Kisné Cseh Julianna (szerk.): Annales Tataienses III. Régészeti adatok Tata történetéhez 1. (A Tatán 1999-ben megtartott tudományos ülésszakon elhangzott előadások anyaga). Mecénás Közalapítvány, Tata, 2003.
Kissné Cseh Julianna: A Dunántúli Mészbetétes Edények kultúrájának leletei Tatán és környékén
Finds of the Transdanubian Encrusted Pottery Culture at Tata and its region Julianna Kis-Cseh As compared to the original idea of the project initiated by three institutions (Kuny Domokos Museum, Móricz Zsigmond Municipal Library and German Nationality Museum) this period is in the most problematic situation since relatively few new find assemblages have been discovered at Tata and its region since the results published in the "Tata története" (History of Tata) in 1979. This project, nevertheless, affords the recapitulation of the old and recent finds and the delineation of the historical context. The recent finds, even though not from the Tata region, have modified the results reached in the former research periods. The first finds were uncovered in the second half of the 19 th century (plates IIV). At first, they were taken to the Hungarian National Museum, then, from the first half of the 20 th century, to the Piarist Museum in Tata, the legal predecessor of the Kuny Domokos Museum. After a historical sketch, the study intends to draw a comprehensive picture about the history of the period through the analysis of the old and the recent find materials (lifestyle, settlements, burial rites, ceramics, metal working, reconstruction of costumes). In the territory of Komárom-Esztergom county, a special version of the culture evolved in result of the inner development of the Tokod group of the Hatvan culture, strongly influenced by the Early and Middle Bronze Age cultures of Northern Transdanubia and Southern Slovakia (Makó, Kisapostag and Aunjetitz cultures). The complex analysis of the period led to the following results. The Tokod group was the ethnic base of the Transdanubian Encrusted Pottery culture. The Makó and the Kisapostag cultures exercised an influence on the development of the new culture, which can be followed in Komárom-Esztergom county as long as the Koszider period. 16