Gál, Erika and Bondár, Mária (2022) Kutyaszemfog-díszek egy különleges késő rézkori sírból. A Kaposvári Rippl-Rónai Múzeum Közleményei, 8. pp. 87-98. ISSN 2631-0376
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Abstract
Grave 367 of the Balatonlelle-Rádpuszta-Templom mellett cemetery dating from the classical period of the Baden culture contained the burial of an adult woman interred according to an unusual rite involving the placement of a child’s skull under the head. The sole grave goods from this burial were three and ten fragmented drilled dog canines. Roughly one-half of the canines lays by the feet of the deceased. The worn surface of the canines and the damaged perforations indicate that they had been worn for a long time, while their position in the grave would suggest that some had once adorned the lower part or hemline of a longer garment. The Hungarian and Central European analogies dating from a few centuries later raise the possibility that woman laid to rest at Balatonlelle as well as the dogs providing the canines used for the adornment, a wholly unique practice in the Carpathian Basin during the fourth millennium BC, were not of local, but of eastern origin
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | drilled dog canines, ornament, grave donation, Baden culture, Carpathian Basin |
Subjects: | C Auxiliary Sciences of History / történeti segédtudományok > CC Archaeology / régészet |
Depositing User: | Bégányi Ilona |
Date Deposited: | 30 Nov 2022 08:10 |
Last Modified: | 30 Nov 2022 08:10 |
URI: | http://real.mtak.hu/id/eprint/154109 |
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