Gáti Csilla (szerk.): A Janus Pannonius Múzeum Évkönyve 54., 2016-2017 (Pécs, 2017)
RÉGÉSZET - Viktor Wéber: Settlement of the Early Urnfield period at Majs–Borza-major (Southern Transdanubia, Hungary)
A Janus Pannonius Múzeum Évkönyve ( 2017 ) 198 Every known rim sherd of pots from the site is everted. Of the sherds from pots with everted rims, 4 were undecorated, while 12 were faceted and 4 were channelled internally. 1.1. Pots with cylindrical neck Pots with cylindrical necks tend to have strongly everted rims, which are usually internally faceted or channelled. ?e nearest analogy of the form is from the settlement of Pécs–Jakabhegy, dated to the Bz D-Ha A period ( Maráz 1987: 1. t. 4.). Pots with cylindrical necks and everted rim are known the Ha A1 period sites of Horn and Oberbergern ( Lochner 1991b: Taf. 8.1., Lochner 1994: Taf. 12. 3.). 1.1.a) Pots with cylindrical neck and internally faceted, everted rim Pots with cylindrical necks and internally faceted rims (Fig. 5/ 1; Fig. 6/ 1–3) were common in the Baierdorf-Velatice phase, their appearance in Transdanubia can be dated to the Ha A1 phase, and the type is characteristic in the Ha A2 and Ha A2/B1 transitional period ( Patek 1968: 94., Vadász 1992: 217–218., Črešnar 2010: 38., 59., 72., Kalicz-Schreiber et al. 2010: 250–251.). Several examples of pots with cylindrical necks are known from the cemetery of Békásmegyer ( Kalicz-Schreiber et al. 2010). It seems that pots with cylindrical necks are rather rare in Croatian and Slovenian assemblages of the same period ( Črešnar 2010: 33–38.). Horizontal channelling on the shoulder is frequent in the earlier phase of the Vál-Chotín group ( Vadász 1992: 222.). Internally faceted rims were one of the features used by L. Horváth to distinguish graves of the Ha A1 period from the earlier graves at Balatonmagyaród–Hídvégpuszta ( Horváth 1994: 10–14. kép). P. Polgár noted that internal faceting of the rims became less frequent in the Late Urnfield period ( Polgár 2003: 76.). 1.1.b) Pots with cylindrical neck and internally channelled, everted rim Internally channelled rims (Fig. 6/ 4; Fig. 8/ 4–5) are usually rather rare at the sites of the Initial and Early Urnfield period. ?e internal channelling of everted rims is considered to be a characteristic of the Ha A period by Slovenian and Croatian researchers ( Črešnar 2010: 42.), however, the decoration can be found in the assemblage of Ormož too, dated to the Ha B phase ( Dular – Jevremov 2010: T. 18. 4.). Horizontally channelled rims are also present on various vessels at sites of the Gáva culture ( V. Szabó 1996: 35., 17. kép 1–3, 5–7, 10–13., 22. kép 8., 23. kép 7., 27. kép 1–2., 29. kép 2, 4, 7, 11., 33. kép 1, 5.). 1.2. Pots with conical neck Although their strongly everted rims may suggest that most of the rim sherds belong to pots with carinated shoulder to neck transitions, in some cases,