Somogyvári Ágnes – V. Székely György szerk.: „In terra quondam Avarorum…” Ünnepi tanulmányok H. Tóth Elvira 80. születésnapjára - Archaeologia Cumanica 2. (Kecskemét, 2009)
Pálóczi Horváth András: Szentkirály középkori háztartásai és a régészeti leletanyag feldolgozásának szempontjai
PÁLÓCZI HORVÁTH ANDRÁS: SZENTKIRÁLY KÖZÉPKORI HÁZTARTÁSAI. Among the iron objects (3,2 %) there are some imports from Austria (e.g. knives), but most of them are local products: scissors, awls, hooks, drills, chains, locks. Bigger tools, agricultural tools and horse harness are seldom found on excavations: these include axes, sickles, pitchforks, hoes, bits, spurs, horseshoes. The manufacture of bone tools is an ancient craft: skates of horse bone, awls, punchers, handles, whistles and pin-cases of bird bones, lathe-turned pearls, bell ornaments. (Bone objects: 0,09 %.) Wood and leather objects were found only in the muddy fill of the wells: ladder, posts, beams, timbers, a boot-stole, leather bag, etc. The wells preserved the remains of vegetation and the biological environment of the village. The structure of two excavated wells (pit D and pit 94) reflect the high standard of medieval carpentry. Costumes can be reconstructed from the grave goods of the burials in the cemetery around the church. Silver S-terminated lock-rings are very common grave goods in graves of the Árpádian Age. In the graves of the 15-16th century there were simple buttons, hooks. Girls' headdress (hungarian „párta") is an outstanding find in young girls' graves, the types represent the contemporary Renaissance Hungarian costume. Translated by Magdolna Vicze 1. kép. Szentkirály középkori falu alaprajza. 1. Feltárt lakóházak. 2. Feltáratlan középkori lakóházak valószínű helye. 3. Középkori kocsiút. 4. Rekonstruált középkori telekhatárok (1 -6. sz. régészetileg kutatott beltelkek). 223