Western european whaling in Svalbard.
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Transcript of Western european whaling in Svalbard.
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Smeerenburg Gravneset
By Kristin Prestvold
The Governor of Svalbard is theNorwegian government's supremerepresentative in Svalbard. One ofthe Governor's most importanttasks is the management of Svalbard's natural and cultural environments.
North-West Spitsbergen National Parkwas established in 1973. Its purpose is to preserve environmental assets in a high Arctic region with magnificent nature, landscapes, geological formations, flora, fauna and cultural landmarks. The national park will help maintain Svalbard's wilderness character, maintain the balance of native animalspecies and ecological relationships, provide opportunities for outdoor life, experience and insight into a living environment and its history. Smeerenburg and Gravneset are located in the centre of the nationalpark and are among the most well-known and visited cultural monument in Svalbard.
Cultural monuments in SvalbardCultural monuments are tangible, original and unique visible traces of the everday life, work and recreation of people in the past. As the physical framework around the lives that once were lived, they aregood storytellers and monuments to earlier human activity but also witnesses to decline, the passing ofall things and the transitoriness of greatness. In the Arctic wilderness in Svalbard the permafrost, climateand soil create good preservation conditions for cultural monuments and show how the landscape andthe monuments are inextricably tied together. Cultural monuments give us an understanding of how people of each period have influenced their environment but also how the landscape has affected humanactivities. Smeerenburg and Gravneset are important monuments from the whaling period in Svalbard inthe 17th and 18th centuries, but they are vulnerable and easily suffer damage and wear and tear when thetourist traffic is too heavy. The loose objects that lie round about on the ground can also be tempting toplace in your pocket as a small souvenir from the trip. We wish that the monuments remain as undisturbed as possible, as a part of the landscape, so that as many as possible, both today and in thefuture, will be able to experience Svalbard`s cultural monuments. This places great responsibilities on youas a visitor. So tread lightly, walk carefully. Show respect for the monuments so others in a long time tocome also can experience rich encounters with the past through Svalbard`s almost untouched culturalheritage. The document "Regulations concerning the cultural heritage in Svalbard" states that all cultural remainsoriginating from 1945 or before are automatically protected and must not be disturbed. This applies to alltypes of buildings and remains of houses, installations, and hunting devices in different stages of decay. Remains of human graves, crosses, bones and fragments of bone above or belowground as well as skeletal remains that lie outside of the original grave are protected independent of age.The same applies to skeletal remains and hunting equipment at the slaughtering places for walrus andbeluga and in connection with traps for polar bear. The large number of objects that lie spread along thecoasts of Svalbard are also protected and may not be removed or picked up. These can be things thatmay seem like foreign objects and refuse in an otherwise unspoilt wilderness, but more than just buildingremains, they tell us about daily life, tasks and work methods, about where folk came from and the conditions under which they lived. Destruction, removal or defacing of movable or fixed cultural remains is punishable. The area of protection stretches 100 metres in all directions around the cultural artefact. Within the protection zone itis forbidden to set up camp, light a fire, or leave any traces of one's visit. Non-compliance with this regulation will result in fines or imprisonment of up to one year.
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Western European whaling in Svalbard...
"But, if the body becomes hardened by hardships and hard work, and if, to have
faced danger and avoided it, gives courage and bravery, there can be no question,
that whaling is the school, where the heroes of the seas are formed" (Pontoppidan 1785).
4
The story of Western Europeanwhaling in Svalbard is a storyabout boiling of train oil fromwhale blubber for use in Europein the manufacture of soap, asilluminants, in rope-making, inthe preparation of cloth andtextiles, skins and leather andas a mixing agent in pigmentsand paints. Gradually useswere found for the baleen,amongst others in the stays ofthe corsets of contemporarywomen's fashion.
The beginning of the oil adven-ture started with Barentsz' discovery of Svalbard in 1596.In the years that followed, constant mention was made ofthe large numbers of whalesand walrus in the fjords andwaters around the archipelago.However, it took several yearsbefore the first ships sailed north from Europe withwhaling as their sole intention.None of the European sea powers, such as England and The Netherlands, had the
expertise or organisation to carry out whaling in the ice-filled waters of the north. Theyalso knew very little aboutwhaling itself. Whaling had tobe learnt from the bottom upand was consequently in thebeginning quite a small-scaleoperation. The attempts to learn the craft were a case oftrial and error.
In reality it was only the Bas-ques who mastered whalingand could be thought of as trueexperts. For hundreds of years
they had hunted whales in the Bay of Biscay and off the coast of Labrador. Here were sailorswith long experience in themany, and for others, unknown,techniques of whaling, menwho knew their craft. If thepossibilities of whaling in thenorth where to be explored,the Basques and their skillswere essential. In the begin-ning, therefore, they sailed asspecialists and crew on thenorthbound whaling expediti-ons. For a short period the Basques dominated the hunt,
...Europes first adventure in oil
Map of North-West Spitsbergen National
Park with Smeerenburg and Gravneset
marked in red.
Copyright: Norsk Polarinstitutt
Work at the whaling station. Everybody had their prescribed tasks. The work of boiling th
quickly become a busy affair if the hunt at sea was very successful. It was important to b
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but an ever watchful eye was kept on them, and they weresoon robbed of their know-ledge with the consequencethat dependence on them gradually declined. The sailorsof the expanding European seapowers had themselves learntthe techniques of whaling.
Battle for hunting groundsSvalbard became, in the spaceof a short time, a magnet thatattracted ships northwards topractise whaling. The hunt didnot pass without friction,
competition and rivalry between the whaling expeditions from the differentEuropean countries. In particular the hostility betweenthe Dutch and the English overwhaling rights and the besthunting grounds sets its markon the earliest history of Svalbard. Other nations, suchas, Denmark-Norway, France,Spain and Germany were alsoinvolved in the quarrelling, butthe main fight was betweenEngland and The Netherlands.The fight over the prey wasalso directed towards internalcompetition, and whaling wassoon monopolised by trade-companies that were grantedprivileges to exploit the hunting grounds and watersaround Svalbard. The Netherlands established theNoordsche Compagnie in 1614whilst England's MuscovyCompany had already beenoperating for many decadeswith a monopoly on trade withthe northern parts of Russia.
