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To browse Academia. Dizdar ed. The article gives an overview of studies regarding the role of women in Iron Age archaeology with focus on the eastern Hallstatt culture. It emphasises the history of research concerning this topic with special regard to gender studies in the German speaking archaeological community. Budapest: Archaeolingua Press, Julia K.
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The Role of Women in Iron Age Archaeology - A Brief Overview Of The History Of Research For The Eastern Hallstatt Culturemine Carola Metzner-Nebelsick Carola Metzner-Nebelsick. See full PDF download Download PDF. The project brought together researchers from the Institute of Archaeology, the Institute for Anthropological Research, the Department of Archaeology at the University of Zagreb, the Ludwig-Maximillian University in Munich, the Institute of Archaeology and Art History in Cluj-Napoca, the Vienna Institute for Archaeological Science, the Archaeological Institute in Belgrade, the Archaeological Department at the Faculty of Philosophy in Belgrade, and numerous outside participants from the Archaeological Museum in Osijek, the Vinkovci City Museum, the Vukovar City Museum, and the Slavonski Brod Regional Museum.
Project research tried to answer questions about how the female body was perceived, what influenced female visual identity in the Iron Age, what was the role of women in the Iron Age society, and whether the funerary customs and jewellery reflect the status of the buried women. The exploration of the Danube area cemeteries of Batina and Sotin led to interdisciplinary research of cremated anthropological remains and archaeological analyses and interpretations that resulted in papers on the material traces for the reconstruction of the costume, status and roles of women in these communities and how different female identities were created by costume and jewellery.