TY - GEN N1 - 25 cm M3 - Text J2 - Sprawozdania Archeologiczne 62 (2010) PY - 2010 EP - 592 KW - archaeology A1 - Taras, Halina A1 - Taras, Wojciech A2 - Berej, Joanna. Tł. PB - Instytut Archeolgoii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk VL - 62 CY - Kraków SP - 581 T1 - Wykład prawa dla archeologów [Lecture in Law for Archaeologists] Kamil Zeidler, Maciej Trzciński.Wolters Kluwer Polska, Warszawa 2009 : [recenzja] UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/55454 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 29 cm N2 - The aim of this article is not to discuss the paradigms or the methods of the ‘free’ and the ‘Marxist’ archaeology in the post World War II period in Poland. The literature about this is quite abundant, and I would like to tell another story than the scientific side of Polish archaeology during the communist domination. I remember the reality of those fifteen years in the daily activity of young Polish archaeologists in the late ’70s and ’80s of the XX century, and I would like to give here my personal point of view about this time L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/130411/PDF/WA308_103528_Polish-Archaeology_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Between History and Archaeology : papers in honour of Jacek Lech PY - 2018 EP - 490 KW - archaeology KW - political systems KW - Poland A1 - Boguszewski, Andrzej PB - Archaeopress Archaeology CY - Oxford; England T1 - Polish Archaeology Under Communism. The Trial of Massive Corruption of Clever Minds SP - 487 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/130411 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/62881/PDF/WA308_82386_P331_Kazimierz-Tarczynski_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Kwartalnik Historii Kultury Materialnej R. 64 Nr 3 PY - 2016 IS - 3 EP - 362 KW - Tarczyński Kazimierz KW - history of miusic KW - history of archaeology KW - campanology A1 - Stawiarska, Teresa A2 - Szymańska, Izabela. Tł. PB - Instytut Archeolgoii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk VL - 64 CY - Warszawa SP - 339 T1 - Kazimierz Tarczyński – budowniczy fortepianów, starożytnik (1802-1873) UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/62881 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 29 cm N2 - The interest in striped flint from the Vistula River basin in prehistoric times is associated with articles published by Georg Wilke and Gustaf Kossinna. The works of these German prehistorians turned the attention of Stefan Krukowski to this raw material. In July 1922, Jan Samsonowicz, a geologist from Warsaw, discovered a Neolithic flint mine in the village of Krzemionki, at the time in Opatów district (central Poland). The first excavations of the mine were carried out by Józef Żurowski in 1925. In 1928 the State Archaeological Museum in Warsaw (PMA) was formed, the main archaeological institution in Poland. On the part of the Museum, its curator S. Krukowski took on the job of creating the Krzemionki reserve. He was supported by Roman Jakimowicz, the director of PMA. In the spring of 1928 Krukowski began excavations of the Neolithic mine shafts in Krzemionki. The first period of excavations was summed up in his work: Krzemionki Opatowskie (Krukowski 1939). The book played an important role in the development of the archaeology of prehistoric flint mining in Poland L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/130406/PDF/WA308_103464_Striped-Flint_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Between History and Archaeology : papers in honour of Jacek Lech PY - 2018 EP - 433 A1 - Piotrowska, Danuta A2 - Petrus-Zagroba, Alicja. Tł. PB - Archaeopress Archaeology CY - Oxford; England SP - 427 T1 - Striped Flint and the Krzemionki Opatowskie Mine, Poland. The Beginnings UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/130406 ER - TY - GEN N1 - 25 cm L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/49570/PDF/WA308_P321_67311_Oblicza-wspolczesnej_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Archeologia Polski T. 57 Z. 1-2 (2012) PY - 2012 IS - 1-2 EP - 293 KW - marxism KW - paradigms KW - sociology of archaeology KW - anthropology KW - culture-historical archaeology KW - politics KW - nationalism KW - "Great Tradition" KW - "Great Divide" A1 - Barford, Paul M. A1 - Tabaczyński, Stanisław (1930– ) PB - Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii PAN VL - 57 CY - Warszawa SP - 261 T1 - Oblicza współczesnej archeologii w ujęciu porównawczym. Na marginesie pracy Comparative archaeologies: a sociological view of the science of the past, Ludomir R. Lozny red., New York 2011 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/49570 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - The Archaeological Museum of the Polish Academy of Learning was one of the oldest and richest archaeological museums in Poland. The Second World War interrupted the way it had been operating over the years. In September 1939, the German and Russian armies entered the territory of Poland. After more than a month of fighting, in October 1939, the part of the occupied Polish territory that was not incorporated into the German Reich and the Soviet Union became a separate administrative unit, the Generalgouvernement für die besetzten polnischen Gebiet, with Cracow as its capital. Already in the first months of the occupation, Germany forbade the activities of the Polish Academy of Learning and the Jagiellonian University. In November 1939, they carried out the so-called SonderaktionbKrakau – the arrest of researchers of several Cracow academic institutions. After the liquidation of the Polish Academy of Learning, the Archaeological Museum received the name Landesmuseum für