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PL
From the Germanic site at Zohor (Malacky District) come Roman and Germanic bracelets, pins, needles and a gold bracelet from princely grave 5/1957. Some of the finds come from settlement features and graves and part from the survey. The bracelets were made of silver, bronze and gold, the pins and needles from bronze and bone. The Germanic artefacts were probably produced in Zohor and nearby Germanic settlements, as evidenced by sporadic finds of semi-finished products and manufacturing features in the area.
EN
Skeletal graves from the north regionof the Middle Danube are quite rare, because the cremation burials significantly predominated. In Zohor, beside richly equipped princely skeletal graves, also one isolated female skeletal grave of a 50 – 60 years old woman was excavated. It was found in the settlement area from the 1st c. AD. The equipment of the grave was rather poor than rich: two brooches Almgren 68, a small iron knife, bronze needle und two small ceramic vessels. The median of the absolute 14C dating was about 40 AD.
EN
From the large Germanic settlement of Kostolište, about 40 km north of Carnuntum, comes Germanic und Roman pottery, terra sigillata, coins, brooches, fragments of bronze vessels and small finds. It comes from here also the part of a Roman jug with foot handle, representing a military sandal (caliga). The find is the first evidence of this type north of the middle Danube. Two production centres are postulated for the jugs with foot handle between Gallia Belgica and Germania inferior as well as in Pannonia during the 2 nd and the first half of the 3 rd century AD. The decorative attaches of the jugs show either bare or shoed feet, whose symbolic content and possible interpretations are discussed. In the article is presented also an Aureus from Vespasianus for Titus, only the third documented aureus from the Záhorie region and roman and Germanic bronze brooches from the 1.–3. centuries AD.
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