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Everything Has a Role to Play: Reconstruction of Vessel Function From Early Copper Age Graves in the Upper Tisza Region (Eastern Hungary)

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Investigation into the utilitarian function of mortuary vessels is often a neglected aspect of ceramic examination. Since, in most cases, a direct link can be assumed between the vessels’ size, form, and most optimal utilitarian function, morphometry-based ceramic categories – along with ethnoarchaeological examples – can help to understand the role of these vessels in funerary contexts. This article focuses on the relationship between the utilitarian function of ceramics and their roles in graves through the analysis of eight Early Copper Age (4400/4300–4000/3900 BC) burial sites, associated with Tiszapolgár and Bodrogkeresztúr ceramic styles, from the Upper Tisza Region (Hungary). The deposition of ceramic assemblages in graves became common in this period; however, a systematic analysis of their function has never been carried out before. In this study, a morphometry-based methodology was developed to establish the vessels’ utilitarian function. These functions were considered in the analysis of the composition of mortuary assemblages, and how they may reflect social status or gender roles of the deceased individual. Results indicate that the Tiszapolgár and Bodrogkeresztúr assemblages cannot be unequivocally distinguished from each other based on morphometric and functional criteria, suggesting similar functional roles in the past funerary contexts.
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Research Article
Eszter Solnay*
Everything Has a Role to Play:
Reconstruction of Vessel Function From Early
Copper Age Graves in the Upper Tisza Region
(Eastern Hungary)
https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2022-0282
received July 1, 2022; accepted January 23, 2023
Abstract: Investigation into the utilitarian function of mortuary vessels is often a neglected aspect of
ceramic examination. Since, in most cases, a direct link can be assumed between the vesselssize, form,
and most optimal utilitarian function, morphometry-based ceramic categories along with ethnoarchaeo-
logical examples can help to understand the role of these vessels in funerary contexts. This article focuses
on the relationship between the utilitarian function of ceramics and their roles in graves through the
analysis of eight Early Copper Age (4400/43004000/3900 BC)burial sites, associated with Tiszapolgár
and Bodrogkeresztúr ceramic styles, from the Upper Tisza Region (Hungary). The deposition of ceramic
assemblages in graves became common in this period; however, a systematic analysis of their function has
never been carried out before. In this study, a morphometry-based methodology was developed to establish
the vesselsutilitarian function. These functions were considered in the analysis of the composition of
mortuary assemblages, and how they may reect social status or gender roles of the deceased individual.
Results indicate that the Tiszapolgár and Bodrogkeresztúr assemblages cannot be unequivocally distin-
guished from each other based on morphometric and functional criteria, suggesting similar functional roles
in the past funerary contexts.
Keywords: morphometric analysis, vessel function, mortuary traditions, Great Hungarian Plain, Early
Copper Age
1 Introduction
The relationship between the form, size, and function of ceramic vessels represents one of the key corner-
stones of archaeological thought (Boudreaux, 2010, p. 8; Braun, 1983, p. 108; Kramberger, 2015, p. 233; Rice,
1987, p. 208; Skibo, 1992, p. 36; Van der Veen, 2018); however, the exact use of ceramics cannot be
ascertained based simply on this assumption. To better understand the exact use of a certain vessel
type, the dierence between the intended and the actual function needs to be claried (Figure 1). According
to James M. Skibo and Michael B. Schier, the intended function is a mental image of a particular ceramic
vessel and its use the potter creates the vessel based on this image, which could be social, ideological, or
utilitarian (Skibo, 1992, pp. 3435; 2013, p. 3; Skibo & Schier, 2008, pp. 4, 11). The social function

* Corresponding author: Eszter Solnay, Institute of Archaeological Sciences, Eötvös Loránd University, MTA-ELTE Lendület
MomentumInnovation Research Group, Múzeum krt. 4/a, 1088, Budapest, Hungary; Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University,
Doctoral School of Archaeology, 3 rue Michelet, 75006, Paris, France; UMR 8215 Trajectoires, 9 rue Malher, 75004, Paris,
France, e-mail: soleszter96@student.elte.hu
Open Archaeology 2023; 9: 20220282
Open Access. © 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License.
communicates social phenomena in the framework of a specic activity or performance (Skibo & Schier,
2008, p. 110). The ideological function reects ideas, values, or knowledge symbolised by vessels (Skibo &
Schier, 2008, p. 110). The utilitarian function expresses the optimal use of vessels for example, for
cooking or transporting liquid (Santacreu, Trias, & Rosselló, 2017; Sinopoli, 1999; Skibo, 1992, 2013; Skibo &
Schier, 2008). This can be identied by the examination of the vesselsmorphometry (i.e. the form and the
size), along with the additional elements such as handles manufacturing techniques and decoration
(Read, 2007; Rice, 1987, p. 207; Skibo, 2013, p. 29).
