The ambition of this monograph is to analyse a limited number of topics regarding house types and thus social and economic change from the extensive material that came out of the archaeological excavation that took place at Forsandmoen (“Forsand plain”), Forsand municipality, Rogaland, Norway during the decade 1980–1990, as well as the years 1992, 1995 and 2007. The excavation was organised as an interdisciplinary research project within archaeology, botany (palynological analysis from bogs and soils, macrofossil analysis) and phosphate analysis, conducted by staff from the Museum of Archaeology in Stavanger (as it was called until 2009, now part of the University of Stavanger). A large phosphate survey project had demarcaded a 20 ha settlement area, among which 9 ha were excavated using mechanical topsoil stripping to expose the habitation traces at the top of the glaciofluvial outwash plain of Forsandmoen. A total of 248 houses could be identified by archaeological excavations, distributed among 17 house types. In addition, 26 partly excavated houses could not be classified into a type. The extensive house material comprises three types of longhouses, of which there are as many as 30–40 in number, as well as four other longhouse types, of which there are only 2–7 in number. There were nine other house types, comprising partly small dwelling houses and partly storage houses, of which there were 3–10 in number. Lastly, there are 63 of the smallest storage house, consisting of only four postholes in a square shape. A collection of 264 radiocarbon dates demonstrated that the settlement was established in the last part of the 15th century BC and faded out during the 7th–8th century AD, encompassing the Nordic Bronze Age and Early Iron Age.
Author(s): Trond Løken
Series: AmS-Skrifter, 28
Publisher: Museum of Archaeology, University of Stavanger
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: 312
City: Stavanger
Abstract
Preface
1. Objectives of the Forsandmoen project
2. The investigations at Forsandmoen
3. Methods and source criticism
4. Types 1 and 2: Dwelling houses with wide-spaced trestles
5. Type 3: Dwelling/byre house with opposed, recessed entrances at the middle of the house
6. Small dwelling houses
7. Storage buildings (granaries)
8. Type 7: Large dwelling/byre houses with a central wide-spanned trestle
9. Type 8: Large dwelling and byre house with a dwelling area in the centre of the house
10. Type 9: Large dwelling/byre house with opposed recessed entrances at either end
11. Type 10: Workshop and/or dwelling house as an additional house to type 7, 8 and 9
12. Type 17: Small rectangular workshop
13. The life expectancy of houses
14. Interpretation of activity areas in combined dwelling and byre houses
15. The byre in house types 3 and 9
16. Settlement synthesis
17. The abandonment of the Forsandmoen settlements and the Fimbulwinter in AD 536-37