S. Perémi Ágota (szerk.): A Laczkó Dezső Múzeum Közleményei 28. (Veszprém, 2014)
Regenye Judit–T. Bíró Katalin: Veszprém, Jutasi út neolitikus település leletanyaga. I. Kerámia, kő
Buildings. Ground Plans, Interior, and Their Function. Slov Arch, 60. 2012. 251-284. RACZKY 1974 = RACZKY R: A lengyeli kultúra legkésőbbi szakaszának leletei a Dunántúlon. Funde der spätesten Phase der Lengyel-Kultur in Westungarn. ArchÉrt, 101. 1974. 185-210. REGENYE 1986 = REGENYE J.: Veszprém, Petőfi S. u., Madách u. RégFüz, Ser. 1. 39. 1986. 33—34. REGENYE 2004 = REGENYE J.: Háztípusok és településszerkezet a késői lengyeli kultúrában veszprémi és szentgáli példák alapján. VMMK 23, 2004. 25—47. REGENYE 2006 = REGENYE J.: Temetkezések Veszprém, Jutási út lelőhelyen. Burials at the site Veszprém, Jutási street. VMMK 24, 2006. 7-35. REGENYE 2007 = REGENYE, J.: The Late Lengyel culture in Hungary as reflected by the excavation at Veszprém. In: KOZLOWSKY, J. K. - RACZKY, P. eds.: The Lengyel, Polgár and related cultures in the Middle/Late Neolithic in Central Europe. Krakow, 2007, 381-396. REGENYE 2011 = REGENYE J.: Kő és agyag. Települések és életmód a neolitikum-rézkor fordulóján a Dunántúlon. Veszprém, 2011. REGENYE 2013 = REGENYE J.: Házkultusz - házzal kapcsolatos rítusok a lengyeli kultúrában. Cultic aspect of the house - Rituals connected with the house of the Lengyel Culture. MQMOS VII. Őskoros kutatók VII. összejövetele 2011. március 16-18. Százhalombatta. Ősrégészeti Levelek 13, 2011 (2013), 102-112. RUTTKAY 1985 = RUTTKAY, E.: Das Neolithikum in Niederösterreich. Wien, 1985. RUTTKAY 1991 = RUTTKAY, E.: Die neolithischen Siedlungen in Höbenbach bei Krems. Annales Naturhistorischen Museums Wien, 92. 1991. 105-124. SZAKMÁNY 2009 = SZAKMÁNY GY.: Magyarországi csiszolt kőeszközök nyersanyagtípusai az eddigi archeometriai kutatások eredményei alapján. Types of polished stone tool raw materials in Hungary. Archeometriai Műhely, 6/1. 2009. 11— 30. http://www.ace.hu/am/2009_l/AM-09-01-SZGY.PDF TOŐIK 1986 = TOŐIK, A.: Offene Siedlung der Lengyel- Kultur in Komjatice, Bez. Nővé Zámky (Vorbericht). In: Internationales Symposium über die Lengyel-Kultur. Nővé Vozokany 1984. Nitra-Wien, 1986, 271-279. ZALAI-GAÁL 1996 = ZALAI-GAÁL, I.: Die Kupferfiinde der Lengyel-Kultur im südlichen Transdanubien. Acta ArchHung, 48. 1996. 1-34. ZALAI-GAÁL 2002 = ZALAI-GAÁL, I.: Die neolithische Gräber- gruppe-Bl von Mórágy-Tűzkődomb. I. Die archäologischen Funde und Befunde. Szekszárd-Saarbrücken, 2002. FINDS FROM THE NEOLITHIC SETTLEMENT VESZPRÉM, JUTÁSI STREET I. Ceramics and lithics The site Veszprém, Jutási street (formerly: Fel- szabadulás street) is a significant settlement of the Late Lengyel Culture. It was excavated in several campaigns, most recently, in course of a preventive excavation in 2003. A large area was excavated; the finds will be published in subsequent series. In the first part, the northernmost part of the area will be covered in a patch of approximately 20 meters. This area is a seemingly confined part of the settlement, approximately 80x20 m large, comprising a row of houses extending to 5 households including the building and associated pits. The find material is also coherent in the sense that all finds here belong to older phases of the Lengyel culture without features with Late Lengyel (Lengyel III) pottery. On the analysed part of the settlement there were 143 Lengyel culture features (without the graves). Most of them were pole post pits (87). The other features were smaller and bigger pits around the houses (56). The number of pottery fragments investigated is 1617. They were found in 39 features - 15 among them were pole post pit adherent to the houses and 24 of them pits located outside the houses. The most striking feature of the shards is the high ratio of painted fragments (11%). We can find white painting on red basis, red painting on white, and black painting on red basis, the latter category only in small amount. The typological analysis of the pottery shows two settlement horizons on the study area. Both pottery horizons represent the first half in the life of the settlement. The first horizon comprised features 222 and 216. These two pits, unlike the other features of the area, show no traces of the formation of the Late Lengyel pottery that is apparent on the other parts of the study area. Therefore these two pits can be assigned to the time period preceding the Lengyel IIB phase. The finds of the other features are also dominantly of Lengyel II character but already with 39