Luxury goods, used in mediaeval long distance trade ca. AD 900-1250, found an important market among the Iron Age peoples of southern Africa. Indirect evidence of this trade can be seen in the form of archaeological collections of glass beads at sites throughout Africa and Southeast Asia. Thousands of beads have been found at Iron Age sites in the eastern Transvaal Lowveld and at inland sites along the Limpopo Valley and in Botswana. Similar looking types of beads, referred to as small seed beads, were also used in the Muslim mercantile networks and maritime trade in the Indian Ocean, and have been found at coeval sites throughout Southeast Asia, particularly at entrepot ports in India, eastern and western Malaysia and Thailand. At the comm...
Ancient glass beads as a window to the ancient world Glass beads, both beautiful and portable, ha...
Drawing primarily on data obtained from recent excavations at Elmina, Ghana, this report examines th...
none1noThe study of monetary systems in the history of Africa is a subject that by its nature crosse...
Glass beads form a large part of archaeological evidence attesting to Indian Ocean trade with easter...
Recent archaeological excavations at the seventh-to tenth-century CE sites of Unguja Ukuu and Fukuch...
The presence of glass beads in West African archaeological sites provides important evi- dence of lo...
Glass beads have been produced and traded for millennia all over the world for use as everyday item...
Several thousand glass beads excavated in the Maryam Anza (Tigray, Ethiopia) cemetery over three sea...
A wide variety of glass beads poured into Central East Africa during the second half of the 19th cen...
Additional file 1: Table S1. Report on XRF results of the main elements (wt %) that act as glass fo...
Excavations conducted between 2010 and 2012 at Magoro Hill, a site in South Africa\u27s Limpopo Prov...
This article presents the discovery and analysis of a new glass bead assemblage from the Swahili sit...
The link between Europe and the rest of the world is often studied with Europe being the consumer of...
This article presents a new approach to the archaeological and chemical evidence for glass in Africa...
Artisans in Kiffa and several other towns in southern Mauritania have produced a unique kind of powd...
Ancient glass beads as a window to the ancient world Glass beads, both beautiful and portable, ha...
Drawing primarily on data obtained from recent excavations at Elmina, Ghana, this report examines th...
none1noThe study of monetary systems in the history of Africa is a subject that by its nature crosse...
Glass beads form a large part of archaeological evidence attesting to Indian Ocean trade with easter...
Recent archaeological excavations at the seventh-to tenth-century CE sites of Unguja Ukuu and Fukuch...
The presence of glass beads in West African archaeological sites provides important evi- dence of lo...
Glass beads have been produced and traded for millennia all over the world for use as everyday item...
Several thousand glass beads excavated in the Maryam Anza (Tigray, Ethiopia) cemetery over three sea...
A wide variety of glass beads poured into Central East Africa during the second half of the 19th cen...
Additional file 1: Table S1. Report on XRF results of the main elements (wt %) that act as glass fo...
Excavations conducted between 2010 and 2012 at Magoro Hill, a site in South Africa\u27s Limpopo Prov...
This article presents the discovery and analysis of a new glass bead assemblage from the Swahili sit...
The link between Europe and the rest of the world is often studied with Europe being the consumer of...
This article presents a new approach to the archaeological and chemical evidence for glass in Africa...
Artisans in Kiffa and several other towns in southern Mauritania have produced a unique kind of powd...
Ancient glass beads as a window to the ancient world Glass beads, both beautiful and portable, ha...
Drawing primarily on data obtained from recent excavations at Elmina, Ghana, this report examines th...
none1noThe study of monetary systems in the history of Africa is a subject that by its nature crosse...