Detailed Information on Publication Record
2016
Zaniklé středověké vesnice na Moravě, dějiny bádání a stav výzkumu
MAZÁČKOVÁ, Jana, Kateřina DOLEŽALOVÁ and Jakub TĚSNOHLÍDEKBasic information
Original name
Zaniklé středověké vesnice na Moravě, dějiny bádání a stav výzkumu
Name (in English)
Deserted Medieval Villages in Moravia, History and the Current State of Research
Authors
MAZÁČKOVÁ, Jana, Kateřina DOLEŽALOVÁ and Jakub TĚSNOHLÍDEK
Edition
Chorzów, p. 59-92, 350 pp. 2016
Publisher
Górnośląski Park Etnograficzny w Chorzowie
Other information
Language
Czech
Type of outcome
Stať ve sborníku
Field of Study
Archaeology, anthropology, ethnology
Country of publisher
Poland
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Publication form
printed version "print"
Organization unit
Faculty of Arts
ISBN
978-83-941769-5-2
Tags
Reviewed
Změněno: 14/5/2024 10:02, Mgr. Jana Mazáčková, Ph.D.
Abstract
In English
The first information about the villages considered lost in the area of Moravia dates back to the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century, when in the studies of a lexicon characterthere appeared first mentions on the “empty” villages – already non-existing settlements. At the end of the nineteenth century more detailed studies concerning the villages began to be published. They were discussing this phenomenon analytically, combining data from historical sources with the ongoing parallel researches of the terrain. However, such projects were implemented only on a regional scale. Apart from previous single excavation actions being often of the amateur nature, the first methodical archaeological research on the disappeared medieval villages in Moravia took place in the 1950s.Pfaffenschlag, Mstěnice, Bystřec and Konůvky are the most widely analyzed villages with the biggest number of published studies concerning them. That researches have foundations for more developed models of studies concerning the disappeared villages, which – due to the emergence of new methods continue to evolve. In the twenty-first century, they have been extended, among others, by modern methods of measurement and presentation.