The competition led to repeated confrontations in theyears before 1620, and onseveral occasions it came toactual warfare on the huntinggrounds. One year it could beEnglish whaling shipsthat would board several ships fromThe Netherlands, steal the entire season's catch aswell as any equip-ment on board andsend the empty shipshomeward. The nextyear there could bereprisals from theDutch and Englishships would have toreturn home withoutcatch or equipment. During these years
it was normal to send navyships with the whaling fleet as deterrent and protection.Gradually, however, the quarrelling calmed considerably. The hunting areaswere divided between theDutch and English under anagreement whereby theywould operate in separate areas without disturbing oneanother too much. The Englishhunted south of Magdalene-fjorden, whilst the Dutch controlled the area north ofMagdalenefjorden in the northwest corner of Spitsbergen.Here the Dutch built the legendary whaling station ofSmeerenburg.
The earliest Arctic whalingIn the summer months thelarge and heavy Greenlandright whale concentrated, inlarge numbers, in the watersaround Svalbard. Until themiddle of the 17th century thehunt for the Greenland rightwhale was carried out alongthe coast and in the fjords ofthe archipelago. The Greenlandright whale is a cumbersome,slow-moving species with poorswimming skills. It was easy tocatch. It has a thick layer ofblubber and many baleens.
Ships on their way north to take part in the hunt.
Detail from a map from the 17th century.
he blubber and extracting the oil on land could
be prepared. From Fotherbys "Journal" 1613
It floats when dead and allthese qualities made it aparticularly ideal and attractiveprey.The right whale to kill.
The Basque whalingtechnology was based on landstations were the blubber wastaken ashore after flensing andboiled to oil in large copperboilers. The earliest knowncultural heritage monuments inSvalbard come from this firstphase of Western Europeanwhaling, characterised by try-works built on land as nearto the shore as possible. At thebeginning the stations had atemporary look where one ortwo loose copper boilerswould be placed on top ofprimitive furnaces. The landcrew lived in tents and hadtheir workshops in tents. At theend of the season equipmentand materials were dismantledand taken home. Graduallyseveral of the stations took ona more permanent look withsolid accommodation andworkshops and stone or brick-built try-works that couldbe reused year after year. Thetools and materials were left atthe station on the return home,and at some of the whalingstations attempts were madeat voluntary winterings in orderto keep the station in order andin readiness for the beginningof the following season. Thedeath rate among thewinterers, however, proved tobe too high and the attemptswere soon abandoned.
Throughout the 1630scompetition with the tradecompanies that held themonopolies to practise whalingon Svalbard increased.Independent whalers had formany years been forced to
catch whales wherever it waspossible, such as in the areaaround Edgeøya and eastwardsalong the northern coast ofSvalbard. They were pressingto have the monopolies lifted.It is probably these harbourlessinterlopers that first began tocatch whales in the open seasand developed the techniqueof flensing the whale alongsidethe ship. In the 1640s the monopolieson whaling came to an end
and there was free and opencompetition for all who werewilling to take their chances onthe hunt.From the middle of the 17th
century a long cold periodmeant that the fjords werecovered in ice for longerperiods in the summer, whichshortened the working season.Sometimes the ice alsoprevented the whalers fromreaching and making use of
their land stations. TheGreenland right whale, at thesame time, disappeared fromthe fjords and concentrated inthe open waters along theedge of the drift ice. Theconnection with land began toloose its importance, the landstations gradually went out ofuse, and the whalingtechniques changed. A newperiod of whaling, where the hunt took place in the ice andin the open seas, was arriving.
Out in the iceWhaling increased dramaticallyafter the middle of the 17th
century and gradually came tocover large areas of the Arcticsea and include ships frommost of the seafaring nations inEurope. After 1670 all huntingtook place out in the oceanalong the edge of the drift ice.Many more took part in thewhaling than previously and bythe end of the 17th century
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Painting of the work on the land while the hunt took place in the fjords in Svalbard in the firs
how the blubber was cut into smaller and smaller pieces before it was placed in the copper b
After the oil was cooled it was filled into barrels and vats and taken to the ships for storing.
7
there were probably 2-300whaling ships and sealers outin the ice east of Greenlandduring the summer. There wasno longer a fight for the bestharbours and the question ofsovereignty and specialprivileges no longer had anyrelevance. Svalbard as a landarea had lost its importance.The hunt in the open seasbrought about changes andadaptations in the equipment,boats and crew. The whale was
now flensed alongside the ship,and the blubber was barrelledand taken back to the homeport to be boiled into oil there.There was no longer a need forspecialists on land, and thecrew of the ships hunting out inthe ice was therefore halved inrelation to the land-based hunt.The extraction of oil in thehome country created a newtype of business that employedmany people.
Whaling out at sea brought theEuropeans experience insailing in ice-filled waters andcreated a particularlycompetent group of sailors.This was very important to thenavies of the sea powers. Atthe same time the watersaround the belt of drift ice aredangerous where weather andwind conditions can make thejourney unsafe. More shipswere lost during this hunt than was usual during the land-based hunt.
The end of an eraAt the beginning of the 17th
century large numbers ofwhales were reported in thewaters around Svalbard, and onhis journey to Svalbard in 1612Poole describes the seas beingfilled with whales around thesides of the ship. By the end ofthe 18th century it was over.The populations of Greenlandright whale east and west ofGreenland had reached crisispoint and the WesternEuropean whaling adventure inthe Arctic was over. The whalewas practically extinct, themarket for whale products hadchanged, and it was no longerprofitable to practise whaling.
st half of the 17th century. The vignette shows
boilers over the furnaces and boiled to oil.
From Fotherbys "Journal" 1613
In the picture the coopers are in full swing with their work. They were
indispensable specialists and the hope every year was to return home in ships
fully laden with barrels of oil.
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In the beginning of June the ships
head under full sail into
Smeerenburgfjorden in the
northwest corner of Spitsbergen.
Over three weeks have passed
since ships and crew left harbour
back home in Europe and the goal
of the voyage is now in sight.
There is little ice in the fjord this
year, and in a short time the ships
cast anchor in front of the flat
promontory on the south of
Amsterdamøya. With shouted
commands and much noise and
din the small boats are lowered
and set on the sea, tools and
materials are loaded on board
and the boats are rowed ashore.
The crew have their appointed
duties, and it only takes a short
while before the materials and
tools are safely placed on the
beach. Afterwards they begin
with the work of repairing the
damage that the winter has
caused the whaling station.
