TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 47 (2009-2011) PY - 2011 EP - 261 KW - archeologia -- czasopisma A1 - Piotrowska, Danuta A1 - Piotrowski, Wojciech PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 47 CY - Warszawa T1 - The International Symposium: The History of Archaeology and Archaeological Thought in the 20th Century, dedicated to Grahame Clark on the 100th anniversary of his birth and 50th anniversary of the Polish edition of G. Clark’s Prehistoric Europe: the economic basis, Biskupin, 23rd–25th May 2007 SP - 243 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77106 ER - TY - GEN N1 - 24 cm M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 46 (2008) PY - 2008 EP - 342 KW - archeologia -- czasopisma A1 - Nebelsick, Louis Daniel PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 46 CY - Warszawa T1 - Spuren und Botschaften: Interpretationen materieller Kultur. Edited by Ulrich Veit, Tobias L. Kienlin, Christoph Kümmel and Sascha Schmid, Tübinger Archäologische Taschenbücher, vol 4, Münster-New York – München – Berlin 2003 : [recenzja] SP - 333 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77221 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - Objects of historical value on museum display and in storage are influenced by the surrounding environment which is called a microclimate. The conservation process of objects in museums can be effected in two ways: passive conservation which is concerned with controlling the surrounding parameters and active conservation which focuses on individual objects. In many museums the microclimate is not automatically controlled, resulting in considerable temperature gradients as well as changes in humidity. This paper focuses upon the impact that changes in humidity have upon museum exhibits. Measurements were carried out using dataloggers and thermovision camera. Data were collected at different times of the day and seasons of the year, as well as before and after museum visiting hours M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 46 (2008) PY - 2008 EP - 332 KW - museum conditions KW - temperature gradient KW - relative humidity KW - glass corrosion KW - weathering process KW - thermovision camera A1 - Greiner-Wronowa, Elżbieta A1 - Pusoska, Anna A1 - Wrona, Jarosław PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 46 CY - Warszawa SP - 317 T1 - Lighting influence on heat parameter changes in museum cabinets UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77220 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - The article presents the main trends of the laboratory investigations on ancient pottery in Polish archaeology and the most important moments in history of this trend of investigations in the 20th century. The article contains bibliography of books and papers on the subject of ceramological archaeometry published by Polish authors M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 46 (2008) PY - 2008 EP - 121 KW - Polish archaeology KW - history of archaeology KW - ceramology KW - archaeometry A1 - Kobylińska, Urszula PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 46 CY - Warszawa SP - 89 T1 - Ceramological archaeometry in Poland: the outline of history and problems UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77193 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - Colourless glass vessels (243 objects) from Colchester are among the best studied collections. The glasses represent four groups of tableware. This paper interprets the results of physico-chemical analyses of the glass of the Colchester finds carried out by bivariant analysis and by the author’s own method (Stawiarska 1993, 2005). A comparison with Romano-British glasses from the rest of Europe and the Near East justifies the assumption that glass with high-alkaline recipes, which makes up more than 80% of the Colchester collection, was considerably different from other common Roman glass. It is likely to have originated from highly-developed workshops producing easily melting luxury glass. A comparison of the chemical features of glass from vessels from all of the groups proves that it was connected with the same manufacturing tradition of luxury glass (as regards using large amounts of alkalis and relatively pure sand, and decolouring only with antimony). The cast bowls and facet-cut beakers are more likely to have been imports from Eastern or perhaps Italian workshops. Vessels from group III were made probably and from group IV certainly in the West, the latter especially in the Rhineland (mainly Cologne) M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 45 (2007) PY - 2007 EP - 61 KW - Romano-British glass vessels KW - colourless glass KW - chemical analyses KW - interpretation of chemical composition A1 - Stawiarska, Teresa PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 45 CY - Warszawa SP - 41 T1 - Colourless Romano-British vessel glass from the technological point of view UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77241 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. ; 24 cm M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 47 (2009-2011) PY - 2011 EP - 279 KW - archeologia -- czasopisma A1 - Lech, Jacek (1946– ) PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 47 CY - Warszawa T1 - Peter Josef (Sejuf ) Felder (1928–2009). A commemoration SP - 271 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77140 ER - TY - GEN N1 - 24 cm N2 - Sporadic attempts to incorporate pottery analysis into the wider field of archaeological inquiry in the German-speaking world can be traced back into the 19th century. Systematic archaeo-ceramology, however, has its origins in the interwar years. The very different biographies of the protagonists involved reflect the troubled times they lived in. They include both members of the nazi establishment as well as victims of nazi persecution. Post-war patterns of interest in and deployment of ceramological research up to this day are clearly linked to the seminal implementation of archaeo-ceramology in the Third Reich but also to early to mid-20th century debates about interpretative strategies, particularly in prehistoric archaeology. These debates, which pitted xenophobic “volkish” ideologies against liberal historistic visions, would have a decisive impact on the formation of the cultural-historical paradigm, which has formed the backdrop to decisions whether or not to incorporate archaeo-ceramology in interdisciplinary research projects to this day. The emergence of large-scale systematic ceramological inquiry in the 1970s can be linked to the initiatives of a small circle of energetic scientists, the post-war patriarchs. Depending on their interests, as well as the regional and academic context in which their work was embedded, idiosyncratic focuses in methodology and chronological focus emerged, which would characterize German-speaking archaeo-ceramology until the close of the millennium. This paper serves as an introduction to a comprehensive annotated bibliography of German-speaking archaeological ceramology from the 19th century to modern times, which is published on the enclosed CD-ROM at the end of this volume M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 46 (2008) PY - 2008 EP - 88 KW - archaeo-ceramology KW - Germany KW - Austria KW - Switzerland KW - history of archaeology KW - regional development KW - impact of ideology A1 - Nebelsick, Louis D. PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 46 CY - Warszawa SP - 29 T1 - More than meets the eye: contributions to analytical archaeo-ceramology from German-speaking Europe between 1880 and 2000 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77190 ER - TY - GEN PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences N1 - 24 cm M3 - Text VL - 45 CY - Warszawa J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 45 (2007) PY - 2007 EP - 21 KW - archeologia -- czasopisma T1 - Bibliography of Prof. Maria Dekówna SP - 15 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77236 ER - TY - GEN PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences N1 - 24 cm M3 - Text VL - 47 CY - Warszawa J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 47 (2009-2011) PY - 2011 EP - 8 KW - archeologia -- czasopisma T1 - Contents SP - 7 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77062 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - During the inter-war period, Karel Absolon (1877–1960), a specialist in the Palaeolithic, was one of the most famous personalities in Czech archaeology. With his systematic excavations, he not only significantly enriched the collections of the Moravian Museum but also established a specialized workplace and the museum exposition, Anthropos. This exposition is devoted entirely to the history of the Pleistocene, the rise of man and the development of the oldest human culture. Between 1924–1938, Absolon acted as the organizational and professional guarantor of large-scale archaeological excavations at Dolní Věstonice, Předmostí near Přerov, the Pekárna and Býčí skála caves as well as many other smaller ventures. Aided by his extraordinary personality, he contributed to scientific knowledge concerning the development of human culture in the Palaeolithic. As a result of his ability to make use of the media for promotion and his talent for popularizing science, he significantly affected the general cultural history of the inter-war Czechoslovakia. Karel Absolon’s name thus became synonymous with research into the oldest history of man. However, he was also known for his controversial nature; he was not afraid of reaching his goals by methods which were often criticized by his colleagues and contemporaries M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 47 (2009-2011) PY - 2011 EP - 139 KW - Karel Absolon (1877–1960) KW - H. Breuil (1877–1961) KW - V. G. Childe (1892–1957) KW - history