Artigo Revisado por pares

Changing histories and ethnicities in a Sámi and Norse borderland

2017; Routledge; Volume: 34; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/08003831.2017.1398537

ISSN

1503-111X

Autores

Hilde Rigmor Amundsen,

Tópico(s)

Indigenous Studies and Ecology

Resumo

Hedmark County is a large inland district in southeast Norway that represents the southern part of the Sámi settlement area, and a Sámi–Norse borderland. Centred on the municipalities Rendalen and Engerdal, the study investigates the long-term cultural and social processes involved in the construction and maintenance of a borderland using theories of ethnicity and cultural tradition. Over time, different groups of people have used the diverse landscapes, and two periods are highlighted: the Late Neolithic and the Bronze Age (2350–500 BC), and the Iron Age and the Middle Ages (500 BC–AD 1500). The focus is on how different groups of people used the landscapes as seen through variation in settlement, subsistence, borders and contact networks with neighbouring and distant regions.

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