Everywhere is a hive of activity.
The loose copper boilers to extract
oil from the whale blubber are
placed on solid-walled ovens and
people are sent to the observation
posts to keep an eye out for
whales on their way into the fjord.
All are prepared for the hunt that
shall soon begin.
Smeerenburg - BlubbertownThe name Smeerenburgliterally means Blubbertownand the whaling station wasthe headquarters of Dutchwhaling whilst the hunt tookplace along the coast and inthe fjords of Svalbard in thefirst half of the 17th century.The whaling station wasprobably founded in the yearsbefore 1620 and was desertedaround 1660. The station lies inpicturesque surroundings onAmsterdamøya, right up in thenorthwest corner ofSpitsbergen, surrounded byfjords, high glacier faces andsteep mountains. The areaaround Smeerenburg was earlychosen as a suitable place tohunt. The waters were calm with good anchorage for thewhaling ships and the whalesconcentrated in the fjords in
the area in large numbers.Smeerenburg shows how awhaling station developedfrom basic working conditionsto more permanent structures.Today the ruins of the whalingstation are the most importantmonument to organizedWestern European whaling.
The story of Smeerenburg isalso the story of a tiny andcareful start at the beginning ofthe 17th century, as is the story
Smeerenburg -steeped in myths and legends"On this side of the sound these piles of sand...like the only reminder of
the golden age of Holland" (Nansen 1920)
Remains of a double try-work on the edge of the beach in Smeerenburg. Today
only the black concreted blubber formed by the oil that ran into the sand is visible
above ground. Photo: Ben Bekooy and Louwrens Hacquebord
Boiling of blubber to train oil.From Fotherbys "Journ
9
of many of the other whalingstations in Svalbard. At thebeginning the land station hada temporary look with simpleand provisional try-works onthe beach. As soon as the shipshad cast anchor a couple oftents were raised for theworkers on the land. The workwas carried out under the openskies and the purposelybrought copper boilers forboiling the blubber were placedon temporary and primitivefurnaces that lay in rows oneafter the other along the beach.
As the years passed the landstation grew in size and took ona more permanent look. Thetry-works became solidcontructions of stone and brickwhere the loose copper boilers,often with a diameter of up to2-3m rested. Sometimes thefurnaces had a brick chimney.These more permanent stationsalso had platforms for cuttingup the strips of blubber and forplacing the cooling vessels. The tents were replaced withbuildings of wood and brickwhere the equipment used forboiling the blubber could bestored when the ships sailedhome at the end of a season.The buildings functioned asaccomodation, storehousesand workshops and throughoutthe season the craftsmen,blubber-cutters and boilers hadthere temporary residencehere.
View over Smeerenburgneset in 1980. Smeerenburg was the main station for the Dutch
while the whaling took place in the fjords in Svalbard in the first half of the 17th
century. The whaling station lay near the rich hunting grounds for whales in the fjord,
had a good harbour with suitable anchorage and good escape routes for the ships
should the drift ice enter in the fjord. The latter was particularly important for the slowly
manoeuvreable ships of the 17th century. In the picture you catch a glimpse of the camp
and work cabins of the archaeological investigation in 1980.
Photo: Dag Nævestad
Map of Smeerenburg on
Amsterdamøya. The map
shows the placing of the
individual trading cham-
bers whaling stations on
the promontory. When the
Norwegian Thorolf Vogt
visited Smeerenburg in
1928, he found 8 try-
works, but the eastern-
most already lay on the
beach and was flooded at
high tide. Today try-work
8 has vanished into the sea and try-work 7 is about to follow. The same fate has also
befallen the buildings that lay behind try-works 7 and 8. According to the order given
on old maps of Smeerenburg, it is the try-works from Amsterdam that have vanished,
with the exception of 7.
Reprinted with kind permission of Louwrens Hacquebord, Arctic Centre, University of Groningen, Holland
al" 1613
Some of the try-works are so well
preserved that should someone place a
suitable copper boiler over the hole it
could probably be set in operation
immediately. Photo: Kristin Prestvold
10
In its heyday the land stationcontained 16-17 buildings thatwere situated near the beach.The spaces between the houses were cobbled and drainage gullies where constructed to carry off the sufacewater. Most of the houses were floored and the living conditions must havebeen reasonably good. Outsideat the try-works, shelters shielded the workplace fromwind and weather, helping tomake the working conditionsrelatively comfortable. At mostthere were seven double andone single try-work in opera-tion at the same time. The try-works belonged to several independent trading chambersthat together formed one trading company. These tradingchambers co-operated only if itwas absolutely necessary.
The founder of Smeerenburgwas the Amsterdam TradingChamber that in the heyday ofSmeerenburg had the largesttry-works with two doubleovens and four buildings situated behind them. The Amsterdam whalers establis-hed themselves at the easternend of the promontory wherethe conditions at that time weremost suitable for anchorageand the landing of people,equipment and not least blubber after the flensing of thewhale. The other trading chambers that were active atSmeerenburg during the whaling station's busiest periodwere Middelburg, Vlissingen,Enkhuizen and Hoorn, Veere,Delft and Rotterdam. The Danish had, for a short period inthe 1620s, a try-work at Smeerenburg, but after a fewyears this was taken over by aDutch trading chamber. In themiddle of the whaling stationthere was a small fortification ora simple cannon emplacement
built on a small plateau to defend the site against compe-tition and possible interlopers.
Land-based whaling - adventure and tradeThe large whaling ships thatevery year sailed up to Svalbard, with a crew to manthe land stations and sailors to carry out the actual hunt at sea,were little more than cargoships. After the ships had castanchor in the harbour by thewhaling station and were unloaded of tools and equip-ment, they lay at anchor for therest of the season. Along withthem on the journey the whaling ships brought four tosix small shallops or whale-boats that were used in the ac-tual hunt. These were open rowing boats manned by six men.
There was a clearlydefined division of labour on the hunt atsea. The whaleboatswere crewed by spe-cialists in their fields, and co-operation betweenthe crew was a pre-requisite for asuccessful hunt, pre-ferably without accident inany shape or form. Whalingwas a dangerous job and thesmallest mistake could havedire consequences. The method of hunting demandedgreat skill and was therefore ajob for experienced and skilledmen. Even long experiencewas not necessarily a goodenough guarantee for success.Many things could go wrongand the hunt demanded bothcourage and skill.
