An examination of the beads recovered from three Hungarian cemeteries in use during the 10th-12th centuries resulted in the identification of 61 distinct bead types. Seven of these were found to be significant on the basis of frequency analysis, and represent the beads most used by the local population. The study is enhanced by comparative material from a number of other contemporary archaeological sites in and around the country. The classification system developed for this study is applicable to other geographical areas and time periods, and may be expanded or otherwise modified to suit the needs of other researchers
Prof. A. Kokowski has drawn a special attention to the glass beads of multiple shape (usually of blu...
In researching the archaeology of the Hungarian Conquest period, the analysis of organic remains wit...
This is the first dedicated and comprehensive study of glass beads from Early Medieval Ireland, pres...
Beading is a cultural necessity in some rural villages of Hungary and Transylvania, where peasants h...
This paper presents a classification for beads of the Merovingian period (ca. A.D. 450-750) in the L...
In the year 2000, an Early Medieval (7th-century) cemetery containing more than 200 burials with ric...
The year 2006 marks the 80th anniversary of the presentation of a Classification and Nomenclature o...
In this article I investigate the stone finds of the Bell Beaker cemetery of Budakalász from archaeo...
Bucket-shaped pendants were widely spread in various cultural environments from the Roman imperial p...
This paper will present several interesting archaeological finds from the period of the Hungarian Co...
The paper features the materials of burials with beads from the Anatkasy burial ground corresponding...
A double burial of the Baden culture from Tatabánya–Delphi (northern Transdanubia, Hungary) – A case...
© 2018 Academy of Sciences of Tatarstan A.Kh. Khalikov Archaeology Institute. All Rights Reserved. T...
The article presents the results of a comprehensive and interdisciplinary analysis of a collection o...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...
Prof. A. Kokowski has drawn a special attention to the glass beads of multiple shape (usually of blu...
In researching the archaeology of the Hungarian Conquest period, the analysis of organic remains wit...
This is the first dedicated and comprehensive study of glass beads from Early Medieval Ireland, pres...
Beading is a cultural necessity in some rural villages of Hungary and Transylvania, where peasants h...
This paper presents a classification for beads of the Merovingian period (ca. A.D. 450-750) in the L...
In the year 2000, an Early Medieval (7th-century) cemetery containing more than 200 burials with ric...
The year 2006 marks the 80th anniversary of the presentation of a Classification and Nomenclature o...
In this article I investigate the stone finds of the Bell Beaker cemetery of Budakalász from archaeo...
Bucket-shaped pendants were widely spread in various cultural environments from the Roman imperial p...
This paper will present several interesting archaeological finds from the period of the Hungarian Co...
The paper features the materials of burials with beads from the Anatkasy burial ground corresponding...
A double burial of the Baden culture from Tatabánya–Delphi (northern Transdanubia, Hungary) – A case...
© 2018 Academy of Sciences of Tatarstan A.Kh. Khalikov Archaeology Institute. All Rights Reserved. T...
The article presents the results of a comprehensive and interdisciplinary analysis of a collection o...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...
Prof. A. Kokowski has drawn a special attention to the glass beads of multiple shape (usually of blu...
In researching the archaeology of the Hungarian Conquest period, the analysis of organic remains wit...
This is the first dedicated and comprehensive study of glass beads from Early Medieval Ireland, pres...