Vorgeschichte. From that time, until the liberation of Cracow in January 1945, the Museum was subordinate to the educational authorities of the Krakau district, one of the four districts of the Generalgouvernement. The Archaeological Museum entered the structure of the Faculty of Knowledge and Science (Abteilung Wissenschaft und Unterricht) of the occupying powers. Museum work was continued in the facility throughout the War, and Museum staff also conducted excavations, they also secretly carried out scientific and didactic work, even though it was officially forbidden. The museum did not suffer directly during the War and, unlike other archaeological museums in Poland, did not suffer great losses. Its collections – thanks to happy coincidences and the care of the employees – have been preserved almost entirely. L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/117542/PDF/WA308_145792_P357_The-Archaeological_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 50: 2012 (2019) PY - 2019 EP - 84 KW - the World War II KW - the Archaeological Museum of the Polish Academy of Learning KW - Cracow A1 - Woźny, Marzena PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 50 CY - Warszawa SP - 63 T1 - The Archaeological Museum of the Polish Academy of Learning in Cracow During the Second World War UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/117542 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 29 cm N2 - The development of archaeology in 19th-century Europe resulted in more and more precise archaeological maps comprising the data that researchers had gathered in their studies and excavations. In the mid 19th century, Polish scholars linked to the Cracow Learned Society proposed a new method of improving the archaeological documentation, namely devising a common system of cartographic symbols. The project, presented to the European forum of anthropologists and archaeologists, aroused much interest, was discussed and subsequently endorsed as one of the not so many issues that the international congresses of anthropology and archaeology settled quickly and explicitly. The project, first reported to the congresses by Count Aleksander Przezdziecki, was completed after his death by Ernest Chantre from France. The very idea and its elaboration, however, came from the Polish environment and were intended to overcome the borders and particularisms of 19th-century Europe with the use of a common scientific language L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/130401/PDF/WA308_103386_Towards-Common_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Between History and Archaeology : papers in honour of Jacek Lech PY - 2018 EP - 371 KW - archaeological maps KW - International Congresses of Anthropology and Prehistoric Archaeology KW - 19th century KW - Cracow A1 - Woźny, Marzena A2 - Skucińska, Anna. Tł. PB - Archaeopress Archaeology CY - Oxford; England SP - 363 T1 - Towards a Common Language: the Plan to Standardise Symbols on Archaeological Maps in 19th-century Europe UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/130401 ER - TY - GEN N1 - 29 cm N2 - The objective of this article is to discuss the role of archaeology in the search for Polish national roots. Questions regarding who we are, where the course of our history begins, have been important already during the Middle Ages. For several centuries, so-called ethnogenetic legends satisfied this curiosity. It was not until 18th century’s ‘intellectual upheaval’ and subsequent partitions of Poland that a significant change in the mentality of Polish people occurred and a new theory of the origins of our nation was formed – the Slavic, what resulted in the development of archaeology, ethnography, history of Middle Ages and Slavic researches in general. After World War II, due to the need for commemorating the 1000-year existence of Poland, the years following 1945 witnessed a return to the search for the roots of Polish national identity. This time, the beginnings of our nation’s history were marked by the year 966, the date of Mieszko I’s baptism, the first historical Polish ruler L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/130400/PDF/WA308_103366_From-the-History_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Between History and Archaeology : papers in honour of Jacek Lech PY - 2018 EP - 361 KW - history of Polish archaeology KW - the search for Polish national roots KW - the Slavic past KW - the thousand years of the Polish state A1 - Szczerba, Adrianna PB - Archaeopress Archaeology CY - Oxford; England T1 - From the History of Polish Archaeology. In the Search for the Beginnings of Polish Nation and Country SP - 355 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/130400 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 29 cm N2 - The course, character and conditions of the excavations conducted in 1948-1966 in Pomerania as part of the program research on the origins of the Polish State were discussed in the paper. Their effects and significance for the development of archaeology in this region of Poland were evaluated. L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/63723/PDF/WA308_83433_PIII149_Badania-milenijne-na_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Przegląd Archeologiczny T. 65 (2017) PY - 2017 EP - 131 KW - history of archaeology KW - Pomerania KW - millennial studies A1 - Rębkowski, Marian PB - Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk PB - Ośrodek Badań nad Kulturą Późnego Antyku i Wczesnego Średniowiecza VL - 65 CY - Wrocław SP - 117 T1 - Millennial studies in Pomerania. Course, significance, effects UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/63723 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - Zdzisław