of archaeology KW - Czech archaeology KW - Palaeolithic archaeology A1 - Kostrhun, Petr PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 47 CY - Warszawa SP - 91 T1 - Karel Absolon (1877–1960) and the research of significant Palaeolithic sites in Moravia UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77084 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 47 (2009-2011) PY - 2011 EP - 270 KW - archeologia -- czasopisma A1 - Lech, Jacek (1946– ) A1 - Perlikowska-Puszkarska, Urszula PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 47 CY - Warszawa T1 - In memoriam Hanna Lech (1949–2008) SP - 267 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77138 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - Woodash glass characterized by potassium plus calcium instead of sodium plus calcium was the major type in European Medieval glass production. The exhaustion of sodium-based raw materials from Egypt caused a change to local sources during the Carolingian period. With the invention of Gothic architecture, glass production and the number of glasshouses increased, but the technical experience was limited, the glasshouses working at the lowest possible furnace temperature of 1200 degrees centigrade which required the high potassium concentrations of beech trunks instead of bulk trees. The latter sources with high calcium concentrations characterized the early and late Medieval glass production at higher furnace temperature. Lack of woods in England and France had to be compensated by mixing woodash with fernash. The late Medieval total production of glass panes in Germany was in the range of 30,000 tons M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 45 (2007) PY - 2007 EP - 162 KW - Woodash glass KW - beech trunks KW - fernash KW - late medieval production A1 - Wedepohl, Karl Hans PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 45 CY - Warszawa SP - 155 T1 - The long-term change in composition of Medieval woodash glass UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77259 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - The author discusses rhomboid-shaped brooches popular in Late-Medieval Europe and uncommon in Poland. In fact, the number of original items from Poland is larger, but findingsfrom Gdańsk and Elbląg have yet to be published. The Polish specimens were cast from tin or bronze alloys, while those from Western Europe were more frequently made of silver and with the use of sophisticated techniques. Rhomboid-shaped brooches appeared in the West in the 13th century and in Poland in the 14th century M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 45 (2007) PY - 2007 EP - 154 KW - brooch KW - Middle Ages KW - Silesia A1 - Wachowski, Krzysztof PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 45 CY - Warszawa SP - 149 T1 - Ornamenta mediaevalia Silesiae UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77258 ER - TY - GEN N1 - 24 cm N2 - The paper discusses some cognitive and social implications of dealing with texts, things and thoughts treated as "sources" of/from or about the past. The stress is put here on the outcome of such interactions. The richness of options of dealing with the "category of source" is signaled by a presentation of some elements of philosophical reflection (among others "topos of the void", the challenge of "infinitism", etc.) which can be prescribed also to scientific activities. The analy-sis of ways in which "archaeological and historical sources" were and are understood is treated here as a source of knowledge on circumstances which shape the past in the present. The author uses anthropology as a model for critical involvement with a specific cognitive situation rather than a distanced and magisterial explanation of such a situation. Consequently, the latest debate on the ethnogenesis of the Slavs is presented as an example of the fundamental dissension that is affecting Polish scholars in regard to their treatment of sources and their related informational potential. In conclusion, it is recommended to replace dichotomist perception, all forms of radicalism, as well as classically understood epistemology with an "intermediate point of view" and with cognition placed within a broader, historically changing, psychological, interpersonal, inter-institutional context open to searching for the senses M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 44 (2006) PY - 2006 EP - 399 KW - archaeological source KW - historical source KW - sourceness KW - ambiguity of scientific categories A1 - Zalewska, Anna PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 44 CY - Warszawa SP - 381 T1 - The ambiguous concept of "source" UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77339 ER - TY - GEN N1 - 24 cm N2 - The authors have selected four Polish poets: Cyprian Norwid, Zbigniew Herbert, Wisława Szymborska and Jacek Kaczmarski to illustrate ontological and epistemological problems, as well as the