Local history book for Gaular

Local history book for Gaular
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Oria The National Library of Norway
Library searchAntikvariat.netHistory of the Danes Online
Subtitle
From the oldest times until around 1660
Volume
1
Author(s)
Jan Anders Timberlid
Year
1990
Publisher
Gaular so-called
Pages
419
Source
BIBSYS

Contents

 INTRODUCTION   15
  
 Natural assets   17
 Religious and spiritual division   22
 Are these divisions natural?   26
  
  
 THE GEOLOGY OF GAULAR   35
  
 Bedrock   35
 by Finn J. Skjerlie 
  
 Bonding   35
 The landscape - a result of geological processes   38
 How the bedrock is built up   39
 - Bedrock   40
 - Askvoll group   44
 - Devonian deposits   46
 What bedrock has to say for agriculture and livestock      49
 Sources   51
  
 Gaular during and after the last ice age   52
 by Eivind Sønstegaard 
  
 Furrowed weatherbeaten over the water   52
 The nights get long and the cold sets in   53
 Valley, fjord and other tracks   54
 Ice across the board   56
 The ice is melting   57
 And parts of the sea became dry land   60
 About the glacier lake at Birkeland, and Gaula, which runs to the Sognefjord      62
 The lice masses turn into   63
 Sand and gravel, an important resource   66
 Crumbling rock - weathering soil   67
 Every mountain and every hill shall be joined together   69
 Ice time - of no use?   71
  
 Sources   71
  
 PREHISTORIC TIMES IN GAULAR   75
 by Sigrid H. Kaland 
  
 Stone Age   76
 - Older Stone Age   76
 - Neolithic period   80
 Bronze Age   84
 Older Iron Age   87
 - The first Iron Age   87
 - Roman times   89
 - Burial customs   91
 - Contact - trade   92
 - Communities and social groups   93
 - Migration period   93
 Younger Iron Age   97
 - Garden and business   99
 - Trade and contact 105
 - Graves and status 108
 - Expansion 116
 - Cult 116
 - Christianization 118
 - Busyness 118
 List of relics and finds from Gaular 129
 Literature 134
  
  
 HIGH MIDDLE AGES 1050-1350 137
  
 A time shift 137
 The boilers 137
 Kings and churches take over from the chieftain 139
 - The defense - the passion 139
 - Administration 142
 - The thing 143
 Kristningsverket is part of a power politics 144
 - Church building 146
 - Priests' economic and social position 146
 - How did most people notice the new doctrine? 149
Busetjing - changes in relation to the Viking Age  153
 - Gardane in Viksdalen 153
 - Curtains on sand 159
 - Guards in Bygstad 165
 - Bygda collect 173
 - Usage sharing 173
 Population 175
 Nutritional benefits 176
 - February 177
 - Arable farm 177
 Eight of the earth 181
 - The leasehold system - land charge and shared ownership 181
 - Calculation of country code 184
 - The different chipmunks 186
 - Local church property 186
 - Monastery goods 187
 - King's earth/ladder material 190
 - Great manor 191
 - Peasant goods 193
 - Bygda collect 193
 The state and the church make demands 194
 In summary 197
  
  
 THE LATE MIDDLE AGES 1350-1500 - FROM GROWTH TO DECAY 199
  
 Depopulation and the Age of Destiny 199
 How to get the message 199
 - Curtains that were in operation 204
 - Gardar who was an islander 205
 - Merging into larger operating units 208
 - Bygda collect 211
 The land charge case 214
 Decline in agricultural production 215
 Changes in ownership conditions 217
 Changes in the administration 220
 Summary - crisis for kven? 221
  
  
 THE PERIOD 1500-1660 - NEW GROWTH 223
  
 In general 233
 The boilers 223
 Attryddinga 1500-1660 225
 - The farms that were in operation around 1520 226
 - Clearing in the 1520-1560s 227
 - Clearance in the 1570s and 80s 228
 - Cleaning up after 1600 230
 - Bygda collect 231
 Usage sharing 234
 - Had the division of use gone too far? 243
 Population development 247
 - Migration in the 1570s and 80s 251
 - What regulated the population? 252
 Nutritional benefits 255
 - February 255
 - Differentiation in the 1660s 258
 - Livestock species/feeding 259
 - Arable farm 262
 - Forestry 268
 - Fishing and hunting 273
 - Other nutrients 277
 - Surplus - means of payment 278
 Property conditions 279
 - Liner eighteen to high and late middle age 279
 - The Reformation - changes in property ownership 279
 - Calculation of the debt - the land debtors 279
 - Jordeigarans 280
 - Local church property 281
 - Central church property 283
 - Private goods 285
 - Bygda collect 287
 Landowners and landlords - social structure 288
 The different groups in the rural community 291
 - Godseigarane 291
 - Self-registration 291
 - Tenants 292
 - Homemakers/beach sitters 298
 - Employees 301
 - Poor people 303
 - Who got positions in the rural community 305
 - Who were the leaders of the campaigns 306
 Increased demands from the state 307
 - Taxation - the different taxes 307
 - People say tax capacity 311
 - Protests in connection with the tax 315
 - Soldier discharge 327
 - The church's requirements 336
 - Tax fleecing? 337
 Those who put the requirements into practice - the rest of the world 339
 - turkeys 341
 - Sorenskrivaren 351
 - Parish priest 352
 - The sheriff 357
 Did people have the right to influence the government? 361
 Forensic physician accessory 363
 - Election matters 365
 - Cases of impropriety 366
 - Penalties 367
 - Offences in general 371
 - The village meeting 373
 A closed society? - contact beyond 378
 Social conditions - the farmer and his family 380
 - Houses in the garden 381
 - Apartment buildings 384
 - rod cage 387
 - Firehouse 387
 - Stables and barns 389
 - Onion 391
 - Forge 392
 - Grinder 392
 - Equipment in connection with cooking 394
 - The slitter behind the pots - the women 395
 - Cloth 396
 - Valuables - gold/silver 397
 - Books 400
 - Were people in debt? 400
 In summary 404
  
 Dimensions, weight and coins 407
 Abbreviations 407
 Literature, sources etc. 408
 Register 414