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The popular image of the Viking Age is of warlords and marauding bands pillaging their way along the shores of Northern Europe. In this fascinating history, Jesse Byock shows that Norse society in Iceland was actually an independent one-almost a republican Free State, without warlords or kings. Combining history with anthropology and archaeology, this remarkable study serves as a valuable companion to the Icelandic sagas, exploring all aspects of Viking Age life: feasting, farming, the power of chieftains and the church, marriage, and the role of women. With masterful interpretations of the blood feuds and the sagas, Byock reveals how the law courts favored compromise over violence, and how the society grappled with proto-democratic tendencies. A work with broad social and historical implications for our modern institutions, Byock's history will alter long-held perceptions of the Viking Age. Review: Important survey of Icelandic society - This study seems to have been written as a follow-up to Medieval Iceland: Society, Sagas, and Power and covers much of the same territory. However, this is a somewhat different work as well. While "Medieval Iceland" focuses much more heavily on the legal sources, this book attempts to use the sagas to reconstruct social structures in the earlier centuries of republican Iceland. This book, along with the author's other works, should be in the library of anyone who seriously wants to learn more about the Viking-Age Norse cultures. This book covers a wide range of topics, from the effects of human settlement on Iceland ecologically to the legal mechanisms that allowed blood feuds to play a stabilizing role on society. Along the way, he covers questions of how Icelandic society was stratified, the role of the chieftains/godhar, and the economics of the island. In an appendix he discusses the construction of turf buildings. In terms of questions of the uses of the Sagas as sources for history, Byock discusses the problems of doing so and the changing debate among historians, covering a large number of viewpoints here. This section in particular is very helpful for those who may be trying to make up their minds as to whether the family sagas can be useful in the study of history. The book is very detailed in what it covers and provides a compelling picture of early Iceland. Highly recommended. Review: Controlled Violence - Byock's study of Iceland during the Viking Age and the generations immediately following it, is not an exciting page turner, but is filled with information not easily available elsewahere. Nordic Iceland developed under extremely unusual circumstances. Unlike the subsequent discoveries of Greenland and North America, Iceland was uninhabitated. Usable land was scarce and was quickly filled with settlers. During the first centuries, civilization developed entirely without the presence of 'civis' [cities] and there weren't even any towns. The liveable parts of the island were subdivided entirely into farms. Nevertheless there was was a society and that society was highly litigious--an alternative to lethal 'solutions'. This was also necessary because Scandinavians of the time were inclined to violence at the drop of a hat. Rules to direct these aggressive impulses into survivable channels were simply mandatory. It was also necessary because available land filled up quickly so there came to be an eternal jocking for land and postion in limited territories. Although legalistic to a fault, Icelandic law had little--and much--in common with present law. Might pretty much made Right and there was a continual scamble for allies--interested allies, to be certain--to 'back' your position at the local Thing or Althing. You won if you could back your opponent and his supporters down, although this sometimes involved bloodshed and killing. Still, this 'decision' didn't always stick. If you reckoned that you had more to gain by a killing than peaceful acquiesence...well...you killed and hoped you judged the consequences properly. If not, you stood to be 'Outlawed' which meant ANYONE could kill you on sight. Police and military weren't necessary. Most individuals were evidently happy to participate in a free kill. Although not included in this book, there is an instructive tale in one of the Vinland Sagas--Sagas primarily about Icelanders. Our Scandinavians are sailing down the coast or a river in North America and chance on some 'skraelings' sleeping under an overturned canoe supported by timbers. Our Europeans quietly land on the bank and kill the native-americans because they were obviously 'Outlaws' A free kill. A kill to be taken advantage of. As rough as Icelandic Law was by our standards, it worked. If you think about it, present legal systems are very much designed to shortcut the more direct satisfaction of a killing duel. Amazingly, when religious push-came-to-shove in 1000 A.D.--and despite the fact that most Icelanders were Pagan--they abided by a decision that ALL would convert to Christianity, in the interest of order. To be certain, many people must have 'converted' entirely tongue-in-cheek but they converted nonetheless and Iceland became a more-or-less Christian nation. I say 'more-or-less' because Pagan prists became Catholic Priests and our primary knowledge of ancient Scandinavian religion was written down--quite proudly--by Icelandic Catholic priests about 200 years following this mass conversion. I also enjoyed discussions about the legal status of women and children. They were IMMUNE from killing violence and protected from family violence. Although women couldn't personally prosecute legal cases [probably to protect them], their status was similar to their fathers, brothers and husbands. There was something like sexual equality which was not unlike that followed over much of the northern world, although obviously not in the rest of the world. Our present laws fixing female equality must therefore derive from northern law and tradition.
| Best Sellers Rank | #189,681 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #61 in Scandinavian History #161 in Archaeology (Books) #425 in Cultural Anthropology (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 129 Reviews |
C**S
Important survey of Icelandic society
This study seems to have been written as a follow-up to Medieval Iceland: Society, Sagas, and Power and covers much of the same territory. However, this is a somewhat different work as well. While "Medieval Iceland" focuses much more heavily on the legal sources, this book attempts to use the sagas to reconstruct social structures in the earlier centuries of republican Iceland. This book, along with the author's other works, should be in the library of anyone who seriously wants to learn more about the Viking-Age Norse cultures. This book covers a wide range of topics, from the effects of human settlement on Iceland ecologically to the legal mechanisms that allowed blood feuds to play a stabilizing role on society. Along the way, he covers questions of how Icelandic society was stratified, the role of the chieftains/godhar, and the economics of the island. In an appendix he discusses the construction of turf buildings. In terms of questions of the uses of the Sagas as sources for history, Byock discusses the problems of doing so and the changing debate among historians, covering a large number of viewpoints here. This section in particular is very helpful for those who may be trying to make up their minds as to whether the family sagas can be useful in the study of history. The book is very detailed in what it covers and provides a compelling picture of early Iceland. Highly recommended.