In the front of the whaleboat satthe harpooner who was themost important specialist on
A complex system of drainage gullies carried
away the surface water so that one was able
to walk dryshod along the cobbled alleys of
Smeerenburg. Exposed during the
excavations at Smeerenburg in 1979-80.
Photo: Ben Bekooy and Louwrens Hacquebord
Reconstruction of the houses in
Smeerenburg during the heyday of
the station. Based on the results of the
archaeological excavations in
1979-80.
Drawing: H. J. Zantkuijl
11
board. Aft sat the mate andbetween these two operatedfour rowers. When the whalewas sighted, it was imperative torow up as close as possible. Theharpooner had to strike cleanlyso that the harpoon wouldembed itself deep enough in theanimal. To the harpoon werefastened long lines which reeledout when the whale dived atgreat speed under the waterafter being hit. "The whaleswims like the wind so that ithowls in the ears" (Martens1671) and it was thereforeimportant that the line was ableto run free whilst this happened.If the rope were to snag, thewhaleboat could quickly bedragged under and this hasaccording to Martens (1671)
cost the life of many a goodman. The whaleboat had to bealigned correctly in relation toboth the line and the direction ofthe fleeing whale. If it were not,it could capsize in an instant andthe crew end up in the sea. If other boats were not quickly onhand to rescue the shipwrecked,there was little chance of surviving for long in the ice-coldwaters.
There were several whaleboatsengaged in the hunt, and whenthe whale surfaced again to
breath, it was acase of being inthe right place at the right time in order to throw more harpoons into the animal. This was simply atrial of strength.When, finally, the whale was exhausted fromdragging along all the whaleboats that were fastened to it byline and harpoon, it slowed down, the boats could be rowed in close to the animal,and it could be put to death withlances.
The whale's final convulsions,when it trashed around with itstail fin, were dangerous moments for the crews of thewhaleboats. The boats could becrushed or overturned, oftenwith fatal consequences for those on board.
The dead whale was then towedeither to the side of the ship ortowards land where, through theuse of ingenious contraptions, itwas rotated in the water whilstthe flensers removed long stripsof blubber with flensing knives.
On land the strips of blubberwere cut into smaller and smaller pieces on permanent cutting benches before it was finally placed in the copper boilers at the try-works and boiled to train oil. The boiled oilwas transported to a system oflarge water filled cooling vesselsboth to cool the oil and filter outimpurities. Afterwards the oilwas poured into casks and barrels and taken out to the shipwhere it was stored in anticipation of the the season'send and the homeward journey.The residue of blubber remains,called fritters, were reused asfuel to fire the furnaces to continue the extraction of oil.From Fotherbys "Journal" 1613
Harpoon heads
Photo: Ben Bekooy and Louwrens Hacquebord
Smeerenburg - myth and realitySmeerenburg has a magicalpower of attraction. None ofthe land stations from the earliest whaling period in Svalbard have been so famousor so talked about as this legendary blubber town. Theformer whaling station has lived its own life in peoplesimagination ever since it wasabandonded, and numerousmyths and fabulous storieshave been spun about its lifeand size. The picture has beenof a lively town with a teemingstreet life and with shops, bakers, storehouses, churches,fortifications and not least barsand brothels. Around the townwalked a population numbering thousands. EvenNansen (1920) describes hundreds of ships at anchor inthe fjord and life, excitementand prosperity on all sides. Hetells of a complete town withstalls and streets where tenthousand people could gather
in the summer in connectionwith the whaling. Here couldbe found warehouses and try-works, gambling dens, smithiesand workshops, the flat beachteeming with sailors back fromthe whalehunt and women ingay colours on the hunt formen. "And all this in order to
provide Europe with train oil, but
even more to provide the women
with whalebone to disfigure their
bodies with corsets and
whalebone skirts".
The stories about the size andpopulation of Smeerenburg inthe space of the short and hec-tic summer season were mythsthat have been hard to shakeoff. It is only through the largearchaeological excavations atthe end of the 1970s that wefirst began to see a more balanced and realistic pictureof the real Smeerenburg. Themyth of a lively town in its heyday with a population of upto 20,000 in the high season,has been modified to a number
of over 200 men working ashore at the land station. Eventhough reality seems a lot duller than myth, Smeerenburgmust still have been a livelyand crowded workplace whenthe work was in full swing andall the try-works were in operation at the same time.
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The myth of Smeerenburg and other whaling stations in the Arctic
Pottery found during the excavations at Smeerenb
Pho
13
Specialists and general workersLand-based whaling was characterised by division of labour. The workers on landhad their given duties and thesame applied to the sailors onboard the whaleboats. Everyyear specialist craftsmen suchas smiths and coopers sailedwith the whaling fleet. Thesemen had their own special duties that were necessary inorder to operate the hunt. Onboard the ships were other experts such as harpoonersand flensers. The specialistswere better paid than the ordinary members of the crew,and they were a necessary andsought-after workforce whodemanded, and often received,good terms when seen from acontemporary viewpoint.
Most of the whaling nationssuffered from a chronic lack ofsailors and seamen and between nations there was amutual passage of people.Both the specialists and the ordinary sailors were well offand could chop and changejobs. The crew of a whalingship on its way north for thesummer hunt must have beena motley collection of menwith origins from all over western Europe. In Smeerenburg the conversations must have beenin several languages.
What was on the bill of fare?From written sources, such asthe inventories and supply listsof the whaling ships, we get adetailed picture of the equip-ment on board the ships. Thelargest part of food, that was to keep the crew alive during aseason of whaling, was takenalong from The Netherlands. It was the same case with fuel.The diet consisted mainly ofpeas, beans, salted meat andfish, bacon, cheese, butter andhard bread as well as a considerable quantity of wine,spirits, beer and tobacco. Evenif the quantity of food wasenough to feed the crew andfeed them well throughout anentire season, the diet was deficient in vitamins, especiallyvitamin C. This could have tragic consequences in thespace of a short time, andmany who lie buried in Svalbard from this period showtraces of scurvy. In order to spice up the diet there was sometimes a little hunting andfishing, but it seems as if thiswas the exception rather thanthe rule.
burg in 1979-81
oto: Ben Bekooy og Louwrens Hacquebord
Woollen glove with many mendings
Knitted hat
Photos: Ben Bekooy og Louwrens Hacquebord
14
An existence amidst blubber,fat and oilIn many ways it is difficult toimagine an existence and wayof life that is quite different toour own. The workers at Smeerenburg worked in all types of weather and keptgoing as long as was necessaryto finish the job of extractingthe oil from the blubber. Thedaily business and existence,moreover, took place amongstthe remains of whale carcasses, other waste, dirt andmud from rain and surface-water that did not drain into theground because of the perma-frost. The smell of the oil in thecasks and barrels, from the cadavres of whales rotting onthe beach and from the try-works must have been penetrating. The smoke fromthe blubber ovens lay thickover the site and clothes andeven the skin would after ashort time be impregnated bywhale oil. Everyday life in Smeerenburg must in truth becalled a life in blubber, fat andoil.
