Hoards, grave goods, jewellery : : objects in hoards and in burial contexts during the Mongol invasion of Central-Eastern Europe / / Mária Vargha.

This monograph examines one specific hoard horizon, which is connected to the Mongol invasion of Hungary (1241-42). Though this study focuses on hoards connected to the Mongol invasion, it is also relevant beyond this specific context.

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Archaeopress archaeology
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Place / Publishing House:Oxford : : Archaeopress Publishing,, [2015]
©2015
Year of Publication:2015
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:Archaeopress archaeology.
Physical Description:1 online resource (vi, 95 pages) :; illustrations, maps.
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Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • List of Figures
  • Introduction
  • CHAPTER ONE
  • Jewellery of the High Middle Ages: Problems with research
  • The intention and methodology of this study
  • The medieval village of Kána: the state of the research
  • Hoards
  • Friesach coins
  • The Fuchsenhof hoard
  • Spatial interpretation of hoards
  • Hoards in dating jewellery
  • Churchyard cemeteries
  • Destroyed settlements
  • Summary
  • Fig. 1. An example for the romantic display of the material culture of the conquering Hungarians.
  • Fig. 2. Academic display of the most representative Conquest period finds.
  • Fig. 3. Typical finds of the uppermost layer of commoners identified in field cemeteries.
  • Fig. 4. Typical finds of field cemeteries of the commoners I. Rings, earrings, pearls, pendants, buttons.
  • Fig. 5. Typical finds of field cemeteries of the commoners II: Majs-Udvari rétek. Lock rings, earrings, pearls, buttons.
  • Fig. 6. Typical finds of field cemeteries of the commoners II: Majs-Udvari rétek. Pendants and mounts.
  • Fig. 7. A typical field cemetery, Majs-Udvari rétek, and a method for analysation: coins.
  • Fig. 8. Graves of a typical rural churchyard cemetery: Kána
  • Fig. 9. Jewellery from the hoard of Pátroha - Butorka dűlő
  • Fig. 10. Coins in 12-13th century Hungary. 1: 12th century anonym denars.
  • Fig. 11. 13th century Hungarian coins. The imagery of the coins is influenced by Friesach-type denarius
  • Fig. 12. The distribution of hoards connected to the Mongol invasion of Hungary by Csaba Tóth
  • Fig. 13. The hoard of Tyukod-Bagolyvár. Jewellery and precious metal pieces.
  • Fig. 14. An early example for a precise documentation of a churchyard cemetery by István Méri at Kide, in 1942.
  • Fig. 15. Documentation of the superpositions of the graves at the cemetery of Kide.
  • Fig. 16. Typical remains of the destruction of the Mongol invasion. 1-2: People hid in an oven of a sunken house, Sz. Wilhelm, 'Szank', pp. 101. Pic. 5. Cegléd. 3: Disturbed remains of people sought refuge in a house which was burnt down
  • CHAPTER TWO
  • Typochronology of the Finds
  • Lock rings
  • Rings
  • Brooches
  • Circular brooches
  • Bird shaped brooches
  • Rhombus-shaped brooches
  • Pins
  • Buttons
  • Belt Buckles
  • Mounts
  • A Pectoral Cross
  • Conclusion
  • The division of rural society visible in written sources
  • Fig. 17. The phases of the cemetery of Kána.
  • Fig. 18. Chronological order of the 10th-11th century finds of the Bjelo-Brdo culture. Giesler, 'Untersuchungen zur Chronologie', Table 53.
  • Fig. 19. The common position of lock rings, examples from the cemetery of Kána. Graves 838, 1013, 1038.
  • Fig. 20. Lock ring types of Kána village. 1: K/1037, 2: K/337, 3: K/633, 4: K/1977, 5: K/177, 6: K/2966, 7: K/2794, 8: K/2973, 9: K/2612.
  • Fig. 21. The occurrence of lock rings in graves, hoards and settlement features
  • Fig. 22. The common position of rings, examples from the cemetery of Kána. Graves 601, 861, 427, 947.
