Writing about Hamburg trading connections with Iceland in 1899, Richard Ehrenberg mentions cursorily in a footnote that Hamburg merchants received hares from Icelanders (Ehrenberg 1899, 25). He refers to an entry in the donation register of the Annenbruderschaft (confraternity of St. Anne). The Annenbruderschaft was a caritative organisation, for which Hamburg merchants trading with Iceland, Shetland and the Faeroes regularly gave money after returning from their journeys. The account book lists goods bought in Iceland and the donations given as a share to the fraternity for the period 1533-1628. The specific entry concerns the donations of the ship\u2019s crew of skipper Marten Horneman after their journey to Iceland in 1587 and reads:<\/p>\n\n\n\n
\u201eitem up der \u00d6he geschattet 15 hovet f und 1 par\u00a0hasen<\/strong>\u00a0darvor 5 s<\/em>\u201c.
(Staatsarchiv Hamburg 612-2\/5, Kaufmannsgesellschaft der Islandfahrer, Annenbruderschaft, 1520-1842, 2, Band 1, folio 327r; see HansDoc, document ID 15330000HAM00<\/a>).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\npage 38: “1 paer haesen<\/strong><\/em>\u201c
page 38: “1 par haesen<\/strong> 1 fordung [\u2026] 1 paer haesen<\/strong><\/em>“
page 45: “3 par haesenn<\/strong> up 1 wett<\/em>“
(Stadtarchiv Oldenburg, Rechnungsbuch \u00fcber die 1585 in Island verkauften Waren, Best. 262-1, no. 3; Holterman 2020, 45; HansDoc ID 15850000OLD00<\/a>).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<\/a><\/figure>\n\n\n\n
<\/a>
Hasen<\/em> mentioned in Oldenburg account book of the goods sold and bought 1585 in Iceland, page 38 and 45.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n This is a good example for the advantage of interdisciplinary research. From the historic point of view the interpretation here is clear and unequivocally: hares were among the goods bought in Iceland (see Holterman 2020, 45). They were not an item of major importance, but at least appear several times in the 16th century Hanseatic trade in different locations in western Iceland on the Sn\u00e6fellsnes and Reykjanes peninsulae. From the zoological point of view, however, a major interpretation problem evolves here. According to zoogeographical sources, hares do not inhabit Iceland, neither the European hare (Lepus europaeus<\/em>) nor the snow hare (Lepus timidus<\/em>) (see e. g. Grimberger et al. 2009, 211-212, 214-216; see also the list of mammals of Iceland<\/a>). There are neither archeozoological nor palaeontological records of hares from Iceland, indicating that the genus ever inhabited the island.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
J\u00f3nsson refers to the description of a not specified author, who claims the mentioned species (white ravens, magpies, hares and vultures) as resident species of Iceland. He is very precise in his comment and disclaims this notion clearly as being wrong, except for vultures, which sometimes reach Iceland with the sea ice. Thus, zoological, archaeozoological and additional historic evidence points to a wrong interpretation of the Low German term hasen<\/em> as hares here. However, there is one slight possibility that needed to be cross-checked before refuting hares and searching for alternative interpretations. One species frequently mistaken for hares, at least by non-specialists, is the rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus<\/em>). Rabbits spread in Europe from the 12th century onwards, first as gifts changed between monasteries. They were high status animals first, jealously guarded by monastic circles and the gentry, becoming more widespread since the 16th century (Benecke 1994, 356-361; K\u00fcchelmann 2010, 183-184). Therefore, an introduction of rabbits to Iceland in medieval or early modern time is theoretically not impossible. I am grateful to L\u00edsabet Gu\u00f0mundsd\u00f3ttir (Institut of Archaeology Reykjavik<\/a>), who kindly checked this question:
