Grzegorz Kuś - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by Grzegorz Kuś
Sprawozdania Archeologiczne, 2024
The paper presents a stray find of an axe head from the Przeworsk culture settlement at Janowiec.... more The paper presents a stray find of an axe head from the Przeworsk culture settlement at Janowiec. It is a medium
weight head attributed to sub-Group II.2 after B. Kontny (2018), dated generally to the Roman Period (Phases
B2-C1a). Its shape does not allow the function to be determined univocally. Most probably it was a multifunctional tool. The aforementioned axes were used mainly in the Balt milieu, but they were also known but rather
not used as weapons in the Przeworsk culture. Single finds from northern Europe may be explained by the participation of the Balt warriors in the military events at these areas. One may consider the possibility that the
axes and some other parts of the military equipment became commonly used thanks to multi-ethnic military
expeditions and the migrations with a military background connected, among other things, with the crisis of the
Roman Empire in the 3rd century
Sprawozdania Archeologiczne 74/2, 2022
The text discusses the results of typological and metallographic analyses of metal objects dated ... more The text discusses the results of typological and metallographic analyses of metal objects dated to the 7 th-8 th centuries from Janowiec on the Vistula River, including five bronze strap fittings, two silver bracelets with trumpet-like endings, two bronze bars, and lumps of melted metal. The analyses of the fittings indicate their direct associations with the Avar Kaganate. Currently, the fittings from Janowiec comprise the most numerous assemblage of Avar imports from Polish lands. The form and technology of manufacture of the bracelets is typical for the area between the middle Dnipro and the middle Danube, while their decorative patterns refer to the art of the Avars. Interestingly, such an assemblage was discovered in the territory currently regarded as peripherical or even wholly uninhabited. The finds from Janowiec document contacts between the emerging "tribal" elites of northern and northeastern Lesser Poland and the Transcarpathian areas and indicate the role of the Vistula as a communicational axis.
Grodzisko w Jeglińcu. Jaćwieskie centrum osadnicze w świetle badań archeologicznych i przyrodniczych, 2022
Tłumaczenie streszczenia i podpisów do rycin i tablic na język angielski: Kinga Brzezińska
Wiadomości Archeologiczne, 2022
In 2020, during a surface survey with metal detectors, two brooches made of copper alloy were dis... more In 2020, during a surface survey with metal detectors, two brooches made of copper alloy were discovered at site 7 at Ryczywółin the Middle Vistula Valley. These fibulae – a knee-shaped brooch and a so-called Bügelknopffibel – should be dated, respectively, to phases B2/C1−C1a and C3−D1 of the Roman Period and associated with Przeworsk Culture settlement.
Wiadomości Archeologiczne, 2021
Rada Naukowa Scientific Advisory Board Tłumaczenia Translation Korekta Proofreading Skład i łaman... more Rada Naukowa Scientific Advisory Board Tłumaczenia Translation Korekta Proofreading Skład i łamanie Layout Rycina na okładce Cover picture Adres redakcji Editorial office Strona www Home Page Tomy archiwalne Archival issues ISSN dr Wojciech Brzeziński dr hab. Jacek Andrzejowski Grażyna Orlińska, Radosław Prochowicz, An drzej Jacek Tomaszewski, Katarzyna Watemborska-Rakowska, Kaja Jaroszewska prof. dr hab. Wojciech Nowakowski (Wydział Nauk o Kulturze i Sztuce Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego), prof. dr Audronė Bliujienė (Klaipėdos universitetas), prof. dr hab. Claus von Carnap-Bornheim (Stiftung Schleswig-Holsteinische Landesmuseen, Zentrum für Baltische und Skandinavische Archäologie, Schleswig), prof. dr hab. Zbigniew Kobyliński (Instytut Archeologii Uniwersytetu Kardynała Stefana Wyszyńskiego), prof. dr hab. Jerzy Maik (Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk), prof. dr hab. Dieter Quast (Forschungsinstitut für Archäologie, Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum, Mainz), prof. dr hab. Paweł Valde-Nowak (Instytut Archeologii Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego)
XXI Śląskie Sympozjum Archeologiczne, 2019
Notatnik Janowiecki nr 21-22, 2017
Weapons by Grzegorz Kuś
Sprawozdania Archeologiczne, 2024
The paper presents a stray find of an axe head from the Przeworsk culture settlement at Janowiec.... more The paper presents a stray find of an axe head from the Przeworsk culture settlement at Janowiec. It is a medium weight head attributed to subgroup II.2 after B. Kontny (2018), dated generally to the Roman Period (Phases B2-C1a). Its shape does not allow the function to be determined univocally. Most probably it was a multifunc-tional tool. The aforementioned axes were used mainly in the Balt milieu, but they were also known but rather not used as weapons in the Przeworsk culture. Single finds from northern Europe may be explained by the participation of the Balt warriors in the military events at these areas. One may consider the possibility that the axes and some other parts of the military equipment became commonly used thanks to multiethnic military expeditions and the migrations with a military background connected, among other things, with the crisis of the Roman Empire in the 3rd century.