principles of ethics that link archaeology and poetry. Zbigniew Herbert wondered what happens with things separated from their context. He did it to ask the question: does an archaeologist have any commitment to former generations? Cyprian Norwid's criticism of the approach to archaeological material was very modern in that he asked why interpretation did not aim at reaching a synthesis. Thus he posed the essential question: "What for the research?". Not everything can be measured and counted. Separating things from their spiritual aspect threatens humanity. The archaeologist is a guardian of the Mystery. Just as poetry interprets the present, so archaeology interprets the past. That symbol of humanity, Pompeii, drives the imagination because it has captured a moment, petrifying a vision of a world now lost. Both Szymborska's and Kaczmarski's poems preserve the spiritual aspect of human life. An archaeologist interpreting the "language" spoken by artefacts discovered in the ground is inferior to the poet, because poetry naturally reflects the spiritual side of our life. Poets ask questions about deeper issues in archaeological research, while archaeologists often concen-trate on just the findings M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 44 (2006) PY - 2006 EP - 263 KW - poetry KW - archaeology KW - material things KW - spirit KW - Cyprian Norwid KW - Wisława Szymborska KW - Zbigniew Herbert KW - Jacek Kaczmarski A1 - Baranowska, Małgorzata A1 - Baranowski, Tadeusz PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 44 CY - Warszawa SP - 255 T1 - Archaeology as the pre-text for poetry. The loneliness of ancient deities or on the other side of a showcase UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77331 ER - TY - GEN N1 - 24 cm N2 - Feminist and gender theory has been infiltrating into archaeological theory since the 1980s. This paper traces the development of gender archaeology and aims to look at the current state of affairs. Gender archaeology has progressed from indicating male bias in archaeological writ-ing through hinting at the centrality of women in the past to establishing a rough outline of gender theory. However, the study of gender in archaeology has been constructed for the most part as the study of women. With the advent of third-wave feminism the situation has changed radically. Third-wave feminists reacted against the woman-centered tendency of much of the existing gender archaeology by rejecting essentialist definitions of women and emphasizing differences between them. Thus, they positioned gender as relational to a host of other social factors such as class, ethnicity, age, sexuality, etc. Consistent with the plurality and difference of third-wave feminism in archaeology are masculinist and queer theory. The author considers the impact of these new concerns which attempt to eliminate boundaries set up by gender archaeologies. Thus, the author explores the adoption and implications of these approaches by gender archaeology in the ways they address gender, sex, body, sexuality and/or identity. Finally, the author also suggests that interpolation of issues raised by third-wave feminists, masculinist and queer theorists offers a more representative picture of life in the past and a more dynamic relationship between the present and the past M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 44 (2006) PY - 2006 EP - 253 KW - gender archaeology KW - feminism KW - masculinity KW - childhood KW - queer theory KW - sexuality KW - body A1 - Pawleta, Michał PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 44 CY - Warszawa SP - 231 T1 - Where do we stand? Exploring the contours of gendered archaeology UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77330 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - Archaeological research done in Rome in the 1980s left open some questions about Late Medieval and Renaissance pottery production and trade. Many topics were socio-economical questions, e.g., who were these artisans? What technical knowledge or skills were they endowed with? What was their aesthetic culture? which market did they address? The goal of this paper is to show how a close confrontation between material and written sources allows for a better reconstruction of the social reality, in our case the main questions we are dealing with are: the origin of the glazed coating technique and the evolution of this type of coating between 1200 and 1300; the development of style during the following century and throughout all of the 15th century; the actors and the driving force of the revolution that occurred between the 15th and 16th centuries; the production of handmade objects precisely imitating the products of other regions. All these questions are if not answered, then at least renewed with our research M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 44 (2006) PY - 2006 EP - 380 KW - Rome KW - Middle Ages KW - Renaissance KW - pottery