Attila Európája?

Attila Európája?
06/06 - 06/08

2019. június 06. - 2019. június 08.

Régészettudományi Intézet (1088 Budapest, Múzeum krt. 4/B), MNM (1088 Budapest, Múzeum krt. 14–16.)

06/06 - 06/08

2019. június 06. - 2019. június 08.

Régészettudományi Intézet (1088 Budapest, Múzeum krt. 4/B), MNM (1088 Budapest, Múzeum krt. 14–16.)


A Régészettudományi Intézet és a Magyar Nemzeti Múzeum nemzetközi konferenciát szervez Attila's Europe? Structural Transformation and Strategies of Succes in the European Hun Period címen.

A rendezvényre a hazai régészeken és antropológusokon kívül Lengyelországból, Oroszországból, Romániából, Szerbiából, Horvátországból, Szlovéniából, Ausztriából, Csehországból, Németországból és Nagy-Britanniából érkeznek a népvándorláskor kutatói.

Strukturális átalakulás és sikerstratégiák az európai hun korszakban című háromnapos nemzetközi szimpóziumot Varga Benedek, a Magyar Nemzeti Múzeum főigazgatója nyitja meg. A szekciókban a civilizációk találkozásáról, a különböző etnikumokról és a tárgyi biográfiáról hangzanak el előadások. A konferencia munkanyelve az angol.

Plakát

THURSDAY, JUNE 6TH • Hungarian National Museum

Registration from 9.00 a.m.

WELCOME

9.45–10.00 Benedek Varga director general, Hungarian National Museum

KEYNOTE SPEECH

10.00–10.50 Radu Harhoiu (Bucharest): Die Hunnenzeit im unteren Donaubecken

10.50–11.10 Coffee break

ENCOUNTER OF CIVILIZATIONS

11.10–11.35 Ilya Akhmedov (St. Petersburg), Natalya Birkina (Moscow): On the eastern fringe of Barbaricum – Directions and chronology of cultural influences and interactions in the late Roman period and the Great Migration period

11.35–12.00 Natalia P. Matveeva, Alexander S. Zelenkov (Tyumen): The impact of nomadic culture on the West Siberian population in the Hunnic period

12.00–12.25 Anton Strokov (Moscow): Two-chamber vaults of the Hun age of the Bosporan Kingdom

12.25–12.50 Claus von Carnap-Bornheim, Andreas Rau (Schleswig): Scandinavia and Eurasian nomads – A search for traces and interpretations

12.50–14.00 Lunch break

REGIONAL TRAJECTORIES

14.00–14.25 Dmitry S. Korobov (Moscow): The system of habitation among the Northcaucasian Alans in Hunnic era

14.25–14.50 Zsófia Masek (Budapest): Settlement research of the 5th century AD in the core of the Hunnic Empire – A chronological approach

14.50–15.15 Hrvoje Vulić, Anita Rapan Papeša (Vinkovci): Foederati ante portas? – The case of a Late Antique cemetery in Cibalae

15.15–15.40 Murtazali S. Gadjiev (Makhachkala): The Maskut Kingdom and Hun Empire – Written Sources and Archaeological Data

15.40–16.00 Coffee break

16.00–16.25 Tina Milavec (Ljubljana): Crises and new beginnings: collapse, adaptation and strategies of success along the road to Italy

16.25–16.50 Eszter Soós (Pécs): Indigenes and invaders, or voluntary adaptation? – The question of the settlement continuity in the German territories of the Upper Tisza Region

16.50–17.15 Zsolt Mráv (Budapest): Fragments of gilded silver saddle plates and a horse skull from a late Roman ditch at Göd (County Pest, Hungary) – Contributions to the burial sacrifices of the Hun period

17.15–17.40 Orsolya Láng (Budapest): ’The town of Attila’… Or where are the Huns of Aquincum?

POSTER SESSION

19.00 Social dinner

FRIDAY, JUNE 7TH • Eötvös Loránd University, Institute of Archaeological Sciences

KEYNOTE SPEECH

9.30–10.20 Tivadar Vida (Budapest): Pannonia and the Huns

PEOPLE’S LIVES

10.20–10.45 Daniel Fernandes, Kendra Sirak, Olivia Cheronet, Rachel Howcroti, Mislav Čavka, Dženi Los, Josip Burmaz, Ron Pinhasi, Mario Novak (Vienna, Zagreb): Cranial deformation and genetic diversity in three adolescent male individuals from the Great Migration Period from Osijek, Eastern Croatia

10.45–11.10 Anett Miháczi-Pálfi (Budapest): Aspects of the interpretation of artificial cranial deformation in the Hunnic period

11.10–11.30 Coffee break

11.30–11.55 Nataša Miladinović-Radmilović (Belgrade): A contribution to the study of archery on the basis of activity-induced stress markers on the skeleton

11.55–12.20 Tamás Szeniczey, Tamás Hajdu, Zsófia Rácz (Budapest), Antónia Marcsik (Szeged): Skeletal remains of the Early Migration Period in Hungary

12.20–12.45 Alpár Dobos, Szilárd Gál (Târgu Mureș): 5th century burials from Sângeorgiu de Mureș (Mureș County, Romania) – Archaeological and anthropological analysis