The whalers, however, wereused to the smells of open gutters, rubbish, dirt and wastefrom the mediæval towns inEurope. Most of them camefrom the poorer classes and itseems unlikely that their noseswould be turned by the smellsof Smeerenburg. Adventureawaited in the north and tempted men to Svalbard, especially with the thought of aquick profit to be made fromthe rich hunting grounds, but
also with the thought of prestige, honour and fameamongst family and friendsback home. Up here one receive pay, a roof over thehead, food and drink, and if the hunt went well, one couldbe lucky enough to get a smallshare of the profit. The existence of a whaler musthave seemed good from acontemporary viewpoint. Themany objects that are dug outof the ground at Smeerenburgpaint a picture of clay pipesmoking, wine drinking menthat understood the art of relaxing and enjoying themselves in the midst of the smells, smoke, fat and oil,and who were intensely keenon different games in their spare time.
The ruins of Smeerenburg -fragments of a past
"So little by little they
exterminated the whale, until
all were gone - and the winter
regained hold of its land in
undisturbed ownership"
(Nansen 1920).
Smeerenburg was graduallyabandonded as a whaling station in the second half of the 17th century. The whaleswithdrew from the fjords andwaters in the immediate vicinity of Svalbard, and theland station lost its importanceand began to decay. Thoughlong after the station wasabandoned Smeerenburg continued to be used as an emergency harbour, a storage
The last try-work of the founders of Smeerenburg, the Amsterdam trading chamber,
about to be taken by the sea. Only the hard concreted blubber remains.
Photo: Kristin Prestvold
15
place for whaling equipmentand as a meeting point for thewhaling ships in the spring andautumn. Smeerenburg had agood harbour and here onecould collect fresh water andspice up the menu with freshmeat when the hunt took placeout in the ice. The many sea la-nes into Smeerenburg meantthat the ships could safely re-ach the open seas even if theice closed one of the branchesof the fjord. On land they couldbury their dead. On Amster-damøya, in the area aroundSmeerenburg, lie 101graves ofmen who lost their lives duringthe whaling in Svalbard in the17th and 18th centuries.
The decay of Smeerenburg began immediately after thestation was abandoned forgood. The try-works were torndown, the tools removed andthe useful materials takenhome. Smeerenburg, therefore,quickly began its journey towards an existence as a ruin. Already when FriedrichMartens visited the land stationin 1671 the site was visibly affected by decay. Several of thebuildings were burnt to theground. He, however, describesbuildings still standing, even ifyear after year the materials inthe buildings were removed andused as fuel or to repair ships.Thus it did not take a very longtime before the land stationmore or less resembled a pile ofdebris.
When the last materials usefulto man had been removed, theforces of nature took over theprocess of breakdown upthrough the centuries. In 1878 aDutch frigate sailed into Smeerenburg to set up a memorial to the seven wintererswho died during their stay at thewhaling station in the winter of 1634-35. The once lively
whaling station was by thenlifeless and returning to nature,the ground was covered in red,broken bricks, large whale-bones, rowing boat oars, rottingrope and what the crew of theDutch frigate described as otherrubbish and junk. The ruins ofSmeerenburg were now theonly visible physical remnantsthat could tell of its former pride.
In 1928 the remains of all thetry-works at Smeerenburgcould still be seen on the beach,even if the easternmost ovenwas at the mercy of the sea andthe waves. The next time a proper report was made on theruins of Smeerenburg, in 1952,this try-work had been taken bythe waters and had disappearedout to sea. Today the seventh ofSmeerenburg's one time eighttry-works is on the verge of falling into the sea. The biggestpart of the try-work is alreadygone and only the concretedblubber remains. The housesthat were situated behind try-works 7 and 8 are also gone.Thus natural decay has causedthe remains of Smeerenburg'sfounders, the Amsterdam Trading Chamber, to be lost.
The whalers packed together their
equipment and tools and left the
site, set sail and travelled south at
the end of August as they had
done at the end of the season for
many years. The land station was
left to the winter storms as on so
many previous occasions. The
year after, however, no whalers
returned. Enduring storm and
silence Smeerenburg has lived its
own life after the site was
abandoned some time around the
middle of the 17th century. The
try-works and houses decayed
and gradually became ruins,
remains of busy activity during
the course of the few short but
hectic summer months of several
years. Nature is reclaiming the
land and the traces of the men
who hunted the whales here and
boiled the train oil out of the
blubber of the whales gradually
become fainter and harder to
discern. If, however, you raise
your ear to the wind and listen,
you might hear the distant sound
of hammering against copper
boilers, the beating from the
cooper's workshop, the creaking
of the ropes on the ships in the
harbour, the distant voices and
laughter of the workers, bent over
the ovens as they boil the oil, and
the weak echo of a cry warning
that whales are on their way into
the fjord.
Remains of try-works on the beach at Smeerenburg. Today these are the
only traces of former pride.
Photo: Kristin Prestvold
16 17
Surrounded by majesticmountains, high glacier faces and magnificent scenery in one of the mostbeautiful fjords on Svalbardlies Gravneset - an old whaling station and the finalresting place for many whalers who never returnedhome at the end of the season.
Gravneset is one of the larger graveyards from thewhaling period on Svalbardand contains around 130 graves. The burials stretch overa period of almost 200 years,from the early 17th until thelate 18th century. Four poorlypreserved try-works are also situated in the sand on the beach just inside the graveyard.According to historical sourcesthe area was used by the English early in the whaling period. They set up a land station here and called the areaTrinity Harbour. The station wasabandoned as early as 1623,but the graveyard continued tobe used for a long time after.The excellent harbour musthave played an important rolethroughout the entire whalingperiod, something that the graves bear silent witness to.
