材料包含了挪威人对皮克特时期居民进行种族灭绝的证据,而和平学派则主张同化或文化适应。在过去的几十年里,挖掘和调查让人们更好地了解了挪威人在岛上的存在。本文通过结合定居点和使用地名数据的考古景观分析,探讨皮克特人时期人口是否幸存的问题。该研究认为,这一景观显示了皮克特文化在主导的挪威社会中幸存下来的证据,尽管这种生存可能是不对称的和区域性的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Revisiting the Norse on the Western Isles from a Landscape Perspective
Historically the research on the relationship between the Norse and Pictish period population of the Western Isles has largely focused on place-name evidence, due to the prevalence of Old Norse place names over Pictish period ones and a scant archaeological record. Placename scholars, as well as archaeologists have traditionally split into two schools of interpretation: a ‘war school’ and a ‘peace school’. The war school argues that the archaeological and place-name material contains proof of a Norse genocide against the Pictish period inhabitants, while the peace school has advocated assimilation or acculturation. In the last few decades excavations and surveys have given a better understanding of the Norse presence on the islands. This article approaches the question of whether the Pictish period population survived, through an archaeological landscape analysis that incorporates settlement sites and uses place-name data. It argues that the landscape displays proof of a surviving Pictish period culture within a dominant Norse society, though this survival as probably asymmetrical and regional.
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