However, the intended function does not always correspond to the actual function, i.e. the way(s)how
the ceramic vessel was actually used by people (Abbink, 1999, p. 163; Rice, 1987, p. 211; Skibo, 1992, p. 33;
2013, p. 4). The actual function of a particular pot can be wide ranging, until it reaches a stage when it is no
longer able to contain foods or liquids. At this point, it may either be deposited or reused, as temper for
instance, or discarded altogether (Skibo, 1992, pp. 4245). The actual function of a vessel could be claried
by scientic testing, such as residue (e.g. Barnard & Eerkens, 2017; Craig et al., 2003; Fanti et al., 2018;
Heron & Evershed, 1993; Hoekman-Sites, 2011)and use-wear analyses (e.g. Banducci, 2014; Debels, 2018;
Fanti et al., 2018; Vieugué, 2014; Vieugué, Mirabaud, & Regert, 2008); however, the re-assessment of the
circumstance of discovery and contextual descriptions can also be helpful in this regard.
The vessels which were deposited and later found in situ in unique archaeological contexts, such as in
ritual depositions or graves, imply that these pots could have had a distinguished or special function, at
least in the nal phase of their lives (Skibo, 2013,p.5). The deposition of ceramic vessels in such unique
contexts could potentially alter the vesselsintended function, but even in these special circumstances, pots
retain some of their original functions, such as their utilitarian function, which could explain why these
vessels were deposited in burials in the rst place. Combining the observations on ritual and mortuary
contexts, and the morphometric examinations carried out on the ceramic assemblages, several aspects of
the intended and actual function of the vessels could be distinguished.
Although the functionality of potteries is not a clear concept and vessels could have had multiple
usages during their life span (Gosselain, 1992; Kempton, 1981; Longacre, Xia, & Yang, 2000; Rice, 1987, p. 29),
general tendencies can be described between the form, size, and function since the basic morphometry of
potteries is not accidental but related to some functional idea (Fowler, 2006, pp. 104106; Kramberger, 2015;
Rice, 1987, p. 208; Skibo, 1992). Formerly, a number of studies had demonstrated that the utilitarian function
of ceramic vessels can be outlined by taking a closer look at the vesselsmorphometry (Fowler, 2006, p. 116;
Santacreu et al., 2017, p. 189; Sinopoli, 1999, p. 126; Skibo, 1992, p. 36). Ethnoarchaeological research has
played a key role in establishing the morphometric-based ceramic categories (Hally, 1986; Henrickson &
McDonald, 1983; Smith, 1986, 1988). In these works, rst, an overall vessel typology was established on the
basis of anthropological examinations, before the usage of vessels was discussed in archaeological contexts.
Figure 1: The intended, actual, and distinguished or special function of the vessels.
2Eszter Solnay
Initially, Marion F. Smith dened three basic determining factors for form and size: (1)the relative openness
of the vessels prole, (2)the absolute diameter of the rim, and (3)the total volume of the vessel based on the
absolute height and diameter of the body. However, other analyses demonstrated the volume being the
poorest predictor compared to the other two factors (Smith, 1988, pp. 914915). This suggests the vessels
form and openness to be the key elements in determining the utilitarian function of ceramic pots.
Through the morphometric review of ceramic vessels, four broad function categories could be outlined:
(1)storage, (2)transport, (3)processing, and (4)serving/eating (Orton, Tyers, & Vince, 1993, p. 217; Rice,
1987, p. 208). However, in the case of burials, a slightly modied system of classication is required
considering the partial change to the vesselsintended function.
The aim of this article is to develop a morphometry-based methodology to examine the utilitarian vessel
function in the context of burials based on an Early Copper Age case study from the Upper Tisza Region on
the northern fringes of the Great Hungarian Plain (Eastern Hungary). The morphometry-based utilitarian
function analysis of mortuary ceramics is particularly relevant in this period, when a new social and ritual
system emerged, along with the appearance of multiple ceramic styles (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963, 1972; Par-
kinson, 2006a,b; Parkinson & Gyucha, 2007; Raczky, Anders, & Siklósi, 2014; Raczky & Siklósi, 2013; Siklósi
& Szilágyi, 2021). Formerly, over-detailed ceramic typology hindered the recognition of the utilitarian
function of these vessels and, therefore, the understanding of why these potteries were deposited in burials.
