While Viking-age and medieval Iceland was a place of domestic animals, studies of its literature and material culture have little considered the multi-sensory nature of anymal-human relationships.1 A farming society necessarily shapes its places and society around the animals with whom its livelihoods are shared, but the ways in which the home (ON heimr) became, and continued to become a multi-species space in early Iceland cannot be simply assumed. This article considers ways in which the sights, sounds, and tangible bodies of domestic animals are implicit markers of the home in the Sagas of Icelanders, through investigation of dogs, cattle, and sheep, and their relations with human figures. Icelandic archaeology tells us about field and f...
A history of anthropology in the Northumbrian region of England from the early Christian era, throug...
New evidence for cattle husbandry practices during the earliest period of the southern Scandinavian ...
This article charts the role of Finnur Jónsson’s Historia Ecclesiastica Islandiæ in the development ...
The Vikings are an excellent example of the significance of cultural memory: from post-Viking-Age so...
This paper discusses the evidence for pig husbandry in the Faroes during the Norse and early Medieva...
Early agriculture in north-west Europe was highly diverse. Sometimes it spread rapidly, at other tim...
Studies of animal-human relations in the Old Norse world have often focussed on symbolic or economic...
A thousand years ago Viking age voyagers crossed the grey waters of the North Atlantic, colonizing t...
Harriet J. Evans Tang, Animal-Human Relationships in Medieval Iceland. From Farm-Settlement to Sagas...
It is a well-established fact that all human societies have coexisted with and are dependent upon an...
The Norse colonisation or landnám of the North Atlantic islands of the Faroes, Iceland and Greenland...
A rare, intact Viking boat burial in western Scotland contained a rich assemblage of grave goods, pr...
The offshore islands of the North Atlantic were among some of the last settled places on earth, with...
This thesis focuses on animal-human relationships in medieval Iceland, particularly focusing on the ...
The 14 articles presented in this publication represent some of the latest and most relevant researc...
A history of anthropology in the Northumbrian region of England from the early Christian era, throug...
New evidence for cattle husbandry practices during the earliest period of the southern Scandinavian ...
This article charts the role of Finnur Jónsson’s Historia Ecclesiastica Islandiæ in the development ...
The Vikings are an excellent example of the significance of cultural memory: from post-Viking-Age so...
This paper discusses the evidence for pig husbandry in the Faroes during the Norse and early Medieva...
Early agriculture in north-west Europe was highly diverse. Sometimes it spread rapidly, at other tim...
Studies of animal-human relations in the Old Norse world have often focussed on symbolic or economic...
A thousand years ago Viking age voyagers crossed the grey waters of the North Atlantic, colonizing t...
Harriet J. Evans Tang, Animal-Human Relationships in Medieval Iceland. From Farm-Settlement to Sagas...
It is a well-established fact that all human societies have coexisted with and are dependent upon an...
The Norse colonisation or landnám of the North Atlantic islands of the Faroes, Iceland and Greenland...
A rare, intact Viking boat burial in western Scotland contained a rich assemblage of grave goods, pr...
The offshore islands of the North Atlantic were among some of the last settled places on earth, with...
This thesis focuses on animal-human relationships in medieval Iceland, particularly focusing on the ...
The 14 articles presented in this publication represent some of the latest and most relevant researc...
A history of anthropology in the Northumbrian region of England from the early Christian era, throug...
New evidence for cattle husbandry practices during the earliest period of the southern Scandinavian ...
This article charts the role of Finnur Jónsson’s Historia Ecclesiastica Islandiæ in the development ...