Results 31 to 40 of about 5,478 (195)

‘Fire Burn and Cauldron Bubble’: Iron Age and Early Roman Cauldrons of Britain and Ireland [PDF]

open access: yes, 2014
‘A man can live to 50 but a cauldron will live to 100’ – Old Kazakh sayingThis paper presents a re-examination of Iron Age and early Roman cauldrons, a little studied but important artefact class that have not been considered as a group since the ...
Anderson   +85 more
core   +2 more sources

Making fun of the standard tongue: Enregisterment, social difference, and Kurdish language humor

open access: yesJournal of Linguistic Anthropology, Volume 35, Issue 3, December 2025.
Abstract This article analyzes how humor around contrasts between standard and non‐standard Northern, i.e., Kurmanji, Kurdish spoken in Turkey contributes to the enregisterment of standard Kurdish, arguing that Kurdish language jokes promote the recognition and, to different degrees, uptake of standardized linguistic repertoires among differently ...
Patrick C. Lewis
wiley   +1 more source

The economy of the La Tène culture communities based on the example of research from Upper Silesia [PDF]

open access: hybrid, 2021
Przemysław Dulęba   +3 more
openalex   +1 more source

Un nouveau regard sur la fibule à plaquettes de La Tène moyenne de la Fond des Berthons à Naintré (Vienne) : un décor de corail [PDF]

open access: yes, 2013
Coral identification in place of ivory. Observations about use of coral during Middle La Tène period.Identification de corail en lieu d'ivoire.
Gomez De Soto, José   +3 more
core   +2 more sources

‘CELTIC BRITAIN’ IN PRE‐ROMAN ARCHAEOLOGY, RECONSIDERED

open access: yesOxford Journal of Archaeology, Volume 44, Issue 4, Page 446-461, November 2025.
Summary For forty years archaeologists have avoided referring to pre‐Roman Britain and its inhabitants as ‘Celtic’ on the grounds that contemporaries never described them as such. This is incorrect. The second‐century BC astronomer Hipparchus quotes Pytheas (c. 320 BC) as having referred to Britons as ‘Keltoi’.
Patrick Sims‐Williams
wiley   +1 more source

Zwierzęce szczątki kostne z wielokulturowego stanowiska archeologicznego w miejscowości Górzec, stan. 13, pow. strzeliński, woj. dolnośląskie, Polska = Animal bone remains from the multicultural archaeological site in Górzec, the site 13, Strzelin county,

open access: yesPrzegląd Archeologiczny, 2014
The paper presents an analysis of bone remains from the settlement in Górzec, site 13, in the Strzelin county. They were described within four distinct chronological horizons:1. the Lusatian culture (the V period of the Bronze Age), 2.
Aleksander Chrószcz   +2 more
doaj  

Children's graves at the Middle La Tène cemetery of Zvonimirovo (Croatia)

open access: yesArheološki Vestnik
The cemetery of Zvonimirovo is currently the only systematically researched cemetery of the La Tène culture in northern Croatia that can be dated to the Middle La Tène period (LT C2).
Marko Dizdar
doaj   +1 more source

New evidence for the Late Iron Age in the Posočje region, Slovenia [PDF]

open access: yesStudia Hercynia, 2023
Several archaeological sites from the Late Iron Age have recently been discovered in Posočje, a region along the upper and middle reaches of the River Soča/Isonzo (NW Slovenija, NE fringes of Italy), which compel us to re -examine the Latenisation of the
Boštjan Laharnar
doaj  

Archaeological site of Bolnica in Paraćin and its importance for the prehistory of the Central Morava Region: A contribution in chronology and horizontal and vertical stratigraphy [PDF]

open access: yesStarinar, 2019
The paper presents the horizontal and vertical stratigraphy of the site of Bolnica in Paraćin, based on both earlier and the latest archaeological excavations and the material which had been collected for decades by the Hometown Museum in ...
Filipović Vojislav M.   +2 more
doaj   +1 more source

Aux origines gauloises de Tours (Indre-et-Loire) : état des connaissances

open access: yesGallia, 2022
Tours/Caesarodunum (Indre-et-Loire) was first mentioned as the capital of the city of the Turones in the early 2nd c. AD by Ptolemy. It benefitted from the privilege of being a free city during the Early Roman Empire, subsequently becoming a chief town ...
Sandrine Linger-Riquier
doaj   +1 more source

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