Invisible Connections: An Archaeometallurgical Analysis of the Bronze Age Metalwork from the Egyptian Museum of the University of Leipzig

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Odler ◽  
Jiří Kmošek
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudia Speciale

The book is the result of a three-year investigation for a PhD project at the University of Salento (Lecce, Italy). By comparing archaeological and archaeobotanical data, new paleodemographic estimations are made, reconstructing the use of vegetal resources of Bronze Age communities on the Aeolian Islands.


Archaeologia ◽  
1908 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oscar Montelius

In 1900 I was invited by the University College of London to deliver a series of lectures on prehistoric chronology. I then put forward my chronological system for the Bronze Age in different parts of Europe.The chronology of the Bronze Age in Sweden, Norway, Denmark and the northern part of Germany had been treated by me already in 1885; the first period of the Bronze Age in these countries I examined more especially in 1899.


Heritage ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 1286-1299
Author(s):  
Efthimis Theou ◽  
Katerina Kopaka

At the site called Katalymata, on the island of Gavdos off the south western Cretan shores, the University of Crete is excavating a spacious building complex dating back to the Bronze Age (3rd and mainly 2nd millennia BC). In this paper, we discuss a theatrical performance inspired by this discovery and investigation, which was first presented in situ on the field in 2012. The play was created by young members of the research team, who are themselves both archaeologists and actors. It is based on the accounts in the excavation notebooks of the prehistoric activities revealed in the building’s stratigraphy and enlivened by the memories of the modern islanders of their happenings at home. It also draws upon wider cognitive pieces of relevant knowledge—philosophical, literary and other. This combination was moulded to produce a structured narrative of domestic life on the island through time, and illustrate some specific aspects and overall meanings, material and symbolic, of ‘dwelling’ down the ages. Since its Gavdiot premiere, the work has been adapted for different media to travel in Greece and elsewhere in Europe, as a performative guided tour played in historic houses, as a lecture performance for conferences and art venues, and as an audiovisual installation in museums of contemporary art.


2012 ◽  
Vol 729 ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Klára Pflischl ◽  
Péter Barkóczy ◽  
Árpád Kovács ◽  
Ádám Czibik

Examination of three findings (a hammer axe from the Bronze Age, a bracelet of Aunjetitz, and a pick with neck-disc) from the Bronze Age was performed by the Research Group on Archeometallurgy of the University of Miskolc. The chemical composition, the phase constituents and the microstructure of the findings was examined. Beyond the common analysis of chemical composition features of the microstructure was examined, and data from the production process were collected (metallurgical processes, casting, cold and hot deformation). It was stated that the bracelet is produced by casting; the hammer axe and the pick give the final shapes by hammering after casting. Not only the annealed and hammered microstructure, but the casted primer microstructures were analyzed by application of different etching techniques. The chemical compositions and structures of inclusions were analyzed by SEM-EDS technique. The amount, shape and ordering was examined of the inclusion on micrographs. The aforementioned results gives a detailed study of producing process of the findings which was compared the newest technological knowledge.


Radiocarbon ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 54 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 475-482 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Scirè Calabrisotto ◽  
M E Fedi ◽  
L Caforio ◽  
L Bombardieri

The site area of Erimi-Laonin tou Porakou (Limassol, Cyprus) has been surveyed and systematically excavated since 2007 as a joint research project of the University of Florence and the Department of Antiquities of Cyprus. A focused investigation was dedicated to analyzing funerary evidence from the southern Cemetery (Area E), where 7 single-chamber graves were excavated. The offering goods assemblages from the burials point to a general date ranging from Early to Late Bronze Age I, and draw a sequence of use that is contemporary to the stratigraphic deposits from the top mound Workshop Complex (Area A). During the 2010 field season, charcoal samples from the Workshop Complex and bone samples from the skeleton remains of 2 burials (tombs 228, 230) were opportunely taken for radiocarbon analyses. 14C dating was performed at the AMS-IBA Tandetron accelerator of the INFN-LABEC Laboratory in Florence. This paper will discuss the results of the 14C analyses and compare them with the archaeological evidence in order to outline a chronological sequence for the settlement and cemetery areas at Erimi-Laonin tou Porakou, thus collecting further data on the development and pattern of occupation of the Early to Late Cypriote period in the Kourion area.


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