Thus, the present study has the virtue of being the rst to analyse the functional patterns in the selection of
vessels for mortuary purposes during the Early Copper Age through the statistical examination of simplied
geometric forms of ceramics.
2 Background to the Case Study
The Early Copper Age signalled the beginning of a new era on the Great Hungarian Plain: a new techno-
logical and social system was emerging out of the traditions of the Late Neolithic Tisza-Herpály-Csőszhalom
complex. This, for example, included the establishment of a dense network of small-sized settlements
(Parkinson, 2006a, 2006b; Parkinson & Gyucha, 2007; Sherrat, 1982, 1983a,b)and the rst appearance of
formal cemeteries (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963, 1972; Raczky et al., 2014; Raczky & Siklósi, 2013; Siklósi & Szilágyi,
2021)while at the same time, the tradition of burial depositions continued at settlement sites as well
(Gyucha, 2015; Parkinson, Gyucha, & Yerkes, 2021; Raczky et al., 2014; Szilágyi, 2015). Although the mortuary
practice of gender specic burials dates back to Late Neolithic (Anders & Nagy, 2007), this particular funerary
custom only became xed and normative during the Early Copper Age: women were placed on their left side
and men on their right, both in a crouched position (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963; Chapman, 2000; Kadrow, 2010;
Lichter, 2001; Meisenheimer, 1989; Raczky et al., 2014; Sofaer Derevenski, 1997).
Until recently, the Early Copper Age on the Great Hungarian Plain has been associated with the so-
called Tiszapolgár culture, followed by the Middle Copper Age Bodrogkeresztúr culture (Banner & Bognár-
Kutzián, 1961; Bognár-Kutzián, 1963, 1972, 1985; Kalicz, 1958; Patay, 1961, 1974). In the 1960s70s, the
Tiszapolgár and the Bodrogkeresztúr cultures were identied and came to be treated as separate entities,
mostly on the basis of detailed ceramic typologies drawn from cemeteries (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963, 1972;
Patay, 1961, 1974). By the 1990s, calibrated radiocarbon dates reinforced their absolute chronology and
their chronological succession (Raczky, 1995). However, the recent AMS data and Bayesian modelling
carried out at a number of Tiszapolgár and Bodrogkeresztúr sites imply the partial contemporaneity of
the two cultures, dating both of them to the Early Copper Age (Raczky & Siklósi, 2013; Siklósi et al., 2022;
Siklósi & Szilágyi, 2016, 2021). Although the Tiszapolgár culture still appears to date to a slightly earlier
period (from 4435 (68.2%)4385 cal BC to 4220 (68.2%)4165 cal BC)than the Bodrogkeresztúr culture (from
4400 (68.2%)4325 cal BC to 4020 (68.2%)3930 cal BC)(Siklósi & Szilágyi, 2021, p. 35). The most recent
ceramic stylistic analysis assumes high levels of homogeneity among the domestic assemblages of the two
cultural groups (Szilágyi, 2016); therefore, currently, many experts call for the term ceramic styleinstead
of culture(Raczky et al., 2014; Raczky & Siklósi, 2013; Siklósi & Szilágyi, 2016, 2021; Szilágyi, 2016).
Everything Has a Role To Play 3
The majority of studies that dealt with the ceramic grave goods of Early Copper Age burials applied a
typological approach, fully developed by Bognár-Kutzián (1963, 1972)and Patay (1961, 1974)in the
1960s70s (Figure 2a). These works published in the past decades only put forward generic, largely
Figure 2: Categorisation of the Early Copper Age vessels: (a)typological categories; (b)morphometrical categories (with
sematic images using simplied geometric forms); and (c)morphologic categories (with sematic images using simplied
geometric forms).
4Eszter Solnay
typological statements regarding the composition of Tiszapolgár and Bodrogkeresztúr burial assemblages.
The so-called milk jugs’–upon which the denition of the Bodrogkeresztúr culture as a whole was
determined previously represent the leading ceramic type of the Bodrogkeresztúr culture (Hillebrand,
1927). Milk jugs generally occur in graves along with a few cups and/or bowls (Lichter, 2001, p. 332; Patay,
1974, p. 21). The Tiszapolgár style graves are characterised by a large quantity of pottery (Lichter, 2001, pp.
