Institute of arhaeology
Bronze findings from the island of Krk
2010
Croatian
Otok Krk u svjetlu sjevernojadranske prapovijesti čini zasebnu teritorijalnu cjelinu u kontekstu liburnske grupe kasnoga brončanog doba te Liburna tijekom željeznog doba. Pored većeg broja lokaliteta, poznat je dio materijala pronađen slučajnim nalazima. Radom na infrastrukturi u gradu Krku i u njegovoj neposrednoj blizini pronađena je grupa predmeta koju čine tri brončane šuplje sjekire (keltovi) i brončana masivna narukvica otvorenih krajeva. Sjekire pokazuju izrazitu modu koja se iz matičnog područja kulture polja sa žarama, tijekom njezine IV. faze, preko Bosne proširila na obalu istočnog Jadrana, dok narukvica pokazuje najbliže paralele s materijalom II. faze kulture polja sa žarama iz predalpskog prostora.In the Northern Adriatic prehistory, the island of Krk constitutes a separate territorial entity within the context of the Liburnian group of the Late Bronze Age and the Liburnians of the Iron Age. Although there are many sites dating from this period, some items were found by accident. Works carried out on the infrastructure, in the city of Krk and in its immediate vicinity, revealed a group of items consisting of three bronze socketed axes (celts) and a massive bronze open-ended bracelet. The axes are crafted in the distinctive fashion which spread from the original Urnfield culture area, during its phase IV, via Bosnia, to the Eastern Adriatic coast. The bracelet most closely resembles items from phase II of the Urnfield culture of the pre-Alpine area
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