Pages: 415-423
It is the first introduction of a funerary complex, investigated at the Vladycheni-I cemetery on the left bank of the Lower Danube. The only bronze plate with the image of an eight-petal rosette with a rounded projection in the center was preserved in the completely looted grave. This item, undoubtedly, belongs to the Hungarian artistic repoussage. This circumstance allows us to consider such finds (as well as their replicas on foil) as reliable markers of the early Magyars' presence in the North-West Black Sea region
Keywords: left bank of the Lower Danube, 9th—10th centuries, Hungarians, Magyars, burial, plate-rosette
Information about authors:
Maksym Kvitnytskyi (Tiraspol, Moldova). Pridnestrovian State University named after T. G. Shevchenko. 25 Oktiabria St., 128, Tiraspol, MD-3300, Moldova
E-mail: [email protected]
Nikolaj Telnov (Kishinev, Moldova). Doctor of History. Institute of Cultural Heritage of the Academy of Sciences of Moldova. Stefan cel Mare Bd., 1, Kishinev, MD-2001, Moldova
E-mail: [email protected]
Vitalij Sinika (Tiraspol, Moldova). Candidate of Historical Sciences. Pridnestrovian State University named after T. G. Shevchenko. 25 Oktiabria St., 128, Tiraspol, MD-3300, Moldova
E-mail: [email protected]
Sergey Lysenko (Kyiv, Ukraine). Candidate of Historical Sciences. Institute of Archaeology, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. Geroev Stalingrada Ave., 12, Kyiv, 04210, Ukraine
E-mail: [email protected]
Attila Türk (Budapest, Hungary). PhD. Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Institute of Archaeology. Egyetem St., 1, Piliscsaba, 2087, Pest County, Hungary
E-mail: [email protected]