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#DiamondOpenAccess journal publishing broad range of archaeological research with focus on Central Europe | www.archeologickerozhledy.cz | Published by Institute of Archaeology of the CAS, Prague
How were the dead buried in Late Eneolithic southern Poland? What can graves reveal about local traditions and social meaning? A new study explores two burials of the Złota culture (2900–2300 BCE), revealing the (dis)connections between the Złota, Globular Amphora, and Corded Ware worlds.
doi.org/10.35686/AR....
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FORTHCOMING: An early medieval sword with a Carolingian K-type pommel from Varín in Northwestern Slovakia: A status symbol rather than a weapon
FORTHCOMING: @janturek.bsky.social reviews Petr Pokorný – Petr Šída (eds.): Hinterland. Archeologie severočeských pískovcových krajin
FORTHCOMING: Diverse deathscapes: Insights from two Late Eneolithic Złota culture burials in Southern Poland
Kyselý - Peške: New discoveries change existing views on the domestication of the horse and specify its role in human prehistory and history – a review doi.org/10.35686/AR....
Salaš et al.: A unique stone mould for casting a spearhead from Morkůvky in South Moravia as an example of long-distance import in the Urnfield Period, and its technological contribution doi.org/10.35686/AR....
🥉Halkon - Jinks-Fredrick: New light on old iron: recent work on Iron Age iron production, consumption and deposition in Britain doi.org/10.35686/AR....
🥈Miňo et al.: What does the waste say about the medieval town of Banská Bystrica (Central Slovakia) and its environment doi.org/10.35686/AR....
🥇Trampota et al.: A child, twelve goats, three sheep, a cow, and a horse: An unusual grave from the Late Eneolithic in Brno-Slatina (South Moravia, Czech Republic) doi.org/10.35686/AR....
Check the TOP5 most-read papers of 2025⬇️
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In 2025, we recorded 63,770 abstract views and 27,429 full-text article downloads on our website. Thank you to all authors, reviewers, and readers for contributing to this reach. We look forward to continuing this trajectory in 2026.
Post-medieval #pottery in Poland reflects more than local craft traditions. In her paper, Magdalena Bis traces how foreign prototypes of pottery were adapted into local productions, revealing long-lasting networks of influence and connectivity from the 16th to the 19th century.
FORTHCOMING: A female burial in a Roman bronze bucket from Nezabylice in Northwestern Bohemia
doi.org/10.35686/AR....
We wish you a peaceful Christmas and a fruitful year 2026 filled with interesting discoveries.
The editorial team of Archeologické Rozhledy would like to sincerely thank all our readers, authors, and reviewers for their support and valuable contributions throughout the year.
Early medieval strongholds in Western Greater Poland predate the rise of the Piast state but remain unevenly studied. Mizerka-Urbaniak surveys around 30 known sites, highlighting their diversity and strong potential to rethink chronology, function, and micro-regional settlement networks.
The paper contributes to the discussion started by the recent paper of J. Macháček on the role of Great Moravian agglomerations and their hinterlands
doi.org/10.35686/AR....
FORTHCOMING: A few notes in the defence of the Great Moravian market system by Michal Hlavica
doi.org/10.35686/AR....
paper in CZ with EN summary
doi.org/10.35686/AR....