industry KW - archaeology KW - social history KW - economic history A1 - Güll, Paolo PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 44 CY - Warszawa SP - 365 T1 - The industry of everyday life: men, economy and society in the material culture of an European capital (13th-16th centuries) UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77338 ER - TY - GEN N1 - 24 cm N2 - The plague pandemic in 541—543 and successive outbreaks of the disease till the latter half of the 8th century caused a deep demographic crisis in the Eastern Roman Empire. The most important effects of the plague were a shortage of manpower and a growing importance of marginal barbarian populations, which had suffered less or not at all from the disease. Demographic, political and economic consequences of the pandemic likely caused or at least facilitated Slavic expansion in the Balkans between the 6th and 8th century. The Slavs began to raid intensively and then settle the European provinces of the Roman Empire soon after the first outbreak of the plague and available textual evidence suggests that this region was depopulated by the disease and neglected by the government. During the 7th century, the Empire's administration and economy collapsed due to the effects of the plague and the existing system of land taxation and central provisioning of professional armies must have been replaced by regional organization of territorial troops recruited from free peasant farmers. In the new circumstances, the Slavs, who had in the meantime re-populated the Balkans, constituted an abundant source of manpower for a restored Empire M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 44 (2006) PY - 2006 EP - 364 KW - historical demography KW - bubonic plague KW - Eastern Roman Empire KW - Slavs KW - Balkans A1 - Sołtysiak, Arkadiusz PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 44 CY - Warszawa SP - 339 T1 - The plague pandemic c and Slavic expansion in the 6th-8th centuries UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77337 ER - TY - GEN N1 - 24 cm M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 44 (2006) PY - 2006 EP - 416 KW - archeologia -- czasopisma A1 - Barford, Paul PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 44 CY - Warszawa T1 - Report from the Czersk Meeting, 2006 SP - 401 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77340 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - This text analyses the so-called "return to things", a movement which appeared in the humanities and human sciences in the late 1990s. The author attempts to move beyond both the positivistic and the semiotic approaches to the description of things and discuss the so-called "new material culture" and "technoscience studies" (Don Ihde's "material hermeneutics") as approaches which inspire this field of inquiry. The author claims that the "enchantment with things" can be placed within the context of the prevailing discourse of the Other and the ongoing attempts to create counter-disciplines, such as counter-history, counter-archaeology, etc. In such counter-disciplines, things, which hitherto have been silent and reduced to passivity, are allowed to speak in their own voice or manifest themselves in their individuality. However, even if scholars claim that things should be incorporated into history as something other than passive recipients of human actions, they appear to remain unable to transcend conventional epistemologies. To illustrate this claim, the author analyses the "biographical" approach to things and concludes that this approach is characterized firstly, by the personification of things that results from anthropocentrism and provides a way of neutralizing the threats posed by nonhuman entities; and secondly, by a kind of genealogical and genetic thinking, which by no means helps us create an alternative epistemology of history but, on the contrary, revives in a different context the fetish of origin. It appears that a discourse in defense of things (and in general of non-humans) is in the end a discourse in defense of the human being. Things are coming to be existential, "stable" markers that help unstable humans to orient themselves in the world M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 44 (2006) PY - 2006 EP - 185 KW - things/objects KW - defense of things KW - agency of things KW - biographies of things KW - ethics of things A1 - Domańska, Ewa PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 44 CY - Warszawa SP - 171 T1 - The return to things UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77324 ER - TY - GEN N1 - 24 cm N2 - The article shows the consequences of Roman Ingarden's (1987) philosophical remarks on the human usage of time, which can have a creative or a destructive effect on culture. The two, fundamentally different, ways of perception or use of time, are discussed in their relation to the two types of culture, mostly applying Edward Hall's classification