Sökning: "Late Roman Iron Age"

Visar resultat 6 - 10 av 20 avhandlingar innehållade orden Late Roman Iron Age.

  1. 6. Shards of Iron Age Communications. A ceramological study of internal structures and external contacts in the Gudme-Lundeborg Area, Funen during the Late Roman Iron Age

    Författare :Ole Stilborg; Arkeologi; []
    Nyckelord :HUMANIORA; HUMANITIES; local; Funen; Gudme-Lundeborg Area; trading site; cemetery; settlement; Late Roman Iron Age; material systems; Things; communication; Pottery; ceramology; import; center; Archaeology; Arkeologi;

    Sammanfattning : The objective of ceramology is to describe pottery craft traditions; the potters, their production, social organisation and the use of the products. Through this the human actions surrounding the pottery are studied. LÄS MER

  2. 7. Delar av en grav och glimtar av en tid : Om yngre romersk järnålder, Tuna i Badelunda i Västmanland och personen i grav X

    Författare :Lotta Fernstål; Anders Carlsson; Svante Norr; Stockholms universitet; []
    Nyckelord :HUMANIORA; HUMANITIES; Tuna; Badelunda; Västmanland; Late Roman Iron Age; Grave X; stone-settings; chamber graves; stone enclosures; hill-forts; travel routes; beads; snake-shaped rings; vessels; serving utensils; oral traditions; altered states of consciousness; performative-constructive gender perspective; creolization; Archaeology subjects; Arkeologiämnen;

    Sammanfattning : Grave X was found in 1952 during construction work in Tuna in Badelunda parish, in the province of Västmanland. Objects from this 3rd Century grave were dispersed and the stone grave covering and cist-like wooden burial chamber were cut almost in half as a result of the construction work that unearthed it. LÄS MER

  3. 8. Barshalder 1 : A cemetery in Grötlingbo and Fide parishes, Gotland, Sweden, c. AD 1-1100. Excavations and finds 1826-1971

    Författare :Martin Rundkvist; Ingmar Jansson; Siv Kristoffersen; Stockholms universitet; []
    Nyckelord :HUMANIORA; HUMANITIES; Barshalder; Grötlingbo; Fide; Gotland; cemetery; graves; burial; Iron Age; Roman Iron Age; Migration Period; Vendel Period; Viking Period; landscape history; gender; typology; chronology; seriation; correspondence analysis; social stratification; status; religion; paganism; Christianity; Christianisation; Archaeology subjects; Arkeologiämnen;

    Sammanfattning : The prehistoric cemetery of Barshalder is located along the main road on the boundary between Grötlingbo and Fide parishes, near the southern end of the island of Gotland in the Baltic Sea. The cemetery was used from c. AD 1-1100. LÄS MER

  4. 9. Östersjöns skeppssättningar. Monument och mötesplatser under yngre bronsålder / Baltic Stone Ships. Monuments and Meeting places during the Late Bronze Age

    Författare :Joakim Wehlin; Göteborgs universitet; []
    Nyckelord :HUMANIORA; HUMANITIES; Ship settings; Stone ships; Burials; Burnt bones; Bronze Age; Pre-Roman Iron Age; Bornholm; Gotland; Latvia; Saaremaa; Åland; Baltic Sea; Maritime; Landscape; Seascape; Maritime institutions; Maritory;

    Sammanfattning : During the Late Bronze Age, the number of metal objects in the Baltic Sea region increased tremendously. Mobility and interaction in this northern inland sea intensified. This occurred in a period of prehistory when the ship was the predominant symbol in southern Scandinavia. LÄS MER

  5. 10. Från Döudden till Varghalsen : en studie av kontinuitet och förändring inom ett fångstsamhälle i övre Norrlands inland, 5200 f.Kr. - 400 e.Kr

    Författare :Ingela Bergman; Umeå universitet; []
    Nyckelord :HUMANIORA; HUMANITIES; Hunter-gatherer; Lappland; northern Sweden; Late Mesolithic; Neolithic; Bronze Age; early Iron Age; settlement sites; hunting pits; seasonal mobility; logistically organized; settlement patterns; spatial analysis; Jägare samlare-- Sverige -- Lappland; Bosättningar-- Sverige -- Lappland; Arjeplog;

    Sammanfattning : This thesis is an investigation of a prehistoric hunter-gatherer society in Arjeplog, Lappland, northern Sweden, with regard to changes in the subsistence strategies and social organization. Chronologically, the archeological record dates from 5200 BC to 400 AD. LÄS MER