A. Rajewski was one of a group of the most outstanding twentieth century Polish archaeologists. He was a student of Professor J. Kostrzewski and his assistant in organising the 1934–1939 archaeological excavation of the Early Iron Age fortified lake village of the Lusatian Culture in Biskupin. After the Second World War, Z.A. Rajewski continued to excavate at Biskupin and, starting from 1949, was also actively involved in running the national Millennium programme of research on the origins of the Polish statehood. For a quarter of a century (1949–1974), Rajewski was Director of the State Archaeological Museum in Warsaw. Next to the archaeology of Biskupin and its micro-region, his other research interests included prehistoric and early medieval symbolic culture, battlefield archaeology, innovative methods of research and museum sciences. L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/117541/PDF/WA308_145785_P357_A-Portrait-of-Profes_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 50: 2012 (2019) PY - 2019 EP - 62 KW - Zdzisław A. Rajewski (1907–1974) KW - history of archaeology KW - archaeology of Poland KW - archaeology of Biskupin KW - State Archaeological Museum in Warsaw A1 - Brzeziński, Wojciech A1 - Piotrowska, Danuta PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 50 CY - Warszawa SP - 27 T1 - A Portrait of Professor Zdzisław A. Rajewski (1907–1974), Scholar of Many Talents UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/117541 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 25 cm N2 - Contemporary archaeologies are complex and diverse. It was New Archaeology which clearly showed the crucial role of theory in archaeological research (e.g. Binford 1962). Although post-processual archaeologists have been opposed to many ideas of New Archaeology, they have never questioned the need of theories in archaeology (e.g. Thomas 1996; Tilley 1997; Sørenson 2000). However, there are fields of archaeology which do not seem to be closely enough touched by theory. Without any doubt, one of them is the history of archaeological thought (but see Gillberg 2001; Gustafsson 2001; Jensen 2002). When one compares books which deal with the history of archaeology, one can discover that they are structured in a very similar way (e.g. Abramowicz 1991; Baudou 2004; Trigger 2006). In accordance with it, one sees chronological and linear way of writing about the history of archaeology, following hand in hand with cause and effect thinking. Surprisingly, the very same observation concerns theoreticians of archaeology too (Schnapp 1996; Shanks 1996; Thomas 1996; 2004). They are eager to present new ways of doing archaeology, always ready to criticise previous archaeologies, at any moment tempted to theorise on a particular topic. Nonetheless, the history of archaeology is unproblematic, something what resists theoretical reflection. That is why the goal of this paper is to discuss this allegedly unproblematic understanding of the history of archaeology L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/54773/PDF/WA308_74911_P244_Against-Gandalf-the_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Sprawozdania Archeologiczne 66 (2014) PY - 2014 EP - 447 KW - history of archaeology KW - postprocessual archaeologies KW - context KW - deep understanding KW - surface KW - detective stories KW - popular culture A1 - Kobiałka Dawid PB - Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk VL - 66 CY - Kraków SP - 417 T1 - Against Gandalf the Grey: towards a sherlockian reading of the history of archaeological thought = Przeciwko Gandalfowi Szaremu: w stronę sherlockowskiej lektury historii archeologii UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/54773 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - Analysis of the daily newspapers published in Poland in the post-War period allows to contribute in an objective way to the ongoing debate on the role which archaeology played in the politics in the period of Communist government. Local newspapers from Silesia and Lubusz Land as well as the central daily paper of the Central Committee of the Communist Party were analyzed for the period before 1970 to find out if archaeology and history were used in an anti-German propaganda and in justification of the Polish rights to the Western Territories regained after the World War II M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 43 (2005) PY - 2005 EP - 124 KW - Recovered Territories KW - Silesia KW - Lubusz Land KW - Polish-German relations KW - propaganda KW - archaeology KW - daily press A1 - Kobyliński, Zbigniew A1 - Rutkowska, Grażyna (1956–2019) A2 - Zych, Iwona. Tł. PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 43 CY - Warszawa SP - 51 T1 - Propagandist use of history and archaeology in justification of Polish rights to the “Recovered Territories” after World War II UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77267 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 25 cm N2 - 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 L1 - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/Content/61213/PDF/WA308_80407_PIII368_The-adze-heads-from_I.pdf M3 - Text J2 - Sprawozdania Archeologiczne 68 (2016) PY - 2016 EP - 63 KW - Plemięta KW - Chełmno county KW - Alpine jades KW - Bégude type adze-head KW - the Funnel Beaker culture A1 - Pétrequin, Pierre A1 - Rzepecki, Seweryn A2 - Sheridan, Alison - Tł. PB - Instytut Archeolgoii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk VL - 68 CY - Kraków SP - 39 T1 - The adze-heads from Plemięta, Grudziądz district (Poland): Alpine jades, Armorican products and very long-distance exchanges UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/edition/61213 ER -