and interesting conclusions (1977). Hall's concept of the monochronic and polychronic time systems are presented here in brief. The problem of synchronization of social activity moves to the question of introducing a non-linear time-order. It is illustrated with the ethnographic data on the religion of contem-porary Bushmen, provided by Bradford Keeney (2003), and confronted with Johann Tauler's statements. Consequently, looking for the sources of the inner power, one can find at least two answers depending on the experience of different time-orders. Finally, it is stated that living according to only one perception of time, characteristic of a monochronic culture, and which Andrzej Wierciński names "the apish aperture of the present", is an adaptive illusion M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 44 (2006) PY - 2006 EP - 132 KW - Roman Ingarden KW - Edward Hall KW - perception of time KW - monochronic and polychronic cultures A1 - Wierciński, Mateusz A2 - Sadowski, Robert. Tł. PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 44 CY - Warszawa SP - 121 T1 - Some thoughts on the role of the perception of time in culture UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77321 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - The paper presents some of the examples of recent fruitful cooperation between the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences and German archaeologists interested in Medieval period. Among the joint research projects are such as: Archaeological research of early Slavic settlement in the area of the Middle Vistula River (6th–7th century). Studies on the Slavs’ ethnogenesis and migration – implemented in 2000–2001 and concentrated on the excavations of the settlement at Bocheń near Łowicz (the 8th/9th – mid-9th century); dendrochronological studies of Mazovian fortified settlements – carried on in 1994–1995; studies on the functions and chronology of fortified settlements in Poland conducted in 2000–2001 by German archaeologist Felix Biermann on example of stronghold at Sypniewo in Mazovia; joint excavation of Early Medieval setlement at Starosiedle in the Lubusz Land; as well as the joint programme Archaeological excavations of the Białoboki (Belbuk) monastery and the Trzebiatów (Treptow) Region on the Rega River – aimed at studies on the remains of a Medieval Premonstratensian monastery complex, established in 1180, and its settlement and economic background M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 43 (2005) PY - 2005 EP - 208 KW - archaeology KW - settlement KW - early Middle Ages KW - Polish-German cooperation A1 - Dulinicz, Marek (1957–2010) PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 43 CY - Warszawa SP - 201 T1 - Studies on the Early Middle Ages in Poland conducted by the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology, Polish Academy of Sciences, in cooperation with German researchers UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77295 ER - TY - GEN N1 - ill. ; 24 cm N2 - The entry of 10 new members to the European Union on the 1st of May 2004 has moved Saxony from the periphery back to the centre of Europe. Hence the Saxon foundation “Pro Archaeologia Saxoniae” has decided to make its proceeds available not only for research projects in Saxony but also in neighbouring regions of Poland and Czech Republic. This decision is based on the knowledge that historically oriented scholarship can make a crucial contribution to European integration. It is the wish of the foundation that sponsoring archaeology will serve to intensify cross boarder dialogue, lead to an increase in knowledge about the region’s common past, distinguish scholarly and scientific excellence and support innovative ideas and research approaches. The biography and life work of Werner Coblenz and Gerhard Bersu, whose names are born by the foundation Pro Archaeologia Saxoniae´s award and scholarship, stand for European dialogue and scholarly and scientific freedom. Both Werner Coblenz and Gerhard Bersu stood up for these ideals during both periods of German dictatorship M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 43 (2005) PY - 2005 EP - 217 KW - archaeology KW - Gerhard Bersu KW - Werner Coblenz KW - international cooperation KW - Saxony KW - Silesia KW - Bohemia A1 - Oexle, Judith PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 43 CY - Warszawa T1 - The Foundation “Pro Archaeologia Saxoniae”, a new platform for sponsoring research in the Central European archaeology SP - 209 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77302 ER - TY - GEN N1 - 24 cm M3 - Text J2 - Archaeologia Polona Vol. 43 (2005) PY - 2005 EP - 229 KW - archeologia -- czasopisma A1 - Tabaczyński, Stanisław (1930– ) PB - Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences VL - 43 CY - Warszawa T1 - Has the archaeologist access to the past reality? SP - 219 UR - http://www.rcin.org.pl/iae/dlibra/publication/77303 ER -