Our Lady of Garić (original) (raw)
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Zbornik Instituta za arheologiju / Serta Instituti Archaeologici, Vol. 10. Sacralization of Landscape and Sacred Places. Proceedings of the 3rd International Scientific Conference of Mediaeval Archaeology of the Institute of Archaeology, 2018
Human settlement of landscape raises the question of marking the landscape with one’s own religion. Changes of religious systems or their coexistence documented in the landscape raises further questions, particularly those pertaining to broader socio-cultural phenomena and dynamics. Even if such processes are not documented in written sources, they could often be recognized in toponyms, folklore, archaeological finds and in contemporary religious practices. This publication presents analyses of sacred landscape from the perspective of: archaeology, folklore, ethnology and cultural anthropology, literature, architecture, history, art history, mathematics etc., and at the same time covers the period from prehistory, through antiquity and Slavic period and the Middle Ages to the modern period and contemporary times. In addition to this, it also compares different processes from different regions and times, by and large from Europe.
Sacralization of Landscape and Sacred Places
Book of Abstracts. The Institute of Archaeology is organizing the 3rd International Scientific Conference of Mediaeval Archaeology, entitled "Sacralisation of Landscape and Sacred Places" which will be held on the 2nd and 3rd June 2016, at the Archaeological Museum in Zagreb, 19 Zrinski square, Zagreb, Croatia.
Sacred space: contributions to the archaeology of belief
This volume on the archaeology and ethnology of sacred space includes the following essays: Louis Daniel Nebelsick, Joanna Wawrzeniuk and Katarzyna Zeman-Wiśniewska: Preface Marta Kaczmarek: Settlements of the Brześć Kujawski Group of the Lengyel Culture –places of sacrum or profanum? Christine Winkelmann: Places of ritual activity in pre-Bronze Age Cyprus Katarzyna Zeman-Wiśniewska: The space above. Sacred sky in Prehistoric Cyprus Louis Daniel Nebelsick and Grzegorz Łyszkowicz: Copper artefact deposits in waters and wetlands during the later 5thand 4th millennium BC in the territory of Poland Laerke Recht “Asses were buried with him”. Equids as markers of sacred space in the third and second millennia BC in the Eastern Mediterranean Nicola Scheyhing: Fossilising the Holy. Aniconic standing stones of the Near East Antonia Flontaș: Jewelry depositions from the end of the 2nd millennium BC from the Romanian Carpathian Basin Imke Westhausen: Early Iron Age hoards between Brittany and the Carpathian basin – a preliminary review Krzysztof Narloch: The largest European area of the sacred Zbigniew Kobyliński: Sacred space of the Iron Age enclosed sites in north-eastern Poland Roman Szlązak: Towards a sacred topography of Early Byzantine Thessaloniki Edvard Zajkovski: The Central European Watershed as a part of the space of the pagan sacred Adriana Ciesielska: Selected concepts of power and sacral space Zbigniew Kobyliński and Kamil Rabiega: The symbolic role of boats and ships in pagan and Christian Medieval Northern Europe Bożena Józefów-Czerwińska: Sacred environment and sacred communication process according to ethnographic field research in the Nadbuże Region
The aim of this paper is twofold. The first is to present the research questions of the multidisciplinary International Project “Beyond East and West: Geocommunicating the Sacred Landscapes of ‘Duklja’ and ‘Raška’ through Space and Time (11th-14th Cent.)” (HOLDURA), which is conducted at the Austrian Academy of Sciences (Institute for Medieval Research, Division of Byzantine Research) with two partners (the University of Vienna, Department of Geography and Regional Research and the Hochschule für Technik, Wirtschaft und Kultur Leipzig, Germany) from 1 March 2020 until 28 February 2023. The second introduces to the readers the results, which have been achieved in the project’s first year (2020). These achievements consist of the research on the Austro-Hungarian relief map of Montenegro (1916-1918) in Cetinje (Republic of Montenegro), its 3D capture during a survey in March 2020, its analysis and contextualisation – all of these in close cooperation with the project “Cultural Heritage in Times of World War I: The Case of the Austro-Hungarian Relief Map of Montenegro (1916-1918) / Kulturno nasleđe u vreme Prvog Svetskog Rata: Slučaj austro-ugarske reljefne karte Crne Gore (1916-1918)”, the input of data on medieval settlements, toponyms and monuments in the area of research in the project’s database (i.e. the TIB OpenAtlas Database), the research on the monuments themselves (i.e. churches and monasteries) from the viewpoint of Art History and the development of a framework in the WWW, which will serve as a hub to promote the project’s results to academia as well as the general public. All of these aspects form the integral basis for addressing the project’s research questions in the second and third year. Moreover, the project team of HOLDURA has started with the dissemination of the aforesaid, first results. While an article was published in the blog of the daily Austrian Newspaper “Der Standard”, relevant papers will be presented at the virtual International Medieval Congress (IMC) in Leeds in July 2021. In this way, HOLDURA aims at addressing and answering the hypothesis, if the historic regions of ‘Duklja’ and ‘Raška’ in South-Eastern Europe constituted a “Sacred Landscape” from the 11th to the 14th centuries, and, if this is the case, to define analogue and digital means to geocommunicate it to academia as well as the general public.