Few places have been visitedas much as Gravneset duringthe history of Svalbard, indeed,the woman who gave the promontory its name visitedthe area as early as 1838.Through the descriptions of theFrenchwoman Leonie d'Aunet,we are given a vivid picture of
the graveyard in what she sawas a sombre landscape wherethe bones of hunted whale andwalrus lay strewn everywherelike white, monstrous remnantsof an extinct race of giants in adesolate land. At the graveyardshe finds several of the gravespartly out of the snow, forcedup by the permafrost below,half open and empty as a resultof the ravages of polar bears.Other coffins lie still untouchedwith a cairn on top as a memorial. She carefully gatherstogether some of the bonesthat lie spread around on theground and places them in anempty coffin. She wonderswho has found their finalresting place here and lies buried in "...coffins withoutmemorial stone, without monument, without a wreath
or a flower, without anyone toshed a tear or say a prayer, without a friend to mourn thedeparted and visit their barren,frozen resting place where thewild howls of polar bears andstorms are all that break theeternal silence" (En pariserinnes reise gjennom
Norge til Spitsbergen anno 1838
(1968)).
The grave - silent witnessSituated around Svalbard aremany large and small graveyards, silent monuments,bearing witness to the whalingperiod. They tell of a dangerouswork where one small mistakecould have fateful consequences and where thateternal scourge of sailors, scurvy, hung like a spectre overtheir very existence.
On the northbound whaling expeditions the sailors wereprepared for death. Death wasa common guest and was metwith an unsentimental glance.Despite a hard life on board thewhaling boats and at the landstations, reliable sources suggest that few died duringthe actual hunt. The greatest enemy was disease.
The whalers were probably predisposed to scurvy. Mostwere men from the poorer classes who left for Svalbard inthe spring after a winter lackingin fresh meat, fruit and vegetables at home. Scurvy easily develops if the diet ispoor. If one does not get thecorrect foods and eats a diet
deficient in vitamins, death often lies in wait. From archaeological investigations atthe graveyard at Likneset northof Smeerenburg nine out oftwelve showed traces of scurvy.
" A lonesome grave in a barren, cold and beautifulland"
The graves at Gravneset havenot been the subject of archaeological investigation,but through investigations ofgraves from other sites in Svalbard we have attained aninsight into the lives of thewhalers and a unique understanding of the man inthe grave.
The coffins were buriedas deep as the permafrost allowed, andwere covered with asmall stone cairn. At thehead it was usual to place a wooden crossas a memorial to thedead with his name andhome town as well asthe year. Through earlytravel descriptions, suchas, amongst others, Leonie d'Aunet's portrayal of Gravnesetin the early 19th century,we discover that already by that timemost of the graves were nameless, but that there still stood afew wooden crosseswhere one could justmake out the inscriptioncarved with a knife in some of them: Dortrecht Holland1783, Bremen 1697.Today the crosses aregone.
Gravneset in Magdalenefjorden - a final resting place..."...but there was no sign of who they were, whence they
came or when they died" (d'Aunet 1968)
The triple grave from Jensenvannet. Three
people, probably from the same crew, are
buried together. They are dressed in different
clothes. The man on the left is dressed in a
flax shirt, has a knitted hat on his head and
long, above the knee stockings fastened with
garters. The man in the middle is wearing a
jacket of homespun wool, as well as long
socks, but no headwear. To the right the
body has been dressed in a knitted hat,
probably a shirt, but no socks. He was a big
man, about 1,90m high, and towers above
his shipmates. Photo: Dag Nævestad
Gravneset in Magdalenefjorden surrounded by majestic mountains - an old
whaling station from the early 17th century and a graveyard from the whaling
period lies on the promontory to the left in the picture.
Photo: Kristin Prestvold
There are many graveyards from the whaling
period in Svalbard. Archaeological investigations of
some of these graves show that the dead received
an honourable burial. In this grave from Likneset in
Smeerenburgfjorden the dead is buried dressed in a
fine navy blue jacket, with wide arms, richly
adorned with buttons. Photo: Dag Nævestad
Ph
oto
s: K
rist
in P
rest
vo
ld
16 17
Surrounded by majesticmountains, high glacier faces and magnificent scenery in one of the mostbeautiful fjords on Svalbardlies Gravneset - an old whaling station and the finalresting place for many whalers who never returnedhome at the end of the season.
Gravneset is one of the larger graveyards from thewhaling period on Svalbardand contains around 130 graves. The burials stretch overa period of almost 200 years,from the early 17th until thelate 18th century. Four poorlypreserved try-works are also situated in the sand on the beach just inside the graveyard.According to historical sourcesthe area was used by the English early in the whaling period. They set up a land station here and called the areaTrinity Harbour. The station wasabandoned as early as 1623,but the graveyard continued tobe used for a long time after.The excellent harbour musthave played an important rolethroughout the entire whalingperiod, something that the graves bear silent witness to.
Few places have been visitedas much as Gravneset duringthe history of Svalbard, indeed,the woman who gave the promontory its name visitedthe area as early as 1838.Through the descriptions of theFrenchwoman Leonie d'Aunet,we are given a vivid picture of
the graveyard in what she sawas a sombre landscape wherethe bones of hunted whale andwalrus lay strewn everywherelike white, monstrous remnantsof an extinct race of giants in adesolate land. At the graveyardshe finds several of the gravespartly out of the snow, forcedup by the permafrost below,half open and empty as a resultof the ravages of polar bears.Other coffins lie still untouchedwith a cairn on top as a memorial. She carefully gatherstogether some of the bonesthat lie spread around on theground and places them in anempty coffin. She wonderswho has found their finalresting place here and lies buried in "...coffins withoutmemorial stone, without monument, without a wreath
or a flower, without anyone toshed a tear or say a prayer, without a friend to mourn thedeparted and visit their barren,frozen resting place where thewild howls of polar bears andstorms are all that break theeternal silence" (En pariserinnes reise gjennom
Norge til Spitsbergen anno 1838
(1968)).
The grave - silent witnessSituated around Svalbard aremany large and small graveyards, silent monuments,bearing witness to the whalingperiod. They tell of a dangerouswork where one small mistakecould have fateful consequences and where thateternal scourge of sailors, scurvy, hung like a spectre overtheir very existence.
