ÚJ NEMZEDÉK - A szegedi Régészeti Tanszék tehetséggondozásának elmúlt évtizedei. Ünnepi kötet B. Tóth Ágnes, Kulcsár Valéria, Vörös Gabriella és Wolf Mária tiszteletére, 2020
A resident of Csongrád, Hungary, found an enamelled copper plate from an Árpád age processional c... more A resident of Csongrád, Hungary, found an enamelled copper plate from an Árpád age processional cross, a corpus,
and some coins of King Béla III (1172–1196) near Felgyő. He donated the objects to the Tari László Museum in Csongrád. This paper analyses the processional cross with a goal to determine it’s dating. Processional crosses were
in use in Europe from the 8th–9th century on, and, in the 12th century, they became an obligatory equipment in the churches. Consequently, this was the period when goldsmith centers were established around Limoges, France. These
centers provided almost the entire territory of Europe with enamelled liturgical objects. One of the most important
destinations of these objects was the Hungarian Kingdom. The processional cross found in Felgyő arrived to Hungary
probably in the late 12th or the early 13th century and was discarded when the Hungarian Kingdom was invaded by the
Mongolian army in the middle of the 13th century.
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Papers by Balázs Mellár
and some coins of King Béla III (1172–1196) near Felgyő. He donated the objects to the Tari László Museum in Csongrád. This paper analyses the processional cross with a goal to determine it’s dating. Processional crosses were
in use in Europe from the 8th–9th century on, and, in the 12th century, they became an obligatory equipment in the churches. Consequently, this was the period when goldsmith centers were established around Limoges, France. These
centers provided almost the entire territory of Europe with enamelled liturgical objects. One of the most important
destinations of these objects was the Hungarian Kingdom. The processional cross found in Felgyő arrived to Hungary
probably in the late 12th or the early 13th century and was discarded when the Hungarian Kingdom was invaded by the
Mongolian army in the middle of the 13th century.
and some coins of King Béla III (1172–1196) near Felgyő. He donated the objects to the Tari László Museum in Csongrád. This paper analyses the processional cross with a goal to determine it’s dating. Processional crosses were
in use in Europe from the 8th–9th century on, and, in the 12th century, they became an obligatory equipment in the churches. Consequently, this was the period when goldsmith centers were established around Limoges, France. These
centers provided almost the entire territory of Europe with enamelled liturgical objects. One of the most important
destinations of these objects was the Hungarian Kingdom. The processional cross found in Felgyő arrived to Hungary
probably in the late 12th or the early 13th century and was discarded when the Hungarian Kingdom was invaded by the
Mongolian army in the middle of the 13th century.