01- The Mosfell Archaeological Project
02- Project Goals & Participants
03- The Mosfell Valley
04- Archaeological Field Work Results
05- 1995 Field Season: Mosfell Church
06- 1998 Field Season: Survey
07- 1999 Field Season: Geophysics & Phosphate Survey
08- 2001 Field Season: Hrísbrú Burial Ground
09- 2002 Field Season: Churchyard & Cremation
10- 2003 Field Season: Churchyard & Cremation
11- 2004 Field Season: Hrísbrú Stave Church Uncovered
12- 2005 Field Season: Egil’s Grave? & Ship-settings
13-2006 Field Season: A Viking Longhouse at Hrísbrú
14- 2007 Field Season: Uncovering the Viking Longhouse
15- 2008 Field Season: Hrísbrú Longhouse Revealed
16- 2009 Field Season: Regional Survey in the Mosfell Valley
17- International Collaboration
18- Historical Sources & Archaeology
19- Burial at Hrísbrú & Evidence of Violence
20- Mosfell & the Viking World
21- Future Research & Questions to Explore
Jesse Byock Viking Site
Historical Sources and Archaeology Previous | Next  

 

“When Christianity was adopted by law in Iceland (ca. 1000 A.D.), Grím of Mosfell was baptized and built a church there. People say that Thordis had Egil's bones moved to the church, and this is the evidence. When a church was built at Mosfell, the one that Grím had built at Hrísbrú was demolished and a new graveyard was laid out. Under the altar some human bones were found, much bigger than ordinary human bones, and people are confident that these were Egil's because of stories told by old men.” - Egil's Saga, chapter 86

Historical sources provide a rich source of information about the history of the Mosfell valley. The wealth of medieval and later documentation combined with the archaeological data currently being recovered allows us to construct a rich picture of the Viking Age community in the Mosfell Valley.

One goal of our research is to obtain archaeological data that can be used to evaluate the historical accuracy of literary sources such as Egil's Saga. For example, scholars have been in some disagreement as to precisely what the saga passage from Ch. 86 tells us about the placement of the early church at Mosfell and the relationship to the neighboring church and farm at Hrísbrú.

One of these farms, or perhaps both at different times, appears to have been the homes of chieftains.

Hrisbrú Church Excavation
Excavation of the Hrísbrú Church

 

Mosfell Church from the  Nineteenth Century
The Nineteenth Century Mosfell Church

Manuscript Drawing of Egill Skallagrímsson
A depiction of Egill Skallagrímsson from a saga manuscript.

 

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