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BEAUTY AND THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER.

BEAUTY AND THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER. von Monica Margarit, Adina Boroneant
Personal adornments across the millennia

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Kategorie: Bücher
Seiten / Format: 445 S.; gebundene Ausgabe
Erscheinungsjahr: 2020
Verlag: Targoviste, Cetatea de Scaun
Sprache: Englisch
ISBN: 9786065374614

The result is the present volume comprising 26 studies organized in three major sections related to regional studies on adornments, and their use and presence in everyday life and afterlife. Within one section, papers were organized in chronological order. The papers in the volume cover geographically the whole of Europe and Anatolia: from Spain to Russia and from Latvia to Turkey; it spans chronologically many millennia, from the Middle Palaeolithic to the Iron Age (2nd – 4th centuries AD).
The volume opens with ten regional studies offering not only comprehensive syntheses of various chronological horizons (Palaeolithic – Daniella E. Bar-Yosef Mayer, Neolithic/Chalcolithic – Emma L. Baysal; Fotis Ifantidis; Selena Vitezovic and Dragana Antonovic; Sanda Bacue? Cri?an and Ancu?a Bobîna; Andreea Vornicu-?erna and Stansislav ?erna; Roberto Micheli) but also new data on the acquisition and working of various raw materials or specific types of adornments (Columbella rustica shells – Emanuela Cristiani, Andrea Zupancich and Barbara Cvitkusic; wild boar tusk – Ekaterina Kashina and Aija Macane; canid tooth pendants – Petar Zidarov). The unbreakable link between adornments of the everyday life and those of the afterlife it is also highlighted in some of the contributions.
The following section – Adornments in settlement archaeology – includes nine studies, covering the archaeological evidence from specific settlement sites. Many studies focused on the adornments' iconographic designs, meaning, and exchange but also on raw materials, technologies of production and systems of attachment. Chronology-wise, this section brings together the most varied range of ornaments, raw materials and processing techniques from sites in Spain (Esteban Álvarez-Fernández), Turkey (Sera Yelözer and Rozalia Christidou), Greece (Catherine Perlès and Patrick Pion; Christoforos Arampatzis) and Romania (Adina Boronean? and Pavel Mirea; Ioan Alexandru Barbat, Monica Margarit and Marius Gheorghe Barbu; Monica Margarit, Mihai Gligor, Valentin Radu and Alina Bin?in?an; Gheorghe Lazarovici and Cornelia-Magda Lazarovici; Vasile Diaconu).
The last section – Adornments of the afterlife – focuses on ornaments identified in various funerary contexts allowing for a more detailed biography of ornaments through mostly use- and micro-wear studies, in order to reconstruct their production sequence and use life. Raw material availability and their properties, as well as contexts of deposition are also taken into account. In the seven studies of the section, different funerary contexts from Latvia (Lars Larsson), Ukraine (Nataliia Mykhailova), Hungary (Zsuzsanna Tóth) and Romania (Monica Margarit, Cristian Virag and Alexandra Georgiana Diaconu; Vlad-?tefan Carabi?i, Anca-Diana Popescu, Marta Petruneac, Marin Focsaneanu, Daniela Cristea-Stan and Florin Constantin; Dragos Mandescu; Lavinia Grumeza) are discussed.