This study aims to demonstrate the potential for understanding first millennium glass beads not as individual representatives of types, but as collections of objects brought together and curated by owners. It uses the author’s experience as a skilled bead maker to investigate processes of bead production and mechanics of bead collection current in Scandinavia and Anglo-Saxon England in the period of 6th to 9th century AD. In the study the bead collections of seven graves are examined from the perspective of their production techniques, materials, and damage from wear and cremation. The results point to beads being acquired in different numbers and often worn for long periods of time before being buried
Coloured beads discovered at an Anglo-Saxon inhumation cemetery at Sewerby, Yorkshire. These images ...
An understanding of beads requires an understanding of the people involved with them. This paper exa...
Glass beads. Among finds from an Anglo-Saxon cemetery discovered at The Meads, Sittingbourne, Kent. ...
Birte Brugmann's 'Beads from Anglo-Saxon Graves' digital archive consists of a spreadsheet containin...
A total of seventeen annular transparent blue glass beads and one cylindrical glass bead with opaque...
This study focuses on metal foil beads from Bukël in Albania presenting results from technological i...
Over 300 glass beads found at Sewerby, Bridlington, East Yorkshire, in a cemetery used in the sixth ...
New research has shed light on the origin of the Danish glass beads dating to the BronzeAge and the ...
Many thousands of glass beads have been excavated from Early British cemeteries of the fifth and six...
This is the first dedicated and comprehensive study of glass beads from Early Medieval Ireland, pres...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...
Excavations in 2001 and 2005 at Hammersmith Embankment in West London uncovered the remains of two g...
Four blue glass beads from the prehistoric site of Gardom’s Edge, in the upland area of the Peak Dis...
Tens of thousands (Callmer, 1977, pp.12-32) of beads marking the rich graves of the Viking world ind...
The differences in the composition of bead sets from the Filippovka I burial were analyzed by the au...
Coloured beads discovered at an Anglo-Saxon inhumation cemetery at Sewerby, Yorkshire. These images ...
An understanding of beads requires an understanding of the people involved with them. This paper exa...
Glass beads. Among finds from an Anglo-Saxon cemetery discovered at The Meads, Sittingbourne, Kent. ...
Birte Brugmann's 'Beads from Anglo-Saxon Graves' digital archive consists of a spreadsheet containin...
A total of seventeen annular transparent blue glass beads and one cylindrical glass bead with opaque...
This study focuses on metal foil beads from Bukël in Albania presenting results from technological i...
Over 300 glass beads found at Sewerby, Bridlington, East Yorkshire, in a cemetery used in the sixth ...
New research has shed light on the origin of the Danish glass beads dating to the BronzeAge and the ...
Many thousands of glass beads have been excavated from Early British cemeteries of the fifth and six...
This is the first dedicated and comprehensive study of glass beads from Early Medieval Ireland, pres...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...
Excavations in 2001 and 2005 at Hammersmith Embankment in West London uncovered the remains of two g...
Four blue glass beads from the prehistoric site of Gardom’s Edge, in the upland area of the Peak Dis...
Tens of thousands (Callmer, 1977, pp.12-32) of beads marking the rich graves of the Viking world ind...
The differences in the composition of bead sets from the Filippovka I burial were analyzed by the au...
Coloured beads discovered at an Anglo-Saxon inhumation cemetery at Sewerby, Yorkshire. These images ...
An understanding of beads requires an understanding of the people involved with them. This paper exa...
Glass beads. Among finds from an Anglo-Saxon cemetery discovered at The Meads, Sittingbourne, Kent. ...