Sprawozdania Archeologiczne, 2024
The paper presents a stray find of an axe head from the Przeworsk culture settlement at Janowiec.... more The paper presents a stray find of an axe head from the Przeworsk culture settlement at Janowiec. It is a medium
weight head attributed to sub-Group II.2 after B. Kontny (2018), dated generally to the Roman Period (Phases
B2-C1a). Its shape does not allow the function to be determined univocally. Most probably it was a multifunctional tool. The aforementioned axes were used mainly in the Balt milieu, but they were also known but rather
not used as weapons in the Przeworsk culture. Single finds from northern Europe may be explained by the participation of the Balt warriors in the military events at these areas. One may consider the possibility that the
axes and some other parts of the military equipment became commonly used thanks to multi-ethnic military
expeditions and the migrations with a military background connected, among other things, with the crisis of the
Roman Empire in the 3rd century
Sprawozdania Archeologiczne 74/2, 2022
The text discusses the results of typological and metallographic analyses of metal objects dated ... more The text discusses the results of typological and metallographic analyses of metal objects dated to the 7 th-8 th centuries from Janowiec on the Vistula River, including five bronze strap fittings, two silver bracelets with trumpet-like endings, two bronze bars, and lumps of melted metal. The analyses of the fittings indicate their direct associations with the Avar Kaganate. Currently, the fittings from Janowiec comprise the most numerous assemblage of Avar imports from Polish lands. The form and technology of manufacture of the bracelets is typical for the area between the middle Dnipro and the middle Danube, while their decorative patterns refer to the art of the Avars. Interestingly, such an assemblage was discovered in the territory currently regarded as peripherical or even wholly uninhabited. The finds from Janowiec document contacts between the emerging "tribal" elites of northern and northeastern Lesser Poland and the Transcarpathian areas and indicate the role of the Vistula as a communicational axis.
Grodzisko w Jeglińcu. Jaćwieskie centrum osadnicze w świetle badań archeologicznych i przyrodniczych, 2022
Tłumaczenie streszczenia i podpisów do rycin i tablic na język angielski: Kinga Brzezińska
Wiadomości Archeologiczne, 2022
In 2020, during a surface survey with metal detectors, two brooches made of copper alloy were dis... more In 2020, during a surface survey with metal detectors, two brooches made of copper alloy were discovered at site 7 at Ryczywółin the Middle Vistula Valley. These fibulae – a knee-shaped brooch and a so-called Bügelknopffibel – should be dated, respectively, to phases B2/C1−C1a and C3−D1 of the Roman Period and associated with Przeworsk Culture settlement.
Wiadomości Archeologiczne, 2021
Rada Naukowa Scientific Advisory Board Tłumaczenia Translation Korekta Proofreading Skład i łaman... more Rada Naukowa Scientific Advisory Board Tłumaczenia Translation Korekta Proofreading Skład i łamanie Layout Rycina na okładce Cover picture Adres redakcji Editorial office Strona www Home Page Tomy archiwalne Archival issues ISSN dr Wojciech Brzeziński dr hab. Jacek Andrzejowski Grażyna Orlińska, Radosław Prochowicz, An drzej Jacek Tomaszewski, Katarzyna Watemborska-Rakowska, Kaja Jaroszewska prof. dr hab. Wojciech Nowakowski (Wydział Nauk o Kulturze i Sztuce Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego), prof. dr Audronė Bliujienė (Klaipėdos universitetas), prof. dr hab. Claus von Carnap-Bornheim (Stiftung Schleswig-Holsteinische Landesmuseen, Zentrum für Baltische und Skandinavische Archäologie, Schleswig), prof. dr hab. Zbigniew Kobyliński (Instytut Archeologii Uniwersytetu Kardynała Stefana Wyszyńskiego), prof. dr hab. Jerzy Maik (Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk), prof. dr hab. Dieter Quast (Forschungsinstitut für Archäologie, Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum, Mainz), prof. dr hab. Paweł Valde-Nowak (Instytut Archeologii Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego)
XXI Śląskie Sympozjum Archeologiczne, 2019
Notatnik Janowiecki nr 21-22, 2017
Sprawozdania Archeologiczne, 2024
The paper presents a stray find of an axe head from the Przeworsk culture settlement at Janowiec.... more The paper presents a stray find of an axe head from the Przeworsk culture settlement at Janowiec. It is a medium weight head attributed to subgroup II.2 after B. Kontny (2018), dated generally to the Roman Period (Phases B2-C1a). Its shape does not allow the function to be determined univocally. Most probably it was a multifunc-tional tool. The aforementioned axes were used mainly in the Balt milieu, but they were also known but rather not used as weapons in the Przeworsk culture. Single finds from northern Europe may be explained by the participation of the Balt warriors in the military events at these areas. One may consider the possibility that the axes and some other parts of the military equipment became commonly used thanks to multiethnic military expeditions and the migrations with a military background connected, among other things, with the crisis of the Roman Empire in the 3rd century.