On the northbound whaling expeditions the sailors wereprepared for death. Death wasa common guest and was metwith an unsentimental glance.Despite a hard life on board thewhaling boats and at the landstations, reliable sources suggest that few died duringthe actual hunt. The greatest enemy was disease.
The whalers were probably predisposed to scurvy. Mostwere men from the poorer classes who left for Svalbard inthe spring after a winter lackingin fresh meat, fruit and vegetables at home. Scurvy easily develops if the diet ispoor. If one does not get thecorrect foods and eats a diet
deficient in vitamins, death often lies in wait. From archaeological investigations atthe graveyard at Likneset northof Smeerenburg nine out oftwelve showed traces of scurvy.
" A lonesome grave in a barren, cold and beautifulland"
The graves at Gravneset havenot been the subject of archaeological investigation,but through investigations ofgraves from other sites in Svalbard we have attained aninsight into the lives of thewhalers and a unique understanding of the man inthe grave.
The coffins were buriedas deep as the permafrost allowed, andwere covered with asmall stone cairn. At thehead it was usual to place a wooden crossas a memorial to thedead with his name andhome town as well asthe year. Through earlytravel descriptions, suchas, amongst others, Leonie d'Aunet's portrayal of Gravnesetin the early 19th century,we discover that already by that timemost of the graves were nameless, but that there still stood afew wooden crosseswhere one could justmake out the inscriptioncarved with a knife in some of them: Dortrecht Holland1783, Bremen 1697.Today the crosses aregone.
Gravneset in Magdalenefjorden - a final resting place..."...but there was no sign of who they were, whence they
came or when they died" (d'Aunet 1968)
The triple grave from Jensenvannet. Three
people, probably from the same crew, are
buried together. They are dressed in different
clothes. The man on the left is dressed in a
flax shirt, has a knitted hat on his head and
long, above the knee stockings fastened with
garters. The man in the middle is wearing a
jacket of homespun wool, as well as long
socks, but no headwear. To the right the
body has been dressed in a knitted hat,
probably a shirt, but no socks. He was a big
man, about 1,90m high, and towers above
his shipmates. Photo: Dag Nævestad
Gravneset in Magdalenefjorden surrounded by majestic mountains - an old
whaling station from the early 17th century and a graveyard from the whaling
period lies on the promontory to the left in the picture.
Photo: Kristin Prestvold
There are many graveyards from the whaling
period in Svalbard. Archaeological investigations of
some of these graves show that the dead received
an honourable burial. In this grave from Likneset in
Smeerenburgfjorden the dead is buried dressed in a
fine navy blue jacket, with wide arms, richly
adorned with buttons. Photo: Dag Nævestad
Ph
oto
s: K
rist
in P
rest
vo
ld
18
The textiles' storyThe climatic conditions in Svalbard, with its cold dry climate, have, amongst otherthings, led to good preservation conditions fortextiles. Previously we had littleknowledge about the clothingof working people in the 17th
and 18th centuries in Europe.Through the grave materialfrom Svalbard we have an insight into how the whalersdressed. It appears that theclothes they wore were thesame as those they would haveworn on a winter day backhome. The whalers simply lefthome in their winter clothesand not in any specially madeclothes to hunt whales undertotally different climatic conditions than those theywere used to. The remains ofthe clothes that are found arebrightly coloured and are
influenced by Spanish fashionwith wide knee length trousers,long knitted woollen stockings,short jackets and low-cutleather shoes. Under the shortjacket they wore a check orstriped linen or flax shirt. Thereare not found any remains ofthicker outer garments in thegraves and it seems as if thewhalers simply wore an extralayer of clothing if the cold andwind became too bitter. Ontheir heads they wore knittedhats.
We can easily imagine howthese clothes must have looked and how they musthave felt after the end of a longseason in Svalbard. Graduallythey would have become covered in train oil and blubberand by the end of a seasonthey could surely be describedas being able to "stand by
themselves" so disgusting andunfit for use they must havebecome. It is not so strangethat many were thrown awayduring the stay. This material isunique today and tells of a style of clothing that was characteristic of the workingman from Western Europe inthe 17th and 18th centuries.
Clothing, textiles as well as the colours of the cloth
Everyday clothing and textiles from the 17th and 18
knowledge about clothing of the common man at
Long knitted stockings with garters
Photo: Arctic Centre, University of Groningen Holland
19
Even though we know a greatdeal about the clothing, thegrave material from Svalbard isunable to tell us from which European country the whalers came. The grave material, however, does tell us that mostof the whalers were robustmen in the prime of life andthat most of them were
habitual pipe smokers. We areleft with a picture of commonpeople who carried out theirwork on board the whalingships and on land at the try-works in order to earnthemselves and their lovedones their daily bread.
hes have kept remarkably well after over 300 years in Svalbard thanks to the permafrost.
8th centuries are rare items. The Svalbard material is therefore an important source of
t this time, and brings us closer to the people in the past.
Photo: Arctic Centre, University of Groningen Holland.
Jacket from the whaling period
Knee length trousers from the whaling
periodPhotos: Arctic Centre,
University of Groningen Holland
Close up of the head of this man shows
extensive wear on his teeth from clay
pipes. The owner of this set of teeth has
3 or 4 round "channels" worn between
his teeth where he could stick the pipe
right into his mouth. Such damage is a
common feature of the skeletal material
from Svalbard, and shows widespread
smoking among the whalers.
Photo: Dag Nævestad
20
An honourable burialSince death was a regular visitor, materials for coffinswere always carried on thejourney north. The grave material from Svalbard showsthat when accident occured,the dead received an honourable burial, everythingbeing done to bury them in arespectful way. According tothe practice and custom of thetime the dead were buried onland and not at sea if this couldbe avoided. The old graveyardswere sought out in order tobury the dead. Thus some ofthe graveyards assumed quitelarge dimensions as the yearspassed.
The deceased were laid to restin the coffin, often on top of alayer of sawdust. The coffinsare simple but are made of fine materials, often lined withthin cloth. The deceased were buried in their clothes, sometimes with a woollenblanket wrapped around thebody. In some graves featheror down pillows are found lainunder the head, and several are found with moss, broughtfrom home, laid around thebody as if someone wished tokeep the dead warm and comfortable in an otherwisecold and inhospitable world.
