The fascination of spirals
An Early Eneolithic hoard of decorative copper artefacts near Hrádok, West Slovakia
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.35686/AR.2021.16Keywords:
hoard of copper artefacts, copper-wire jewellery, typology, ICP-MS/ICP-OES, lead isotope analysis, copper provenance, Early EneolithicAbstract
An assemblage of few early Eneolithic hoard finds has been supplemented in 2009 by copper artefacts coming from a hoard discovered at Hrádok (Nové Mesto nad Váhom district), located in north-western Slovakia. The collection from Hrádok consists mostly of copper-wire jewellery. The presented study describes the results of typological and chronological analyses of spiral-shaped copper jewellery so far unknown in the region of Central Europe. The authors discuss the function of the artefacts, as well as their relation to the copper-wire industries of the type Malé Leváre, its variant Stollhof, and the type Hlinsko. Selected artefacts from the hoard from Hrádok were subjected to element (ICP-MS/ICP-OES) and isotope analyses. The results reveal additional information about the provenance and the type of copper present in hoard assemblages from the north-western part of the Carpathian Basin, dated to the end of the 5th Millennium BC. Contacts between the epilengyel Ludanice and Jordanów cultures are also discussed.
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Copyright (c) 2022 Mária Novotná, Tomáš Zachar, Ján Dzúrik
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.