<\/p>\n\n\n\n\u201eRabbits are a modern intrusion to Iceland, being imported as pets, which were let loose, mostly around Reykjav\u00edk but they have also become an ecological problem in Vestmannaeyjar since they are using puffin holes as habitation and the puffins usually use the same ones again and again. They are also living in areas around Akureyri at present. The oldest example of “wild” rabbits in Iceland (that I know of) is from 1942, a farmer in Saurbj\u00e6jarhl\u00ed\u00f0 in Hvalfjar\u00f0arstr\u00f6nd started to breed rabbits around 1932 but some had gotten away and had started to breed in the wild at least in 1942 (see Morgunbla\u00f0i\u00f0 7.3.1942<\/a>). Rabbits had been imported earlier to Iceland but had never been able to survive the winters but now they can. At present the numbers of them are rising instead of declining which is not good since they are causing havoc to the quite sensitive Arctic environment.<\/em>\u201c (Gu\u00f0mundsd\u00f3ttir, personal comm. 16. 11. 2020). <\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n
folio 24r (1571): \u201eItem den man dar ick den ossen van krech XV grote vor I par hasen<\/strong>.<\/em>\u201c
folio 30r (1575): \u201eItem Devert Jebelman I par hasen<\/strong> XX grote.<\/em>\u201c
(Staatsarchiv der Freien und Hansestadt Bremen 7,2051 (formerly Ss.2.a.2.f.3.a.), HansDoc ID 15570000BRE00<\/a>).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\nTo conclude, the former interpretation of the term hasen<\/em> as the zoological species Lepus<\/em> can be refuted, but the entries then become an interesting evidence for Icelandic textile production and trade. According to Mich\u00e8le Hayeur Smith, researcher on historic textiles at the Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology<\/a>, Brown University, Bristol, Rhode Island, USA, the trousers bought by the Hanseatic merchats in Iceland most probably were knitted stockings: <\/p>\n\n\n\n
<\/a>
Icelandic knitted stockings found in Copenhagen in the exhibition of the Nationalmuseet K\u00f8benhavn, most probably 17th -18th century (photos: Michele Hayeur Smith).<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n For further research on Icelandic knitted stockings see e. g. Thirsk (2003), R\u00f3bertsd\u00f3ttir (2008) or Hayeur Smith et al. (2018, 5).<\/p>\n\n\n\n
References<\/strong>:
\u2022 Benecke, Norbert (1994): Der Mensch und seine Haustiere, Stuttgart
\u2022 Ehrenberg, Richard (1899): Aus der Hamburgischen Handelsgeschichte, Zeitschrift des Vereins f\u00fcr Hamburgische Geschichte 10, 1\u201340
\u2022 Grimmberger, Eckhard \/ Rudloff, Klaus \/ Kern, Christian (2009): Atlas der S\u00e4ugetiere Europas, Nordafrikas und Vorderasiens, M\u00fcnster
\u2022 Hakluyt, Richard (1598)<\/a>: The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation, v. 1, Northern Europe
\u2022 Holterman, Bart (2020)<\/a>: The Fish Lands. German trade with Iceland, Shetland and the Faroe Islands in the late 15th and 16th century, Berlin
\u2022 Hayeur Smith, Mich\u00e8le \/ Lucas, Gavin \/ Mould, Quita (2018)<\/a>: Men in Black: Performing masculinity in 17th- and 18th-century Iceland. \u2013 Journal of Social Archaeology 0(0), 1-26
\u2022 Holterman, Bart & Nicholls, John H. (2018)<\/a>: HANSdoc Database, Bremerhaven
\u2022 J\u00f3nsson, Arngr\u00edmur (1593)<\/a>: Brevis commentarius de Islandia
\u2022 K\u00f6bler, Gerhard (2014)<\/a>: Mittelniederdeutsches W\u00f6rterbuch, 3. Ausgabe, Erlangen
\u2022 K\u00fcchelmann, Hans Christian (2010)<\/a>: Vornehme Mahlzeiten: Tierknochen aus dem Dominikanerkloster Norden. \u2013 Nachrichten aus Niedersachsens Urgeschichte 79, 155-200
\u2022 R\u00f3bertsd\u00f3ttir, Hrefna (2008): Wool and society, Reykjav\u00edk
\u2022 Schiller, Karl & L\u00fcbben, August (1876\/1995): Mittelniederdeutsches W\u00f6rterbuch, Zweiter Band: G\u2013L, Vaduz
\u2022 Thirsk, Joan (2003): Knitting and Knitwear, c 1500-1780. in: Jenkins, David (ed.): The Cambridge History of Western Textiles I, 562-584, Cambridge<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"