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 - N. Ju. Limberis - I. I. Marchenko: Szarmata lovas sírja egy meót földvár temetőjében
New data concerning the cultural situation in the basin of the Upper San River Telega 2007. 63, Fig. 3, Madyda-Legutko-Rodzinska-Nowak-Zagórska-Telega 2010. 389, Fig. 1: 2). This fibula is a unique find in the Przeworsk Culture inventories and provides an excellent example of the use of decoration known from A. V, series 8 bronze fibulae, typical for the Wielbark Culture milieu during the development of the so-called Baroque style, that is, in phase B2/C1 (Machajewski 1998. 189, Maczynska-Rudnicka 2004. 402, 414, Fig. 7: 9, Fig. 14, Fig. 16). Beside these, the Prusiek necropolis yielded two gold pendants, also typical for the Wielbark Culture. From grave 22, dated to the close of phase B2 or phase B2/C1, comes a spherical gold pendant decorated with granulation and pearled wire (Madyda-Legutko-Rodzinska-Nowak-Zagórska-Telega 2010. 389, Fig. 1:1). Another gold pendant decorated with filigree and granulation was found secondarily burnt in the similarly dated grave 10. Most probably, this specimen was also a spherical one (Madyda-Legutko-Rodzinska-Nowak-Zagórska-Telega 2010, 387-389, Fig. 1: 4). Spherical pendants, both gold and silver, occur in the inventories from the eastern zone of the Przeworsk Culture (i.e. mainly in the right-bank Masovia) in the developed phase B2 and in phase B2/C1 (Andrzejowski 2001.70, Fig. 11., Madyda-Legutko-Rodzinska-Nowak-Zagórska-Telega 2010. 391-392, Fig. 2). Another observation worth mentioning concerns the significant number of male burials equipped with weaponry (Fig. 4), including swords which are known from as many as six graves (Madyda-Legutko-Rodzinska-Nowak-Zagórska-Telega 2007. 64), while three other burials yielded metal parts of scabbards (chapes and attachments). Five of these swords are specimens imported from the territory of the Roman Empire. On the tang of the sword from feature 16 two impressions of the blacksmith’s stamp (maker’s mark) were preserved. This was a rectangular stamp with partially legible letters (Madyda-Legutko-Rodzinska-N owak-Zagórska-Telega 2007. 64, Fig. 4.) Swords with stamps are quite numerous among specimens of provincial origin found in Barbaricum. However, those with more than one stamp impression are unique (Biborski 1994. 17Ы79, Biborski- Ilkjar 2006. 302). Another unique find is the sword from feature 42. Both sides of its blade bear traces of incrusted representations of Mars and Victoria (Madyda-Legutko-Rodzinska-Nowak-Zagórska-Telega 2008.49, Fig. 2-4). From the Przeworsk Culture area we know only one sword with analogical incrustations, from an unknown locality (Biborski 1978. 84). From Podlodów (Ul§z Commune, Lublin Province) comes a sword dated to phase Cl a, also decorated with incrusted representations of Mars and Victoria. However, in this case both figures are placed on the same side of the blade (Gurba-Slusarski 1966. 202-203). The fragment of a sword decorated similarly to the Prusiek specimen comes also from Jevnaker, in the Norwegian Fig. 4 Prusiek, Site 25, Sanok district. Urn grave (feature 25) 4. kép Prusiek, 25. lelőhely, Sanok járás. Umasir (25. objektum) 413