  • Fig. 23. Ring types of the period. 1-8: Kána, 1: K/1794, 2: K/1777, 3: K/2778, 4: K/1821, 5: K/1732, 6: K/2600, 7: K/2100, 8: K/1976, 9: Tyukod-Bagolyvár, typical ring types of hoards - seal rings and rings with inset stones, Jakab and Balázs, Elrejtett k
  • Fig. 24. Occurrence of finger rings in graves, hoards and settlement features.
  • Fig. 25. Circular brooches. 1-2: Kána, K/ 14 and K/462, 3: Krásno, 4: Skalka nad Váhom, 5: Balota puszta, 6: Ducové, 7: Nitra-Dražovce
  • Fig 26. Bird-shaped brooches. 1: Kána, 2: Lympne, 3: Greetwell, 4: Aslacton, 5: Leicester, 6: Lüneburg
  • Fig. 27. Rhombus-shaped brooches. 1: Kána, 2: Mezőcsát, 3: Esztergom-Szentkirály
  • Fig. 28. Pin from Kána, K/2667.
  • Fig. 29. Button types of Kána. 1: K/458, 2: K/2292, 3: K/456, 4: K/1170.1, 5: K/1170.2, 6: K/357
  • Fig. 30. The common position of buckles, examples from the cemetery of Kána. Graves 44, 903.
  • Fig. 31. Belt buckles. 1-7 Kána, 1: K/731, 2: K/1170, 3: K/2392, 4: K/2789, 5: K/1731, 6: K/143, 7: K/465, 8: Héhalom, 9: Ecseg-Vároldal
  • Fig. 32. Round, iron buckles. 1-2: Kána, K/1783, K/182, 3: Ducové, 4: Krásno
  • Fig. 33. Belt buckles decorated with flower applications. 1: Kána, K/94, 2: Nitra-Dražovce, 3: Egisheim
  • Fig. 34. The hoard of Esztergom-Szentkirályi földek.
  • Fig. 35. The occurrence of buckles in graves, hoards and settlement features
  • Fig. 36. Mounts from Kána. 1: K/312, 2: K/467, 3: K/2523
  • Fig. 37. An example for the use of pectoral crosses as part of a necklace in the 10-11th centuries, from Majs.
  • Fig. 38. Pectoral cross from Kána, K/1725
  • Fig. 39. The comparative chronology of the artefacts.
  • CHAPTER THREE
  • The Material Culture of Hoards: A Socio-Economic Interpretation
  • Socio-Economic Division and Jewellery
  • The Economic Value of Jewellery
  • Iron Tools, Socio-Economic Division, and the Material Culture of Hoards
  • Fig. 40. Laszlovszky, 'Social Stratification', pp. 59-60.
  • Fig. 41. Laszlovszky, 'Social Stratification', pp. 61-62.
  • Fig. 42. Map of Medieval Clay Pots Found with Coins.
  • Fig. 43. Jewellery from the Nyáregyháza-Pusztapótharaszt Hoard.
  • Fig. 44. Gold S-ended Lock Rings.
  • Fig. 45. An Example for Late Medieval Treasure: The Kelebia Hoard.
  • Fig. 46. Golden Headpiece Found in a Burnt Down House at Szank.
  • Fig. 47. The Karcag Hoard.
  • Fig. 48. Golden Drop Headpiece from Tyukod-Bagolyvár.
  • Fig. 49. An Example for the Characteristic Jewellery of Smaller Hoards: Zalaszentgrót.
  • Fig. 50. An Example for the Different Composition of Iron Depots. 1: Nyáregyháza-Pusztapótharaszt,.
  • Fig. 52. Ashlar Framed and Simple Earth Graves from Kána Village. Graves 43, 373, 268, 84.
  • Fig. 53. A Characteristic House Type for the Arpadian Age. 1: Reconstruction of a House in Kardosút.
  • Fig. 54. Typical Arpadian Age Settlement Structures I. The Layout of the Sites Vecsés 67 and 98, with Chronologically Distinguished Features.
  • Fig. 55. Typical Arpadian Age Settlement Structures II. The Layout of the Sites Üllő 1 and 2, with Chronologically Distinguished Features. Rácz, 'Az Árpád-kori települési formák', p. 180.
  • Fig. 56. Reconstruction of a Typical Village Scene, Based on the Excavations at Tiszaeszlár-Bashalom.
  • Bibliography
  • Conclusion
  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Contents.