M**O
Controlled Violence
Byock's study of Iceland during the Viking Age and the generations immediately following it, is not an exciting page turner, but is filled with information not easily available elsewahere. Nordic Iceland developed under extremely unusual circumstances. Unlike the subsequent discoveries of Greenland and North America, Iceland was uninhabitated. Usable land was scarce and was quickly filled with settlers. During the first centuries, civilization developed entirely without the presence of 'civis' [cities] and there weren't even any towns. The liveable parts of the island were subdivided entirely into farms. Nevertheless there was was a society and that society was highly litigious--an alternative to lethal 'solutions'. This was also necessary because Scandinavians of the time were inclined to violence at the drop of a hat. Rules to direct these aggressive impulses into survivable channels were simply mandatory. It was also necessary because available land filled up quickly so there came to be an eternal jocking for land and postion in limited territories. Although legalistic to a fault, Icelandic law had little--and much--in common with present law. Might pretty much made Right and there was a continual scamble for allies--interested allies, to be certain--to 'back' your position at the local Thing or Althing. You won if you could back your opponent and his supporters down, although this sometimes involved bloodshed and killing. Still, this 'decision' didn't always stick. If you reckoned that you had more to gain by a killing than peaceful acquiesence...well...you killed and hoped you judged the consequences properly. If not, you stood to be 'Outlawed' which meant ANYONE could kill you on sight. Police and military weren't necessary. Most individuals were evidently happy to participate in a free kill. Although not included in this book, there is an instructive tale in one of the Vinland Sagas--Sagas primarily about Icelanders. Our Scandinavians are sailing down the coast or a river in North America and chance on some 'skraelings' sleeping under an overturned canoe supported by timbers. Our Europeans quietly land on the bank and kill the native-americans because they were obviously 'Outlaws' A free kill. A kill to be taken advantage of. As rough as Icelandic Law was by our standards, it worked. If you think about it, present legal systems are very much designed to shortcut the more direct satisfaction of a killing duel. Amazingly, when religious push-came-to-shove in 1000 A.D.--and despite the fact that most Icelanders were Pagan--they abided by a decision that ALL would convert to Christianity, in the interest of order. To be certain, many people must have 'converted' entirely tongue-in-cheek but they converted nonetheless and Iceland became a more-or-less Christian nation. I say 'more-or-less' because Pagan prists became Catholic Priests and our primary knowledge of ancient Scandinavian religion was written down--quite proudly--by Icelandic Catholic priests about 200 years following this mass conversion. I also enjoyed discussions about the legal status of women and children. They were IMMUNE from killing violence and protected from family violence. Although women couldn't personally prosecute legal cases [probably to protect them], their status was similar to their fathers, brothers and husbands. There was something like sexual equality which was not unlike that followed over much of the northern world, although obviously not in the rest of the world. Our present laws fixing female equality must therefore derive from northern law and tradition.
C**C
Some History for Iceland
More detail than needed for me, but others might enjoy those details.
W**S
Gaps in my Family History Closed!
Written from a field investigation perspective, rather than an academic one, the Byock work is stimulating and intriguing....I think I found my Icelandic ancestors (Eymundson) in those pages, and also found, as a building scientist and registered architect, the detailed descriptions of Viking period structures fascinating. As the Viking age closed, so did the warm arctic period become the "little ice age" which lasted for about four hundred years, affecting social order, politics as well as the economic reality causing increased trade and increased reliance on oceanic resources. I want to learn more about the era that superseded the Viking Age!
K**S
The history of Iceland
I read this book prior to my trip to Iceland, and it really served to give me a good sense of the country, how it was settled, who settled it, and how the population grew over time. It also explained the desolation of the countryside --- when you travel from the airport to Reykjavik, the land is like much like on the moon --- treeless crags abound. The book explains how this came to be. In addition, the book gives a good background to the sagas and other adventures of the people of Iceland, and those who came to its shores. Of course, this book will not explain Iceland's rise to financial success and despair in the early 21st century, but that is a tale for another time. (review by Kendall Giles)
J**T
A fascinating, comprehensive history of early Iceland
Jesse Byock relates the history, anthropology, and archeological significance of this early Norse settlement. The social order and significance of feud are related in part through sagas. This is as informative as it is well written.
S**A
Great book that seamlessly translates a decent section of stories
Great book that seamlessly translates a decent section of stories, has concise and in depth breakdowns of the laws/how they worked in a variety of cases. The book also a hows you precisely where in Iceland certain events took place.
M**I
Basic history of Iceland, focused on the legendary sagas
More a survey of the saga literature than a real history, but Iceland is an endlessly fascinating place. The actual historical people seemed to get lost in the saga legends. I really wanted to know how the people lived their lives, but was disappointed on that score.
A**R
Excellent account of a complex society
Very thorough. Modern history approach. Covers the society at large and considers it as a a kind of social experiment.
D**N
Informative
Excellent value. This book will be used in archaeology and history groups I an involved with
J**S
Good stories, but not enough nuggety facts
I bought this to revise for Mastermind. Good stories, but not enough nuggety facts.
H**N
Farmers not warriors!
There's not much pillaging, raiding, or raping in this book which is a disapointment given the awesome subject matter. Rather it seems to focus on Icelandic farmers and their heated arguments, their laws, and their resolutions.
L**A
Brilliant Book!
I needed this book for a module on my History degree and it was brilliant. I would highly recommend it to anyone studying the Vikings in Iceland. The book covers a wide time period and is easy to follow and understand. The book came quickly. I would definitely use this sender again. Thank you.
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