Papers by Lucia Nezvalová
Radiocarbon, 2023
Nitra-Lupka is an important site from the Great Moravian period in Slovakia. A fortified hillfort... more Nitra-Lupka is an important site from the Great Moravian period in Slovakia. A fortified hillfort which was supposed to be from this period, a battery of pottery kilns, and an Early Medieval cemetery were found on the site and researched during 1959–1975. Further, a few small-range excavations took place on the site at the beginning of the 21st century. At the same time, the dating of the hillfort to the Early Medieval period has begun to be questioned. There was also a problem with the localization of settlement that would belong to the battery of pottery kilns. The settlement was discovered recently in 2021 during development-led excavations at Nitra-Šindolka. It was found at the place of the construction of the ecoduct. Two ovens and four other features with numerous ceramics and other findings were discovered. Some of the bones (phalanges of cattle and goat/sheep) were dated by radiocarbon dating being the first 14C data obtained from this site and therefore of high importance for its precise dating.
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Archaeologia historica, 2016
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Informátor SAS pri SAV - Revue slovenských archeológov, 2021
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Informátor SAS pri SAV, 2020
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exhibition catalogues by Lucia Nezvalová
Avari i Slaveni / Avars and Slavs, 2019
The international exhibition project Avars and Slavs is presented through two exhibitions: the Cr... more The international exhibition project Avars and Slavs is presented through two exhibitions: the Croatian exhibition Avars and Slavs south of the Drava river, and the Slovak exhibition Avars and Slavs north of the Danube. The exhibitions display the archaeological material from Croatian museums, private collections, also including a group of items found during recent archaeological excavations, as well as the items from Slovak museums and institutions. The aforementioned period is presented through carefully chosen jewellery items, warrior equipment, agricultural tools, pottery, and bone items.The exhibitions are the center of communication and interaction of the two distant, yet close Slavic countries, and show incredible similarities among the material found in Croatia and Slovakia.
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Papers by Lucia Nezvalová
exhibition catalogues by Lucia Nezvalová