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A United Europe of Things. Portable material culture across medieval Europe

  1. 1.
    SYSNO ASEP0581681
    Document TypeM - Monograph Chapter
    R&D Document TypeMonograph Chapter
    TitleIntroduction
    Author(s) Sawicki, Jakub (ARU-G) SAI, ORCID
    Lewis, M. (GB)
    Vargha, M. (AT)
    Number of authors3
    Source TitleA United Europe of Things. Portable material culture across medieval Europe. - Cham : Springer, 2024 / Sawicki J. ; Lewis M. ; Vargha M. - ISBN 978-3-031-48335-6
    Pagess. 1-8
    Number of pages8 s.
    Number of pages135
    Publication formPrint - P
    Languageeng - English
    CountryCH - Switzerland
    Keywordspan-European context
    Subject RIVAC - Archeology, Anthropology, Ethnology
    OECD categoryArchaeology
    Institutional supportARU-G - RVO:67985912
    DOI10.1007/978-3-031-48336-3_1
    AnnotationThis book, as well as the sessions organised at the Annual Meetings of the European Association of Archaeologists (EAA) that preceded it (see Preface), are inspired by the phenomenon that aspects of medieval material culture from across Europe are linked by a certain uniformity. Whilst the period between AD 1000 and 1550 is considered here, this homogeneity of material culture is most apparent from the thirteenth century onwards. Prior to Stefan Krabath’s monumental work of 2001, “Die hoch- und spätmittelalterlichen Buntmetallfunde nördlich der Alpen” (High and late Medieval non-ferrous metal finds north of Alps), few studies had attempted to analyse small finds (specifically non-ferrous metal objects) from a pan-European perspective. More than twenty years on, we are in a very different place, especially because of the many thousands of new finds that have come to light, largely due to metal-detecting. As a result, there is a ‘renaissance’ in the study of archaeological small finds, especially in terms of understanding the relationships between find types, their distribution and what they can tell us about past landscapes. Even so, scholarly attitudes towards such finds are inconsistent across Europe, moulded by modern thinking, boundaries created by language and culture, as well as diverse research traditions.
    WorkplaceInstitute of Archaeology (Prague)
    ContactLada Šlesingerová, slesingerova@arup.cas.cz, Tel.: 257 014 412
    Year of Publishing2025
    Electronic addresshttps://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-031-48336-3_1
Number of the records: 1  

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