12.45–14.00 Lunch break

POWER AND COMMUNICATION

14.00–14.25 Ivan Bugarski (Belgrade): Consequences of Hunnic raids and the newly-established border – An archaeological panorama of the Central Balkans (c. 450–500)

14.25–14.50 Judyta Rodzińska-Nowak (Cracow): The ’princely’ burial from Jakuszowice (western Lesser Poland) and its importance for the interpretaon of the ethnic situation and political circumstances between Odra and Vistula rivers during the period of Hunnic domination

14.50–15.15 Bence Gulyás (Budapest): A new theory on the emergence of the long-distance trade network in Central Eurasia in the Early Middle Ages

15.15–15.40 Coffee break

15.40–16.05 Vujadin Ivanišević (Belgrade): The circulation of Roman solidi in the fitih century in Moesia Prima and Barbaricum

16.05–16.30 Eszter Horváth, Viktória Mozgai, Boglárka Topa, László Aradi, Bernadett Bajnóczi (Budapest): Old finds, new insights – Archaeometric study of the polychrome jewellery from the aristocratic grave of Regöly-Pénzesdomb

16.30–16.55 Zsófia Rácz (Budapest): ‘Ladies of wealth’ – The significance of rich female burials in the 5th century Middle Danube region.

16.55–17.20 Gergely Szenthe (Budapest): Social power and identity in the late phase of the European Hunnic period in the light of a new ritual deposit from Central Hungary

18.00 Social dinner

SATURDAY, JUNE 8TH • Hungarian National Museum

OBJECT BIOGRAPHIES

9.30–9.55 Rodica Oanță-Marghitu (Bucharest): Back to objects – On the four brooches of the Pietroasa Treasure

9.55–10.20 Péter Somogyi (Satieins): „Attilas Münzen“ auf der Spur

10.20–10.45 Zsuzsanna Hajnal (Budapest), János Gábor Ódor (Szekszárd): A new elite assemblage from the Hun Period (Diósjenő, North Hungary)

10.45–11.10 Ágnes B. Tóth (Szeged): Authentic or fake? Do they belong to the ’Caucasian’- type brooches? – Some non-ferrous brooches in the collection of the University of Debrecen

11:10–11:30 Coffee break

BEYOND ETHNICITY

11.30–11.55 Eszter Istvánovits (Nyíregyháza), Valéria Kulcsár (Szeged): Argumentum ex silentio – a possible new approach in the research of the Hun Age

11.55–12.20 Attila Kiss P. (Budapest): Which came first, the chicken or the egg? The ethnic interpretations of the hoards of Șimleu Silvaniei/Szilágysomlyó – The case of the mixed argumentation

12.20–12.45 Vlad-Andrei Lăzărescu (Cluj-Napoca), Andrei D. Soficaru (Southampton): From Goths to Huns – Shifting Identities in the Lower Danube area during the 5th Century AD

12.45–13.00 Conclusion

POSTERS

Zsolt Gallina, Gyöngyi Gulyás (Kecskemét): Hun period settlements and cemeteries south of the lake Balaton

Zsuzsanna Hajnal (Budapest): Migration period settlement at the riverbank of the Tisza at Tiszagyenda

Orsolya Heinrich-Tamaska (Leipzig), Eszter Horváth (Budapest) About the shine of “Nomad Mirrors”– new results to selected objects of the 4th/5th c. AD

Eszter Horváth, Viktória Mozgai, Gergely Szenthe, Bernadett Bajnóczi (Budapest): Variations on Red in Gold – Characterisation of Garnets on the Polychrome Objects from the Hun Period Ritual Deposit from Telki (Central Hungary)

Corina Knipper (Mannheim), István Koncz, János G. Ódor, Balázs G. Mende, Zsófia Rácz, Sandra Kraus, Robin van Gyseghem, Ronny Friedrich, Tivadar Vida (Budapest): Community formation in Pannonia atier the decline of the Roman Empire – The case of Mözs

Bernadett Kovacsóczy (Kecskemét), Viktória Mozgai (Budapest), Antónia Marcsik (Szeged), Bernadett Bajnóczi (Budapest): The new research results of the Hun-age grave excavated from the Kecskemét-Mindszenti-dűlő site

Balázs Lukács, Gergely Szenthe (Budapest): Observations on production technology of some of the objects of the Telki assemblage

Viktória Mozgai, Bernadett Bajnóczi, Gergely Szenthe (Budapest): Multi-analytical archaeometric investigation of the polychrome fine gold and gilded silver metalworks from the Hunnic sacrificial assemblage from Telki (Pest County, Hungary) – The metal composition and decoration techniques

Tamara Pavlović, Ksenija Đukić, Marija Đurić (Belgrade): Interfering of the dead: did the Huns looted Sarmatian cemetery of Vojlovica-Rafinerija (Serbia)?

Jan Prostředník (Turnov), Jaroslav Jiřík (Prague), Jan Jílek (Brno): Unusual Site - Unusual Collection: Assemblage of the Migration period from Čertova Ruka, Karst Formation in the North of Bohemia

Balázs Wieszner, Emese Gyöngyvér Nagy (Debrecen): Ritual deposit from the Hun period from Debrecen