The history of Sieciechów and located monuments on its area for over 140 years are the subject of intensive research by historians, architectural historians and archaeologists. Particular attention is drawn primarily researchers station called Mountain village mayors – a small (now almost totally destroyed) hill situated west of the center of today’s settlement, considered by some researchers for the location of the well-known from written sources castrum Sieciech. This article discusses how far unpublished materials relating to this position, which is a collection of 399 pieces of pottery derived from within two archaeological sites located in the southern part Wójtowa Mountains. Analysis of these artifakts has allowed the protrusion of a new and different about the current interpretation of the functional position. Now, as a result of the analysis of these materials, and correlating the information obtained in this way with the data on the stratigraphy of the hill, the view of past defensive been denied a Wójtowa Mountains. In the light of the development of this material in position to function only of an open settlement, and the chronology based on the analysis of the ceramic material, can be determined by the age XIII, XIV or early age. Presumably, discussed the settlement was destroyed by the Tartar invasion.
The text introduces the phenomenon of the so-called manga fanzines, i.e. independent, self-published magazines devoted to the issue of Japanese pop culture, created by people fascinated by this topic and addressed to people who share this interest. The author of the article focuses on the discussion of the oldest Polish magazines of this type, introduced into circulation within the subcultural in the years 1995–1997 and presents their bibliological and historical characteristics. The paper discusses as many as ten Polish manga fanzines, including the Krakow fanzine "Kawaii", the oldest Polish magazine of this type.
PL
Tekst przybliża zjawisko tzw. fanzinów mangowych, czyli niezależnych, wydawanych własnym sumptem czasopism poświęconych zagadnieniu popkultury japońskiej, tworzonych przez osoby zafascynowane tym tematem i skierowanych do ludzi podzielających to zainteresowanie. Autor artykułu skupia się na omówieniu najstarszych polskich magazynów tego typu, wprowadzonych do obiegu wewnątrz subkulturowego w latach 1995–1997 i prezentuje ich charakterystyki bibliologiczno-historyczne. W pracy omówiono aż dziesięć polskich fanzinów mangowych, w tym krakowski fanzin „Kawaii”, czyli najstarsze rodzime czasopismo tego typu.
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