A cultural heritage monumentsuffering problemsGravneset is today one of themost visited cultural heritagemonuments in Svalbard. Theconcentrated tourist traffic haseroded much of the vegetationfrom the site and in 1979 attention was drawn to the factthat the graveyard more resembled a camping site thanits original intended purpose.
Several times the graves havebeen opened by curious tourists. As early as 1932, in aninterview with Aftenposten,mine superintendent Mercollsays that tourists had ravagedappallingly in the graveyardand that in 1930 a great amount of bones found slungover the site had to be reburied.
A part of Gravneset in Magdelenefjorden. Today much of the moss covering the peninsula is
21
Today Gravneset shows considerable traces of wearand tear due to traffic. In areasthere are marked paths and inseveral places the vegetationhas been exposed to hard wearand is practically gone. Thedark lichen is worn off rock and stone and the moss and sparsegrass are disappearing. This isone of the reasons why thecentrally situated area of the
gravesite was fenced in during1996. You may not walk in thisarea. The vegetation inside ofthe fence is now recoveringand it is therefore under constant consideration to close off larger areas to promote vegetation growth.
Gravneset has great experiencevalue, where the graveyard is situated in an awe-inspiring natural landscape.
The deceased was once treated with great respect anddeference. We ought to do thesame today. So tread lightly,walk carefully and leave no trace of your visit. Let the deadcontinue to rest in peace whenthe last ship turns her bow homewards in the autumn aftera visit to Svalbard and the wildhowls of polar bears andstorms are all that break theeternal silence.
worn away and gone.
Photo: Tromsø Museum
Remains of a try-work on the beach at Gravneset. Footprints from visitors on the
last cruise-ship are fresh in the sand and on the actual oven. The photo was taken
in 1985 - what is the situation like today?
Photo: Dag Nævestad
BibliographyAlbrethsen, Svend E.: Archaeological investigations in 17th century whaling on Svalbard.
Acta Borealia 1-1989
Albrethsen, S.E.: 1600-tallets spækovnsanlæg på Svalbard. Tromura nr. 14. Tromsø 1988.Arlov, T.B.: Svalbards historie. Oslo 1996
Arlov, T.B. & Supphellen, Steinar: Forelesninger i arktisk historie. Rapport nr. 2 fra Svalbardprosjektet.
Trondheim 1987
Chochorowski, Jan: The Hornsund whaling station - exploration and conservation problems.Acta Borealia 1-1989
Conway, Martin: No man`s land. A history of Spitsbergen. Damms Antikvariat A/S. NorbokA/S. Oslo/Gjøvik 1995
d'Aunet, Leonie: En pariserinnes reise gjennom Norge til Spitsbergen anno 1838.
Oslo 1968
Feyling-Hansen: De gamle trankokerier på vestspitsbergens nordvesthjørne og den
formodede senking av landet i ny tid. Norsk Polarinstitutts Meddelelse nr. 77 1954
Fotherby, R.: A short discourse of a voyage in the year of our Lord 1613 to the
late-discovered contrye of Greenland (1860). I Haven, S. (ed) Narrative of a voyage to Spitzbergen in the year 1613. Transactions of the American Antiquarian Society 4.
Haquebord, Louwrens: Smeerenburg. Vitnesbyrd fra Svalbards tidligste historie.
Tromsø museum 1985
Haquebord, Louwrens: The Smeerenburg project - A study of a 17th century Dutch whaling
settlement in the Arctic seen from an ecological point of view.
Arkeologiske rapporter 7. Historisk museum. Bergen 1983
Haquebord, Louwrens: Smeerenburg. Groningen 1984
Haquebord, Louwrens & Vroom, Wim (eds): Walvisvaart in de Gouden Eeuw. Opgravingen op Spitsbergen.
Amsterdam 1988
Jackson, G.: The British whaling trade. Adam & Charles Black 1978
Molaug, S: Hvalfangst på 1600-tallets Svalbard. Norsk Polarinstitutt 1968
Nansen, Fridtjof: En ferd til Spitsbergen. Kristiania 1920
Scoresby, W.: An account of the Arctic regions, with a history and description of the
northern whale fishery. 2 vols. Newton Abbot: David & Charles 1969
Vig Jensen, Lars: Menig mand bag hvalfangsten ved Svalbard på 16- og 1700-tallet. I Arlov, Thor B. Studier i arktisk kulturhistorie.
Rapport nr. 3 fra Svalbardprosjektet 1989
22
From Fotherbys "Journal" 1613
Published by the Governor of Svalbard, Environmental Section. Thanks to: Louwrens Hacquebord,Arctic Centre, University of Groningen, The Netherlands and the Photo Service of the University ofGroningen, The Netherlands and also Dag Nævestad for use of photographs.
Editor: Kristin PrestvoldText: Kristin PrestvoldDesign and graphic layout: Peder Norbye Grafisk ASEnglish Translation: Richard WoolleyCover photo: Map from the 17th Century showing the by then known land area of SpitsbergenVignette photos front page:Nr. 1 Grave from Jensenvannet on Danskøya, North-West-Spitsbergen National Park. Photo: Dag NævestadNr. 2 Last remains of a try-work on the beach in Smeerenburg. Photo: Ben Bekooy and Louwrens HacquebordNr. 3 Figurehead fron the 17th Century found on Prins Karls Forland. Poto: Kristin PrestvoldBack cover photo: Copperplate from the Western European Whaling period in the 17th and 18th
Century.Vignette photos: Kristin PrestvoldMap of North-West Spitsbergen National Park: Copyright Norwegian Polar InstitutePrinting: Peder Norbye Grafisk AS
Longyearbyen 2001
The person in the picture is buried in a wig. The wig lies partly on a down
pillow that lies under the head. Round the neck were found traces of a silk
scarf, probably yellow in colour.
Photo: Dag Nævestad
SYSSELMANNENPÅ SVALBARD
MILJØVERNAVDELINGEN
N-9171 LONGYEARBYEN
The Western European whaling period in the 17th and 18th
centuries has left behind many traces in Svalbard in the form
of graves and remains of whaling stations on land. The traces
tell stories of a dangerous workplace and of hard work, but
also of the possibility of a good profit, strength, will and the
lust for adventure. Smeerenburg was the main base for the
Dutch whaling in Svalbard and at Gravneset lies one of the
larger graveyards from the whaling period. What can
fragments of a past tell us about the life and work of people
living a long time ago?
Copperplate