Egy különleges kemence nyomai Orosháza határában

The site is situated north of the town of Orosháza, between the roads leading to Nagyszénás and Gádoros. It was discovered between the autumn of 1997 and summer of 1998 during the second archaeological excavation prior to building of road 47. The excavation was led by Imre Szatmári who wrote a short...

Teljes leírás

Elmentve itt :
Bibliográfiai részletek
Szerző: Lukács Nikoletta
Testületi szerző: Az Alföld a 9. században - Új eredmények (2.) (2017) (Szeged)
Dokumentumtípus: Könyv része
Megjelent: 2017
Sorozat:Monográfiák a Szegedi Tudományegyetem Régészeti Tanszékéről
Az Alföld a 9. században II.
Kulcsszavak:Régészet - avarok - Kárpát-medence - 7-10. sz., Kárpát-medence népei - 7-10. sz.
Tárgyszavak:
Online Access:http://acta.bibl.u-szeged.hu/62690
Leíró adatok
Tartalmi kivonat:The site is situated north of the town of Orosháza, between the roads leading to Nagyszénás and Gádoros. It was discovered between the autumn of 1997 and summer of 1998 during the second archaeological excavation prior to building of road 47. The excavation was led by Imre Szatmári who wrote a short report on the site in 2001. According to his estimate, four houses, an exterior furnace and two ditch networks are dated to the 8th–9th century. Five houses and a workshop can, probably, come be from the 9th century, and eight houses, three farm buildings, four pits, ten workshops and eight ditches can be dated to the 11th century. Further research has been done by myself, I have already partly reported upon it. In this study I introduce a unique phenomenon from the 9th century which can provide new information regarding furnaces from the Great Hungarian Plain. The singularity of the furnace found in House 107 lays in the three large undamaged pots situated in the wall of the furnace, so the structure of the furnace is unsuitable for ironwork. However, from the presence of iron slag we can conclude to ironwork at the unexplored part of the site. Although only few findings connected to ironwork have been made in the south of the Great Hungarian Plain, I assume, the area might be suitable for blooms-ironwork because the necessarily basic commodity can easily be found in the valley of river Maros. Beside the areas well-known for ironwork, like Western and Northeastern Hungary (Borsod), new data show that ironwork existed at the south of the Great Hungarian Plain. So, in my opinion, more attention should be given to the collection and preservation of such archaeological evidence.
Terjedelem/Fizikai jellemzők:165-179
ISBN:978-963-306-555-6
ISSN:2062-9877