The medieval stockfish trade: a maritime perspective from northern Norway
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23234Date
2021Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Wickler, StephenAbstract
Life in northern Norway has been dependent
on the sea and marine resources since initial
settlement following the retreating ice at least
11,500 years ago. Small islands have played a
significant role for maritime communities since
the Mesolithic when occupation of offshore
islands reflected the maritime orientation of
hunter‑gatherer settlement. Although settlement
along the coast, including coastal islands,
in northern Norway has been the subject of
extensive archaeological interest, archaeologists
have generally under communicated the
importance of smaller islands as central nodes
in coastal communication, contact and exchange
binding the inhabitants of northern Norway to one
another since the Stone Age. This is paralleled by
the present‑day situation in which small islands
that were formerly socio‑economic midpoints
have been transformed into depopulated remote
entities on the margins of society over the past
century. The following overview of archaeological
evidence for the development of maritime
communities in Arctic Norway and their linkages
to the medieval stockfish trade focuses to a large
extent on the central importance of islands where
stockfish was produced for export.
Publisher
Âncora EditoraCitation
Wickler S. The medieval stockfish trade: a maritime perspective from northern Norway. ARGOS – Revista do Museu Marítimo de Ílhavo. 2021;09:100-107Metadata
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