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Sándor Berecki/Rita E. Németh/Botond Rezi (eds.), Bronze Age Rites and Ritual in the Carpathian Basin. Proceedings of the International Colloquium from Târgu Mureş, 8-10 October 2010. Bibliotheca Musei Marisiensis, Seria Archaeologica IV, Târgu Mureş 2011, 357-376
At the Head of Concealment. The Deposition of Bronze Age Helmets in the Carpathian BasinArheološki vestnik 69
Roman bronze helmets from the Republican period and the Early Principate in Slovenia2018 •
Archaeological sites in Slovenia have yielded a number of Roman bronze helmets from the Late Republican and Early Imperial periods. More precisely, there are six (nearly) complete examples, several fragments of another helmet, five pieces of five different other helmets and possibly a cheek-piece. Four of the helmets belong to the Etrusco-Italic type, with the bowl and knob made in a single piece and with a polished exterior, of which the latest dated example is from around 70 BC. The other helmets or their parts are of the Buggenum (upper part of one helmet with a crest-knob) and Haguenau types (two helmets, two crest-knobs, two upper part fragments with a crest-knob), one also of the transitory form between the two types; all these date to the Early Principate. The helmets have been subjected to PIXE analyses to determine the approximate elemental composition. The results have shown that the helmets proper are mainly made of bronze with a medium amount of tin (roughly 6 to 12%) and no or very little lead or other elements, the hinges for attaching the cheek-pieces are of bronze and on one helmet of iron, rivets are of copper and on one helmet of iron, while the use of brass and the practice of soldering have been recorded on the helmets of the latest type (Haguenau) and on the helmet of the transitory Buggenum/Haguenau form.
Paulina Suchowska-Ducke/Samantha Scott Reiter/Helle Vandkilde (eds.), Forging Identities. The Mobility of Culture in Bronze Age Europe. Report from a Marie Curie Project 2009-2012 with Concluding Conference at Aarhus University, Moesgaard 2012. BAR Internat. Ser. 2772, Vol. 2, Oxford 2015, 107-114
Metal Heads: A Review on the Origin and Spread of Two-piece Helmets in the European Bronze AgeA unique medieval helmet that is part of the archaeological collection of the National Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina was found in the village of Trnčina near Ljubinje, and donated to the museum more than a century ago. The following paper is the first detailed publication of this artefact. The first part of the paper contains a description of the helmet while the second discusses its dating and place on the timeline of the evolution of warrior headgear. As a result of the research it is possible to draw the conclusion that the Trnčina helmet was made and then altered in the 11th century.
After more than a century of research into Bronze Age helmets throughout Europe, the development and chronology of conical helmets with spool-shaped sockets remains still unclear. The thorough studies and analysis of the helmet from Biecz have not completely resolved the discussions. The other helmets, if not single finds, were usually dated according to their alleged associations in a hoard but have never been extensive discussed as one type of helmet with a uniform life span. By including in the discussion a Greek bronze helmet with incised boar tusks as well as boar tusk helmets with bronze cheek plates more light on the development and chronology of these very first European bronze helmets is shed.
The contribution presents three stray finds of iron spearheads with decorated blades; one from Britof near Kranj and the other two from the riverbed of the Ljubljanica in the western part of the Ljubljansko barje (Slovenia). The spearhead from Britof has close parallels in Pomerania and the Scandinavian Baltic Isles, indicating its most probable origin in the area inhabited by the ‘East Germanic’ cultural groups of the late pre-Roman Iron Age. The two spearheads from the Ljubljanica also rank among rare forms, with parallels known across wide regions between the south-western edges of the Alps and the southern coast of the Baltic Sea. Both are most likely local ‘Celtic’ products, with decoration again close to that on spearheads from the ‘Germanic’ milieu. These exceptional artefacts might perhaps be associated with the movements of Germanic peoples between the late 2nd and the mid- 1st century BC.
Materials Characterization
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