@article{MTMT:34551284, title = {Tell-tale fragments: The pottery use of a 6000-year-old community at Bükkábrány}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34551284}, author = {Hegedűs, Zsuzsa and András, Kalli and Eszter, K. Tutkovics}, journal-iso = {HUNG ARCHAEOL}, journal = {HUNGARIAN ARCHAEOLOGY}, volume = {12 (2023)}, unique-id = {34551284}, year = {2024}, eissn = {2416-0296}, pages = {1-9}, orcid-numbers = {Hegedűs, Zsuzsa/0000-0002-1450-4344} } @article{MTMT:35045023, title = {An administrative centre on the eastern frontier of the Neo-Assyrian Empire. Current research at the Grd-i Tle site (2021–2023)}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/35045023}, author = {Kalla, Gábor and Dezső, Tamás and Király, Attila and Barzan, Baiz and Szilasi, Attila Botond and Németh, Fruzsina Alexandra and Almády, László and Tatár, Iringó and Kutyifa, Ákos and Láng, Dorottya}, doi = {10.36338/ha.2024.1.2}, journal-iso = {HUNG ARCHAEOL}, journal = {HUNGARIAN ARCHAEOLOGY}, volume = {13}, unique-id = {35045023}, year = {2024}, eissn = {2416-0296}, pages = {9-18}, orcid-numbers = {Kalla, Gábor/0000-0003-4465-0358; Dezső, Tamás/0000-0001-5150-5277; Király, Attila/0000-0002-4993-8206} } @article{MTMT:34864986, title = {NOMADIC TOWNS AND THEIR ENVIRONMENTS IN MONGOLIA. The Khi-Land Project’s research into Khar Bukh Balgas and other Khitan settlements}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34864986}, author = {Erdenebold, Lkhagvasuren and András, Harmath and József, Laszlovszky and Csilla, Siklódi and Szilágyi, Zsolt and Tolnai, Katalin and Tamás, Tóth}, doi = {10.36338/ha.2024.1.3}, journal-iso = {HUNG ARCHAEOL}, journal = {HUNGARIAN ARCHAEOLOGY}, unique-id = {34864986}, year = {2024}, eissn = {2416-0296}, pages = {32-42}, orcid-numbers = {Szilágyi, Zsolt/0000-0003-0804-3657} } @article{MTMT:34600872, title = {Review: Katona, Csete: Vikings of the Steppe. Scandinavians, Rus’, and the Turkic World (c.750–1050). London: Routledge, 2022.}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34600872}, author = {Shepard, Jonathan}, journal-iso = {HUNG ARCHAEOL}, journal = {HUNGARIAN ARCHAEOLOGY}, unique-id = {34600872}, year = {2023}, eissn = {2416-0296} } @article{MTMT:34479586, title = {Conference report: “The people of Árpád – Latest research results of the Hungarian Conquest Period” April 13–15 2023, Szentendre}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34479586}, author = {Vida, Tivadar and Füredi, Ágnes}, journal-iso = {HUNG ARCHAEOL}, journal = {HUNGARIAN ARCHAEOLOGY}, volume = {2023}, unique-id = {34479586}, year = {2023}, eissn = {2416-0296}, orcid-numbers = {Vida, Tivadar/0000-0002-0588-1906; Füredi, Ágnes/0000-0001-6896-4218} } @article{MTMT:34575786, title = {Side notes to an exhibition : Some remarks on early medieval lamellar armours}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34575786}, author = {Major, Péter and Gulyás, Bence}, doi = {10.36338/ha.2023.4.4}, journal-iso = {HUNG ARCHAEOL}, journal = {HUNGARIAN ARCHAEOLOGY}, volume = {12}, unique-id = {34575786}, abstract = {The team at the LVR-Landesmuseum in Bonn took on a major task in 2021 when they began planning the exhibition entitled Das Leben des BODI: Eine Forschungsreise ins frühe Mittelalter (The Life of BODI: A Research Journey into the Early Middle Ages), based around a burial site with outstanding artefacts. The central theme of the exhibition, which opened in March 2023, is the ways of social representation of the elite in the Early Middle Ages and the burials and grave finds associated with them (Fig. 1), including the lamellar armour finds from many burials of the period in different parts of Europe. Similar armours can also be found in the Avar archaeological record, the most significant specimen found in a grave at Derecske-Bikás-dűlő in 2019. The exhibition included armour fragments from the sites Kölked-Feketekapu B and Kiskőrös-Vágóhíd, lent from the collection of the Hungarian National Museum. This study summarises the brief history of research into the role of lamellar armour in the Avar funerary practice and the possibilities of its interpretation.