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EN
The problems of imports from the Funnel Beaker culture identified in the environment of the Brynzeny group of the Tripolye culture, repeatedly described in the literature (V.S. Titov, V.I. Markevič 1974; T. Movša 1985; M. Videiko 2000, 2001), is one of the major issues necessary to discuss in the context of relationships between the Funnel Beaker culture and Tripolye culture.
EN
The lack of a unified system of description of vessels types of the Funnel Beaker culture in Lower Silesia means that heterogeneous terminology prevents precise classification of ceramic forms found at sites of the culture. The paper presents a proposition of a classification of vessels types of the Funnel Beaker culture developed on the basis of analyses of artefacts from Lower Silesian sites. It has been constructed in a way that enables its complement in case of new discoveries, not falling within the present scope.
EN
Discovered in the 19th century, the hoard from Plemięta (Chełmno county, Poland) consisted of three polished adze-heads, of which two are in the Museum in Grudziądz. Until now, this hoard had been assumed to be linked to Danubian farming communities. A petrographic approach coupled with an in-depth, Europe-wide typological study allows us to rethink this cultural attribution. In fact, the Plemięta adze-heads had very probably been made in the Armorican massif (France), produced by specialists directly influenced by the standards of the earliest adze-heads of Alpine jades from Mont Viso in the Italian Alps. This proposition, which is supported by other examples of adze- and axeheads that had probably been imported into southern Scandinavia from France, re-invigorates the hypothesis that there had been western European influences on communities of the Eastern TRB Group, pertaining to the circulation of ‘object-signs’ and ideas over distances exceeding 1500 km as the crow flies.
EN
Abstract: The article is a summary of previous findings concerning the settlement of the Funnel Beaker culture on Wolin island. There is comprehensively characterized the palaeoenvironment of the region in question and these findings were used to determine the settlement preferences of the Funnel Beaker culture communities. The analysis of pottery material, mainly decoration motifs, allowed to establish that its majority should be associated with Wiórek phase, with a very modest share of the northern component (Gingst group).
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