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Imported Grave Goods and the Early Anglo-Saxon Economy

Medieval Archaeology, 1988
A spatial analysis of the incidence of certain imported artefacts demonstrates a distinction between artefacts found in Kent and those occurring elsewhere; a number of likely different exchange mechanisms are examined which can also be correlated with documentarv evidence.
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4 Grave Good Typology

2014
This chapter presents a typology of the grave goods found in the Banat and dated between the 10th and the 14th century. It follows the general lines of the typology published in 2008, modified and improved on the basis of new archaeological finds. Grave goods were made by Jozsef Hampel, who dealt with the Carpathian Basin in its entirety.
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Grave goods in early medieval burials: messages and meanings

Mortality, 2014
AbstractObjects in graves have been a traditional focus of burial archaeology. Conventional interpretations of their meanings revolved around religion (equipment for the hereafter, Charon’s Penny), legal concepts (inalienable possessions) and social structure (status display, ostentatious destruction of wealth). An interdisciplinary perspective drawing
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Hoards, grave goods, jewellery

2015
This monograph examines one specific hoard horizon, which is connected to the Mongol invasion of Hungary (1241-42). With this catastrophic event, the historical context is both well-known and much discussed by contemporaries and modern scholars. This opportunity to examine material connected to a sole event, but across a broad spectrum of geographical ...
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Grave Goods: Essays of a Peculiar Nature

Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment, 2002
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