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EN
The contribution presents first brief information about the finds of glass excavated during archaeological research of the Zobor monastery. The glass finds from the Benedictine monastery of St. Hyppolitus (the 11th-15th cent.) have been preserved only in fragments of window targets, which were usually found in secondary positions; collection of almost 30 glass vessels were revealed at a monk’s abode cellar of the Camaldulian St. Joseph’s monastery (1695-1782). Some glass vessels were made in Italy, from where several monks came after the monastery had been finished in 1695. A glass, most probably early-medieval bead found in a monk’s abode Baroque masonry is a curious find.
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RÍMSKE SKLO Z GERMÁNSKEHO SÍDLISKA V ŠALI-VEČI

88%
EN
During the rescue archaeological excavation in Šaľa-Veča in 2002 a settlement from Roman Period has been discovered. On the basis of the current analysis of excavated material it can be dated between the second half of the 2nd century AD and the first half of the 3rd century AD. In this paper an elementary interpretation of 27 glass artefacts will be discussed, of which 15 are fragments of glass vessels, another 11 are fragments of jewellery (beads) and one is a glass bracelet. A broad typological variety has been indicated by the analysis, showing that the vessels here found were not manufactured only in adjacent Pannonia, but also in more distant manufactories of Rhineland. The beads, the most numerous part of the jewellery, were of various shape, colour and size. The glass bracelet is rather a rare find in Slovakia, having only four parallels in other sites from Roman times.
Študijné zvesti
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2020
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vol. 67
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issue 1
77 - 102
EN
Current publication is devoted to the injection of two same-type glass bowls from Cherniakhiv culture burial ground into the circle of scientific knowledge. Similar glass bowls are came from graves 110 and 211 on Vojtenki 1 burial ground (Eastern Ukraine). During the research, presumable closest analogies to them were found. These analogies are vessels from Weklice, Poland (burial 82) and Danceni, Republic Moldova (burial 169). T. Stawiarska was identified them as a “Weklice” type. Distinctive and peculiar morphological features of each of the bowls indicate that the Weklice type vessels are unlikely to have a common origin. However, despite these differences, similar shape, the same techniques for processing a rim and a similar ornament composition allow us to rank these bowls to type of product. Some researchers have associated “hot decoration” way of glassware production with the provincial-Roman glass working technology. That is why, it could be assumed, that Weklice type glass bowls have provincial-Roman origin. The evolution of the glassware forms in Roman world allows us to establish the time of their production. It is limited to the period between the second third of the 3rd century – the end of 3rd/beginning of 4th centuries. Lower chronological frame corresponds to the time of appearance of such products in Barbaricum, and the upper one to the time of disappearance of glassware with fire-rounded rim in a number of border provinces of the Empire. Nevertheless, the dating of burials 110 and 211 from Vojtenki 1, shows that such products continue to exist in Barbaricum for a rather long time and fall into complexes at least at chronological stage C3. At the Voitenki 1 burial ground, such bowls are found only in high or special social status female graves. Moreover, the same type of vessel appears in burials with different burial rite as a grave good.
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