DavidH22
Do you think a man in the same circumstances that befell Agnes - abandonment, poverty and perceived loose morals - would have suffered the same fate as she did.
Perhaps not, although one can never be sure. Men, like Agnes, were certainly born into impoverished circumstances that drastically limited their opportunities in life. Many people on the lower rungs of Iceland's social ladder were there because they lacked a kinship network, as Agnes did, and many men turned to petty crime as a means to better their circumstances, or gain some kind of agency and independence in their lives. This said, I doubt they would have been quite as vulnerable as women. After all, they would never have faced the difficulty of falling pregnant and losing their employment as a result.
DavidH22
Has there ever been a move in Iceland to have Agnes pardoned posthumously or at least have the circumstances surrounding the killings looked at again?
Many thanks for my copy of the book. I will certainly look out for your next.
Over 150 years after Agnes was killed, something happened which resulted in Agnes and Fridrik's bones being moved from their unmarked grave near the site of their execution, to consecrated ground. I'm being intentionally vague when I say 'something' – it involves the supernatural, and is a story I feel I have no authority to tell. But yes, while there has been no official pardon to my knowledge, there has been a local, informal move to forgive the condemned.