[Bonetools] Medieval Italian comb
Steve Ashby
steve.ashby at york.ac.uk
Thu May 5 11:47:07 CEST 2016
My typology (see http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue30/ashby_index.html
)will hold in broad terms for that region, but your best bet is to just
start looking through site reports for the region. There should be plenty
of reports featuring combs from Late Antique sites in the region.
Steve
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).
Please support families and communities in Langtang, Nepal:
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Please see the University of York's email disclaimer:
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On 5 May 2016 at 10:16, Maja G. <majagrguric at gmail.com> wrote:
> 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).
>>
>> Please support families and communities in Langtang, Nepal:
>> http://www.justgiving.com/langtang-survivors
>>
>> Please see the University of York's email disclaimer:
>> http://www.york.ac.uk/docs/disclaimer/email.htm
>>
>>
>>
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>> Bonetools mailing list
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>>
>
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