[Bonetools] Medieval Italian comb
Maja G.
majagrguric at gmail.com
Thu May 5 11:16:58 CEST 2016
Dear All,
speaking of comb typology. Have there been typologies made for other
regions, southeastern, eastern Europe? I am interested in Migration Period
bone combs from Ukraine, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary...
Any reference is more than welcome.
Thank you,
Maja Grgurić
Archaeological museum in Zagreb
2016-05-05 10:51 GMT+02:00 Steve Ashby <steve.ashby at york.ac.uk>:
> Agreed looks antler. Form broadly fits into my broad group Type 11, but
> the typology is not so well-tested in southern Europe, and not sure how
> useful that term will be for you there. Also, without seeing the
> endplate profile it could well fit into the range of Late Roman forms that
> I have termed type 10. In fact it is probably better simply to consider
> these in the context of other late Roman and post-Roman hair combs from
> the region.
>
> Steve
>
>
> On Wednesday, 4 May 2016, Michel Feugère <michel.feugere at mom.fr> wrote:
>
>> Ashby type 11…?
>>
>> See :
>> http://artefacts.mom.fr/fr/result.php?id=PGN-5008&find=PGN-&pagenum=1&affmode=vign
>>
>> Yours,
>>
>> M. F.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Le 3 mai 2016 à 22:53, Alice Choyke <choyke at gmail.com> a écrit :
>>
>> Dear Marta,
>> If you go to the WBRG.net <http://wbrg.net> references and search
>> for combs you will find a pretty long list of Steve Ashby's work and
>> generally about early medieval combs from Northern Europe. There are many
>> combs of this type from so-called Migration period burials and settlements
>> in Hungary and beyond but very little of this material is published in
>> English of course. Such double-sided composite combs are really everywhere
>> in early medieval continental Europe at least - but again not masses of
>> references in English. Most of the Hungarian combs are definitely
>> antler.and may be single-sided and double sided with differences in
>> decorative motif.
>>
>> Alice
>>
>> On Tue, May 3, 2016 at 8:06 PM, MARTA MORENO GARCIA <
>> marta.moreno at cchs.csic.es> wrote:
>>
>>> Dear all,
>>> I am currently studying the bone assemblage recovered from the Duomo of
>>> Padova (Italy) dated to the early and high Middle Ages. An Italian student
>>> is working with the worked bone material, among which there is this comb
>>> (see attached photographs) that comes from the cleaning layer. First of
>>> all, I would like to ask for your expertise in order to identify the
>>> material it is made of and secondly, I would appreciate very much any
>>> comments you would like to make on its typology. If you send some
>>> bibliography we can read, it would be great!
>>>
>>> Best regards,
>>> Marta
>>>
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>>
>
> --
> Steve Ashby
>
>
>
>
> Dr Steven P Ashby, FSA
> Senior Lecturer
> Dept of Archaeology
> University of York
> www.york.ac.uk/archaeology
> @uoyarchaeology / @grungeviking
> Awards Officer, Finds Research Group
> www.frg700-1700.org.uk
>
> PLEASE NOTE: I am on research leave.
> Student issues to *David Orton* (david.orton at york.ac.uk
> <gill.chitty at york.ac.uk>).
> BoS issues to *Dr Gill Chitty* (gill.chitty at york.ac.uk).
>
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