Late Roman pottery from Room III/North at the Visegrád-Gizellamajor fort Cover Image

Late Roman pottery from Room III/North at the Visegrád-Gizellamajor fort
Late Roman pottery from Room III/North at the Visegrád-Gizellamajor fort

Author(s): Katalin Ottományi
Subject(s): Archaeology, Ancient World
Published by: Akadémiai Kiadó
Keywords: Late Roman Period; Early Migration Period; pottery; Limes in Pannonia

Summary/Abstract: Pottery at the late Roman fort of Visegrád-Gizellamajor contains both forms common in the 4th century as well as new ones, which appear at the turn of the 4th and 5th centuries. On traditional Roman household pottery and glazed vessels new surface ornaments (incised and notched) and new designs (fired yellowish-white, very gritty fabric) appear. Additionally, there are vessels with smoothed and smoothed-in ornaments. Although the excavators distinguished various layers in the fort, pottery from the layers often fit together. What survived to the greatest extent were the materials from the upper destruction debris. Room III of the north wing was a later addition to the fort; hence its pottery can be dated from the Valentinian period until the Hun period.

  • Issue Year: 71/2020
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 15-69
  • Page Count: 55
  • Language: English