It looks like you're offline.
Open Library logo
additional options menu

MARC Record from marc_oapen

Record ID marc_oapen/oapen.marc.utf8.mrc:17469480:3032
Source marc_oapen
Download Link /show-records/marc_oapen/oapen.marc.utf8.mrc:17469480:3032?format=raw

LEADER: 03032 am a22004693u 450
001 420887
005 20120629
007 cu#uuu---auuuu
008 120629s|||| xx o 0 u ger |
020 $a9783700171225
020 $a9783700167204
024 7 $a10.26530/OAPEN_420887$2doi
041 0 $ager
042 $adc
072 7 $aHBJD$2bicssc
072 7 $aHBLA$2bicssc
072 7 $aHDD$2bicssc
072 7 $aHDDA$2bicssc
100 1 $aRamsl, Peter C.$4aut
245 10 $aDas latènezeitliche Gräberfeld von Mannersdorf am Leithagebirge, Flur Reinthal Süd, Niederösterreich
260 $a$bVerlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften$c2011
300 $a668
520 $aThis publication is the first monographic result of the APART project ?Migration Phenomena in the Early La Tène Period? and the Austrian Science Fund project ?The Celtic cemetery in Mannersdorf (Lower Austria) in the context of east-west cultural contact?. From 1976 to 1984, Heribert Schutzbier and Friedrich Opferkuh from the Mannersdorf Museum, together with the Austrian Federal Department of Sites and Monuments, excavated a total of 96 inhumation and cremation burials from the Early and Middle La Tène periods in the field Reinthal Süd. The artefacts are of high quality, seen primarily in the use of materials such as silver, gold, glass and corals, as well as in their technical workmanship. A major find at the cemetery is a bronze situla, which was imported from northern Italy. Certain areas, like the Middle Rhine, the Champagne or the Balkan, must have been well connected to this Lower Austrian region. An analysis revealed a group of ?Lt B1 elite or leading graves?, with persons wearing double foot and hand bands and the graves containing precious metals. In the central Danube region, the size of the necropolis in Mannersdorf am Leithagebirge, with its 96 graves, lies midfield. According to a considered but cautious opinion, it is possible that some of those buried in Mannersdorf were a group of people originating from the area of today?s Switzerland. An equally possible hypothesis is, and this does not contradict the first view, that here members of an ?upper class? are represented. Printed with the support of the Austrian Science Fund (FWF).
546 $aGerman.
650 7 $aEuropean history$2bicssc
650 7 $aAncient history: to c 500 CE$2bicssc
650 7 $aArchaeology by period / region$2bicssc
650 7 $aPrehistoric archaeology$2bicssc
653 $alate bronze age
653 $apre- and early history
653 $amigrationsphänomene
653 $aearly bronze age
653 $amannersdorf, leithagebirge
653 $agräberfeld
653 $agrave field research
653 $aarcheaology
653 $alatène-zeit
653 $aaustria
653 $aancient migration
653 $afinds dating back to early history
856 40 $uhttp://www.oapen.org/download?type=document&docid=420887$zAccess full text online
856 40 $uAll rights reserved$zLicense