Horn, C., Wollentz, G., Di Maida, G., Haug, A. (eds) (2020). Places of Memory: Spatialised Practices of Remembrance from Prehistory to Today. Oxford: Archaeopress., 2020
This paper addresses the implications of applying cultural memory theory for the communities inha... more This paper addresses the implications of applying cultural memory theory for the communities inhabiting the Danube-Tisza Interfluve in the first half of the second millennium BC. It is argued that a theoretical framework focused on the historicity of communities living in the past provides an explanatory model for the numerous markers of continuity
recorded in the Hungarian Middle Bronze Age. Instead of interpreting changes in the archaeological record as indicators of population change, as in the persistent culture-historical framework, the proposed framework acknowledges change as a constant part of any
community and pursues meaningful practices which countermeasure change. As such it provides a means to approach the archaeological record from an emic perspective.
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We document and describe the archaeological features excavated at the sites of Vráble ‘Veľké Lehemby’/‘Farské’ (Nitriansky kraj, Slovakia) during the years 2012‑2017. The data are organised around the houses, which are represented by a table recording their architectural elements, the accompanying lateral long pits and other structures.
The main descriptive category is the ‘object’, which represents an interpretational unit of features (which can be, for example, cuts or different fill layers). We also account for the find quantities, relative chronological dating based on pottery ornamentation, and 14C dating based on Bayesian modelling. We also describe the features associated with the enclosure around the southwestern neighbourhood.
Find the complete book in Open Access at: https://www.sidestone.com/books/archaeology-in-the-zitava-valley-i
recorded in the Hungarian Middle Bronze Age. Instead of interpreting changes in the archaeological record as indicators of population change, as in the persistent culture-historical framework, the proposed framework acknowledges change as a constant part of any
community and pursues meaningful practices which countermeasure change. As such it provides a means to approach the archaeological record from an emic perspective.
The Kakucs-Turján archaeological site was investigated by a Polish-Hungarian-German research team of archaeologists and various specialists. This volume contains the rst, preliminary results of their work, giving the reader an insight into the complex history of the Bronze Age settlement and its economic activities as reeected in the multi-layered stratigraphy of the site. The currently analysed materials from Kakucs-Turján may help to indicate the basic parameters of the development and functioning of the Middle Bronze Age Vatya culture; on the one hand strongly based on local tradition, on the other contextualized within a wider network covering the Carpathian Basin.
Available at: https://www.habelt.de/
We document and describe the archaeological features excavated at the sites of Vráble ‘Veľké Lehemby’/‘Farské’ (Nitriansky kraj, Slovakia) during the years 2012‑2017. The data are organised around the houses, which are represented by a table recording their architectural elements, the accompanying lateral long pits and other structures.
The main descriptive category is the ‘object’, which represents an interpretational unit of features (which can be, for example, cuts or different fill layers). We also account for the find quantities, relative chronological dating based on pottery ornamentation, and 14C dating based on Bayesian modelling. We also describe the features associated with the enclosure around the southwestern neighbourhood.
Find the complete book in Open Access at: https://www.sidestone.com/books/archaeology-in-the-zitava-valley-i
recorded in the Hungarian Middle Bronze Age. Instead of interpreting changes in the archaeological record as indicators of population change, as in the persistent culture-historical framework, the proposed framework acknowledges change as a constant part of any
community and pursues meaningful practices which countermeasure change. As such it provides a means to approach the archaeological record from an emic perspective.
The Kakucs-Turján archaeological site was investigated by a Polish-Hungarian-German research team of archaeologists and various specialists. This volume contains the rst, preliminary results of their work, giving the reader an insight into the complex history of the Bronze Age settlement and its economic activities as reeected in the multi-layered stratigraphy of the site. The currently analysed materials from Kakucs-Turján may help to indicate the basic parameters of the development and functioning of the Middle Bronze Age Vatya culture; on the one hand strongly based on local tradition, on the other contextualized within a wider network covering the Carpathian Basin.
Available at: https://www.habelt.de/
The Kakucs-Turján archaeological site was investigated by a Polish-Hungarian-German research team of archaeologists and various specialists. This volume contains the rst, preliminary results of their work, giving the reader an insight into the complex history of the Bronze Age settlement and its economic activities as reeected in the multi-layered stratigraphy of the site. The currently analysed materials from Kakucs-Turján may help to indicate the basic parameters of the development and functioning of the Middle Bronze Age Vatya culture; on the one hand strongly based on local tradition, on the other contextualized within a wider network covering the Carpathian Basin.
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