Book chapters by Agata Sztyber
Tarnów county. 8. Demblin, „Grodzisko”, Wietrzychowice commune [in:] Early Medieval hillforts in Poland vol. 4. Bochnia, Brzesko, Gorlice, Myślenice, Olkusz, Oświęcim, Tarnów counties, Małopolska Voivodshaft, ed. Poleski Jacek Early Medieval hillforts in Poland vol. 4, 2019
Olkusz county. 6. Zagórowa, „Zamczysko”, Trzyciąż commune [in:] Early Medieval hillforts in Poland vol. 4. Bochnia, Brzesko, Gorlice, Myślenice, Olkusz, Oświęcim, Tarnów counties, Małopolska Voivodshaft, ed. Poleski Jacek Early Medieval hillforts in Poland vol. 4, 2019
Brzesko county. 3. Jadowniki Podgórne, „Bocheniec”, Brzesko commune [in:] Early Medieval hillforts in Poland vol. 4. Bochnia, Brzesko, Gorlice, Myślenice, Olkusz, Oświęcim, Tarnów counties, Małopolska Voivodshaft, ed. Poleski Jacek Early Medieval hillforts in Poland vol. 4, 2019
Bochnia county. 1. Chełm, „Grodzisko”, Bochnia commune [in:] Early Medieval hillforts in Poland vol. 4. Bochnia, Brzesko, Gorlice, Myślenice, Olkusz, Oświęcim, Tarnów counties, Małopolska Voivodshaft, ed. Poleski Jacek Early Medieval hillforts in Poland vol. 4, 2019
Modlnica, stan. 5 Od epoki brązu po czasy średniowiecza. Via Archaeologica. Źródła z badań wykopaliskowych na trasie autostrady A4 w Małopolsce, 2015
Work in Polish.
Od Bachórza do Światowida ze Zbrucza : tworzenie się słowiańskiej Europy w ujęciu źródłoznawczym : księga jubileuszowa Profesora Michała Parczewskiego, 2016
Drinking horn fitting from Koźmice Wielkie, Wieliczka district. In the spring of 2016, the Instit... more Drinking horn fitting from Koźmice Wielkie, Wieliczka district. In the spring of 2016, the Institute of Archaeology of the Jagiellonian
University in Kraków was contacted by an anonymous finder, who offered to donate to the Institute’s collection an artefact accidentally
discovered near Koźmice Wielkie. The artefact turned out to be a fitting of a drinking horn, made from copper alloy, crowned
with a stylised bull’s head. It expands the collection of drinking horn fittings of group E according to the classification by J. Andrzejowski,
represented by only seven other pieces from the entire territory of Poland. According to Andrzejowski they were manufactured
mainly in the Danish Islands, and in Gotland and Oland. The chronology of the discussed group is correlated with the Early Roman
period. In that period the Celtic population of the Puchov culture (more precisely its Kraków group, migrating from the present-day Slovakia
to the north of the Carpathians) coexisted in the right-bank Vistula basin with the Germanic population of the Przeworsk culture.
With the new discoveries, the geographical range of drinking horns with bull’s head terminations has expanded further to the south
(Greater Poland, central Masovia). The find from Koźmice Wielkie testifies to the occurrence of such fittings in southern Poland. This
allows to formulate a hypothesis about the southern origin of such objects in the Przeworsk culture, and perhaps also in the Wielbark
and Bogaczewo cultures. Analogical change in the interpretation has recently been proposed with regard to the brooches decorated with
plastic representations of a bull’s head, some of which have horns decorated with granulation Previously interpreted as originating from
western Scandinavia, by some scholars they are now considered to be of southern origin.
Academic studies of archaeological excavations in Lysokanie archaeological site 4, Klaj commune, Wieliczka county, Via Archaeologica. The archaeological materials from the A4 high-way excavations in Lesser Poland, Krakow, pp. 279-294 [in Polish], 2014
Rozborz, archaeological site no 27. The multicultural settlement, Via Archaeologica Ressoviensia, Rzeszow, pp. 55-60 [in Polish], 2014
Historical layers in the cities, Krakow, pp. 207-223 [in Polish], 2012
Modlnica 5. From the Middle Neolithic to the Early Bronze Age, Via Archaeologica. The archaeological materials from the A4 high-way excavations in Lesser Poland, Krakow, pp. 1-19, 2011
The daily life through things, Toruń, pp. 43-62 [in Polish], 2010
Papers by Agata Sztyber
Popularisation of science by Agata Sztyber
Artykuł ukazał się w piśmie kulturalnym " Fragile " nr 4(6) 2009, strony 90-93.
Books by Agata Sztyber
Wczesnośredniowieczne grodziska w Polsce, tom 4, 2019
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Book chapters by Agata Sztyber
University in Kraków was contacted by an anonymous finder, who offered to donate to the Institute’s collection an artefact accidentally
discovered near Koźmice Wielkie. The artefact turned out to be a fitting of a drinking horn, made from copper alloy, crowned
with a stylised bull’s head. It expands the collection of drinking horn fittings of group E according to the classification by J. Andrzejowski,
represented by only seven other pieces from the entire territory of Poland. According to Andrzejowski they were manufactured
mainly in the Danish Islands, and in Gotland and Oland. The chronology of the discussed group is correlated with the Early Roman
period. In that period the Celtic population of the Puchov culture (more precisely its Kraków group, migrating from the present-day Slovakia
to the north of the Carpathians) coexisted in the right-bank Vistula basin with the Germanic population of the Przeworsk culture.
With the new discoveries, the geographical range of drinking horns with bull’s head terminations has expanded further to the south
(Greater Poland, central Masovia). The find from Koźmice Wielkie testifies to the occurrence of such fittings in southern Poland. This
allows to formulate a hypothesis about the southern origin of such objects in the Przeworsk culture, and perhaps also in the Wielbark
and Bogaczewo cultures. Analogical change in the interpretation has recently been proposed with regard to the brooches decorated with
plastic representations of a bull’s head, some of which have horns decorated with granulation Previously interpreted as originating from
western Scandinavia, by some scholars they are now considered to be of southern origin.
Papers by Agata Sztyber
Popularisation of science by Agata Sztyber
Books by Agata Sztyber
University in Kraków was contacted by an anonymous finder, who offered to donate to the Institute’s collection an artefact accidentally
discovered near Koźmice Wielkie. The artefact turned out to be a fitting of a drinking horn, made from copper alloy, crowned
with a stylised bull’s head. It expands the collection of drinking horn fittings of group E according to the classification by J. Andrzejowski,
represented by only seven other pieces from the entire territory of Poland. According to Andrzejowski they were manufactured
mainly in the Danish Islands, and in Gotland and Oland. The chronology of the discussed group is correlated with the Early Roman
period. In that period the Celtic population of the Puchov culture (more precisely its Kraków group, migrating from the present-day Slovakia
to the north of the Carpathians) coexisted in the right-bank Vistula basin with the Germanic population of the Przeworsk culture.
With the new discoveries, the geographical range of drinking horns with bull’s head terminations has expanded further to the south
(Greater Poland, central Masovia). The find from Koźmice Wielkie testifies to the occurrence of such fittings in southern Poland. This
allows to formulate a hypothesis about the southern origin of such objects in the Przeworsk culture, and perhaps also in the Wielbark
and Bogaczewo cultures. Analogical change in the interpretation has recently been proposed with regard to the brooches decorated with
plastic representations of a bull’s head, some of which have horns decorated with granulation Previously interpreted as originating from
western Scandinavia, by some scholars they are now considered to be of southern origin.