Istvánovits Eszter (szerk.): A nyíregyházi Jósa András Múzeum Évkönyve 55. (Nyíregyháza, 2013)
A 2010. október 11-14. között Nyíregyházán és Szatmárnémetiben megtartott Vándorló és letelepült barbárok a kárpáti régióban és a szomszédos területeken (I-V. század) Új leletek, új értelmezések című nemzetközi régészeti konferencia anyagai - Marcin Biborski - Piotr Kaczanowski: Mágikus kardcsüngők
Piotr Kaczanowski - Judyta Rodziriska-Nowak Fig. 7 J^drzychowice, Olawa district (after Krause 1904.) 7. kép Jedrzychowice, Otawa járás (Krause 1904. alapján) rather have served as a reconnaissance of the areas that became their northern neighbourhood once they had taken control over the Carpathian Basin. The question remains as to whether these raids led to the subordination of the inhabitants of the territories north of the Carpathians and Sudetes and if, in a slightly later period, the reign of Attila truly extended ‘as far as the islands on the Ocean’. The archaeological sources mentioned above offer only a limited insight into these issues. As traces of the Huns, one can regard the already mentioned votive finds from Jedrzychowice, Razová and Lichnov. The burial from Przemeczany is undoubtedly the grave of a nomad warrior, as is indicated by the deformation of his skull, although one should remember that the same custom was adopted by the Germans (Werner 1956., Teschler-Nicola-Mitteröcker 2007. 273). The only Hunnic 440