“…Research on the early church in Iceland has been primarily historical, based in the later saga accounts and the extremely limited material on the spread of Christian practice and the institutionalization of the church in the century following the conversion (see for instance Hugason, 2000;Karlsson, 2004;Sigurôsson, 1999Sigurôsson, , 2014Stefa´nsson, 1978Stefa´nsson, , 1975. However, recent archeological work has demonstrated that although the institutional church was largely absent from Iceland, Christian household cemeteries and churches were established at a large number, perhaps the majority, of independent farms in the early 11th century (see for instance Byock et al, 2005;Gestsdo´ttir and Isaksen, 2014;Kristja´nsdo´ttir, 2004Kristja´nsdo´ttir, , 2015Sveinbjarnardo´ttir, 2009;Ve´steinsson, 2000;Zoe¨ga, 2014). With the lack of ecclesiastical organization and, probably, ordained ministers, households appear to have been largely left to their own as to how and where they buried their dead and the execution of burial rites likely were often in the hands of the household church owners themselves (Ve´steinsson, 2000;Zoe¨ga, 2014).…”