Sursa: Youtube Utilizator: Recording Archaeology
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In my paper I will provide an accurate overview of this topic and focus on the ruined church uncovered recently in Alba Iulia fortress – the oldest medieval church ever found north of the Lower Danube. The ruins were unexpectedly uncovered during structural works, in a very complicated stratigraphic context, consequence of the use of the area during the last two thousand years. Prehistoric, Roman, post-Roman, Gepid, and 8th-10th centuries’ habitation evidence was found beneath the church, which was in use for about a hundred years, until it was in turn pulled down during the second half of the 11th century, when the first Roman-Catholic Cathedral was being built. Subsequently, the ruins were disturbed and partly destroyed by the 11th-13th centuries’ medieval graveyard and later still by numerous medieval and modern intrusions. The analysis of this discovery (archaeological context, architectural features, building materials) offers a unique opportunity to explore the history of the Carpathian Basin around the year 1000.
Mai multe informaţii despre subiect mai jos:
1. Biserica din secolele X-XI, de influenţă bizantină, de la Alba Iulia [Gyulafehérvár]. Restituiri preliminare/The 10th-11th centuries’ Byzantine style church in Alba Iulia. Preliminary considerations
2. Byzantine influences in the Carpathian Basin around the turn of the millennium. The pillared church of Alba Iulia [Gyulafehérvár/Karlsburg]
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