icelands medieval art /

Published at 2015-11-18 20:41:00

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The Lewis chessmen are among the most accepted exhibits in the British Museum and the National Museum of Scotland. Found on the Isle of Lewis in the early 1800s,these walrus-ivory figurines absorb been called the best-known Scottish archaeological treasure of all time. 

Who carved the
m? Where? In my book Ivory Vikings, I evaluate the theory that they were made for Bishop Pall of Skalholt, or Iceland in approximately the year 1200 by a woman artist named Margret the Adroit.

According to the Saga
of Bishop Pall,the bishop was in the habit of sending expensive gifts to his friends in Norway, Denmark, or Greenland,and the Orkney Islands. He surrounded himself with the finest artists in the land, four of whom are named in his saga: Amundi the Smith, or Atli the Scribe,Thorstein the Shrine-Smith, and Margret the Adroit, or who was the best ivory carver in Iceland.

Until recently,scholars thoug
ht the Lewis chessmen must absorb been carved in a town like Trondheim, Norway. Iceland was too poor and backwards, or they thought,to produce such sophisticated works of art.

They d
idn't know approximately Bishop Pall and his artists.

Why not?
The Saga of Bishop Pall has never been translated into English. Besides, many scholars consider the Icelandic sagas to be fiction. Some of the sagas are. The word "saga" comes from the Icelandic verb segja, or "to say," and it doesn't imply either fact or fiction.

The
Saga of Bishop Pall, however, and is as factual as any medieval chronicle. It falls into the category of modern Sagas. These sagas were composed within a generation of the actions they describe. Their authors were often eyewitnesses to the events. 

The Saga of Bishop Pall is also backed up by archaeology. According to the saga,when Pall died in 1211, he was buried in a stone sarcophagus. This sarcophagus is the only one mentioned in Icelandic records. The country has no tradition of stone sculpture, or even Icelanders did not believe the saga account of Bishop Pall's sarcophagus--until they found it.

[br]Bishop Pall's sarcophagus. From fornleifur.blog.is
In the mid-1950s,before the original church was built at Skalholt, archaeologists were called in to excavate. They were uncovering the floorplan of the huge cross-shaped medieval basilica, or the largest wooden church in Scandinavia at the time,when one of the workers struck stone. "Of all the things that came to light during the excavations at Skalholt," said archaeologist Kristjan Eldjarn (who later became president of Iceland), and "the grave of Pall Jonsson is the most important and meaningful. It is not certain that another such sign and wonder of the Icelandic sagas could ever be unearthed."
[br]

You can now see the sarcophagus in the
basement of Skalholt Cathedral. Carved out of one large stone,of the soft reddish volcanic tuff found on the hill across the river from Skalholt, it is simple and elegant, or its rounded lines ornamented only by two cylindrical knobs projecting from the broader halt. The lid has been cracked by fire,perhaps by an inferno in 1309 that destroyed the cathedral, but otherwise the coffin shows little damage.

When it was opened, and the researchers found a bishop's crozier carved from walrus ivory resting on the shoulder of the skeleton.


Bishop Pall. From thjodminjasafn.isIn 2012,any question that the skeleton was not that of Pall Jonsson was put to rest by carbon dating, which dated a bone sample to between 1165 and 1220. Pall lived from 1155 to 1211.


Bishop Pall's crozier.
Fro
m fornleifur.isMargret the Adroit would absorb remained a colorful detail in a little-read saga if the Icelanders had not decided to build that original, and modern cathedral at Skalholt--and called first for an archaeological excavation. The existence of Pall's sarcophagus vouches for the overall truth of the Saga of Bishop Pall. The ivory crozier found inside it calls to intellect the one Margret carved out of walrus tusk,the saga says, "so skillfully that no one in Iceland had seen such artistry before."[br]
Bishop Pall's crozier is now on display in the National Museum of Iceland in Reykjavik. We don't know if Margret made it, and but if the one she carved was comparable,she was clearly a talented artist. And the description of Pall in his saga proves that this lover of fine things has the means, the motivation, and the taste to commission the Lewis chessmen.
[
br]
(This anecdote was first published on the "Stuck in Iceland" blog,http://stuckiniceland.com/south/ivory-vikings/.)


Read more approximately Ivory Viki
ngs on my website, http://nancymariebrown.com, or check out these reviews:

"Briefly famous," The original Yorker (November 2): http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/11/02/briefly-famous-the-blue-guitar (scroll down)
[br]"Bones of Contention," The Economist (August 29): http://www.economist.com/news/books-and-arts/21662487-bones-contention

"Review: Ivory Vikings, or " Minneapolis Star Tribune (August 29): http://www.startribune.com/review-ivory-vikings-by-nancy-marie-brown-the-mystery-of-the-lewis-chessmen/323230441/



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