Results 161 to 170 of about 257,355 (213)
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The Fujinoki Tomb and Its Grave-Goods
Monumenta Nipponica, 1987La tombe du Fujinoki, a Ikaruga (prefecture de Nara), fut ouverte en 1985 et livra un spectaculaire etalage de harnachements du VIe s. Les sources litteraires, la classant dans les tombes en ''trou de serrure'', l'attribuent a l'empereur Sushun (mort en 592). Description de la tombe | comparaison des mesures avec celles d'autres tombes.
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Desk Based Assessment at The Grave Goods Project
2021The 'Grave Goods' project was undertaken between July and September 2020. The aim of the project was to improve the care of mortuary contexts in England through a better understanding of the unique threats posed by the private ownership of grave goods.
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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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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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One hoof in the grave? Animal remains as inhumation grave goods in early medieval eastern England
Archaeological Journal, 2021Animal remains placed into inhumation graves in 5th-7th century England have been recorded for many years, but for reasons related both to the development of the discipline and the sparse nature of...
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Imported Grave Goods and the Early Anglo-Saxon Economy
Medieval Archaeology, 1988A 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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Grave goods in early medieval burials: messages and meanings
Mortality, 2014AbstractObjects 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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Horizontal gene transfer in osmotrophs: playing with public goods
Nature Reviews Microbiology, 2013Thomas A Richards
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