}, year = {2023}, eissn = {2416-0296}, pages = {30-37}, orcid-numbers = {Gulyás, Bence/0000-0002-7682-2065} } @article{MTMT:34571701, title = {Ceramic vessels as cooking pots : Use-wear analysis with experimental archaeological methods}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34571701}, author = {Fülöp, Kristóf György and Gucsi, László}, doi = {10.36338/ha.2023.4.1}, journal-iso = {HUNG ARCHAEOL}, journal = {HUNGARIAN ARCHAEOLOGY}, volume = {12}, unique-id = {34571701}, abstract = {Surpassing mere typological description, pottery analyses have recently been increasingly engaged in evaluating the functional roles of vessels and reconstructing the nuanced ways they could have been used in the past. Therefore, it has become necessary to apply scientific methods and examine, specify, and sometimes re-interpret the current typological framework rooted in traditional denominations and morphological associations. This paper investigates the generic roles of cooking pots, taking, besides morphological characteristics, use-wear traces into account. The article presents a detailed description of the general methodology applied in a series of cooking experiments in 2022 and one of the open-air cooking methods. The goal of the experiments was to reconstruct and document the transformation pottery vessels undergo during cooking, including the characteristic traces of cooking-related changes induced by high temperatures and contact with fire.}, year = {2023}, eissn = {2416-0296}, pages = {10-21}, orcid-numbers = {Fülöp, Kristóf György/0009-0005-9763-672X} } @article{MTMT:34723246, title = {Economy, society, and rural life. The north-western hinterland of Aquincum}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34723246}, author = {Simon, Bence}, journal-iso = {HUNG ARCHAEOL}, journal = {HUNGARIAN ARCHAEOLOGY}, volume = {12}, unique-id = {34723246}, year = {2023}, eissn = {2416-0296}, pages = {53-62}, orcid-numbers = {Simon, Bence/0000-0002-6701-439X} } @article{MTMT:34434897, title = {Becoming Adults:. The state of children in the Middle Bronze Age of Western Hungary}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34434897}, author = {Melis, Eszter}, doi = {10.36338/ha.2023.3.2}, journal-iso = {HUNG ARCHAEOL}, journal = {HUNGARIAN ARCHAEOLOGY}, unique-id = {34434897}, abstract = {The last few decades witnessed increasing attention to the study of the state and role of children in different historical and prehistoric periods. The graves of those who unfortunately died in their childhood are one of the most informative and important sources for this topic in prehistoric research, which, thanks to modern scientific methods, can provide information not only about the diseases or sex of the young deceased, but also about their lifestyle (e.g., their diet). However, we should not forget that the way children are buried and their grave goods reveal primarily the relationship of the adult community to the youngest generation and their loss and mourning. The period between 2200/2100 and 1600/1500 BC is the end of the Early Bronze Age and the whole Middle Bronze Age in Hungary. The territory of Western Hungary was then the borderland between the Central European Únětice and related cultures (e.g., Gáta-Wieselburg) adopting inhumation mortuary practice and the groups of the Carpathian Basin with cremation rites (Kisapostag and the Transdanubian Encrusted Pottery Culture). Children were buried in 30–40% of the excavated burials, and while archaeological analysis of these graves can provide limited insights into what it was like to be a child in the Bronze Age, it can also shed light on key aspects of social organisation between 3500 and 4000 years ago.}, year = {2023}, eissn = {2416-0296}, pages = {14-26} } @article{MTMT:34430624, title = {A unique Iberian majolica fragment from the marketplace of Győr (Hungary)}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34430624}, author = {Nádai, Zsófia and Kolláth, Ágnes and Kovács, Bianka Gina}, doi = {10.36338/ha.2023.3.5}, journal-iso = {HUNG ARCHAEOL}, journal = {HUNGARIAN ARCHAEOLOGY}, unique-id = {34430624}, abstract = {This paper explores the origin, chronology, and connections of a majolica vessel found during excavation in the marketplace of Győr. The piece is of exceptionally high quality and counts as exceptional in the archaeological record of Hungary. It is adorned with painted cobalt blue motifs and lustre decoration. Its analogies are known from major museums' collections, including the Metropolitan Museum, the British Museum, and the Louvre. Based on these, its place and time of origin could be identified as the 15th-century Valencia in today’s Spain, more specifically, Manises (now a district of Valencia) and between the 1430s and 1450s (based on the detailed chronological framework established from excavation results in the area). According to written sources, ceramic vessels and architectural ceramics were produced in Manises, a workshop following Hispanic Moorish traditions, to be exported to distant lands and on the order by noble families and princely courts, thus influencing, for instance, the majolica production of Italy. Following the expansion of the Kingdom of Aragon during the reign of Alfonso V, the Manises ware also became important in the court in Naples. The diplomatic relations between the royal courts of Aragon and Hungary can be accounted for the appearance of such a vessel in the territory of the Kingdom of Hungary.}, year = {2023}, eissn = {2416-0296}, pages = {35-45} }