280281)and the presence of vessels with hollow-pedestals (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963, 1972). Moreover, some
vessel types were dened as non-culture-specicceramics like the owerpot-like vessels or storage jars
due to their occurrence in both Tiszapolgár and Bodrogkeresztúr burials (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963, pp.
241244, 271275; 1972, pp. 121122; Patay, 1974, p. 29), as well as the lack of distinctive decoration styles.
However, these generalisations and complicated ceramic typologies often hinder the recognition of the
utilitarian function and make it dicult to compare the two ceramic assemblages. Therefore, a more general
ceramic classication was required to analytically recognise the utilitarian function and to better under-
stand the Tiszapolgár and Bodrogkeresztúr mortuary practices.
There have been a number of works published on the function of the Early Copper Age ceramic grave
goods. The study carried out by Meisenheimer (1989)analysed the functions of ceramics that occurred in
the 155 Early Copper Age graves of Tiszapolgár-Basatanya cemetery, where both the Tiszapolgár and the
Bodrogkeresztúr styles can be found (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963). However, contrary to the approach of the
present article, Meisenheimer worked out a detailed typochronology for the burials similarly to Bognár-
Kutziáns pioneering study upon which she was able to outline the two cultural phases of the cemetery.
Meisenheimer analysed the ceramic functions of the two periods separately within the framework of her
detailed typology and focused on the general function of the ceramic oerings, instead of dening the
function of each vessel type (Meisenheimer, 1989, pp. 3032). More recently, István Zalai-Gaál published
his results on the metric examination of the ceramics dating to the Early Copper Age, similarly what the
present article is set out to achieve. However, in the centre of his study was the comparison of the vessels of
Tiszapolgár and Bodrogkeresztúr style and metric examinations were used for the purpose of chronological
questions, not to understand the composition of ceramic assemblages in the graves and past mortuary
practices (Zalai-Gaál, 2016). Therefore, the reconstruction of the composition of ceramic assemblages and
the assessment of the vesselsutilitarian function in Early Copper Age burials are yet to be completed.
Therefore, the aim of the present case study is to examine the morphometric similarities and dierences
between the Tiszapolgár and the Bodrogkeresztúr ceramic styles, along with a closer look at the possible
reconstructions of burial assemblages, and the utilitarian functions of ceramics within these, followed by a
discussion of possible selection patterns reected by Early Copper Age burials. In this way, the article
attempts to shed more light on why exactly certain vessels were selected for mortuary purposes and, thus,
the similarities and dierences between the functions of ceramics that accompanied the Tiszapolgár and
the Bodrogkeresztúr graves.
3 Case Study
The case study area is situated in the Upper Tisza Region in Northeast Hungary, along the northern fringes
of the Great Hungarian Plain, with a focus on eight cemeteries and grave clusters with fully published
ceramic material concentrating within a radius of 50 km (Figure 3).
3.1 First Group of Selected Sites
Within the remits of this article, four (major)undisturbed and published (including the metric data on
ceramics)Early Copper Age cemeteries or grave clusters (all situated away from the settlements)were
examined: (1)Tiszapolgár-Basatanya (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963),(2)Tiszavalk-Kenderföld (Patay, 1978b),(3)
Everything Has a Role To Play 5
Polgár-Nagy-Kasziba (Solnay, 2018), and (4)Tiszabábolna-Szilpuszta (Hillebrandt & Patay, 1977, pp.
4147). The analysis included only undisturbed burials and well-preserved vessels whose form and size
can be reconstructed. The morphometric examination is primarily based on the published metric data
occasionally along with photographs (Supplement File 1).
Tiszapolgár-Basatanya represents one of the most thoroughly studied Early Cooper Age burial grounds
in Hungary, excavated between 1950 and 1954. The site is located on the area of the so-called Polgár Island
(Raczky et al., 2014, p. 323, Figure 4)between the Selypes Stream and the Szandalik Canal. The cemetery
containing 156 graves served as a basis for outlining the Early Copper Age ceramic typochronology in
the region. At the Tiszapolgár-Basatanya site, both Tiszapolgár and Bodrogkeresztúr style graves were
identied, as well as the transitional graves (i.e. representing the transition between the two styles)
(Bognár-Kutzián, 1963). Most recent chronological examinations show that the cemetery was established
after 44204280 cal BC and was utilised until 40403910 cal BC (Raczky & Siklósi, 2013, p. 566). For this
article, altogether 90 burials along with 417 vessels were selected for analysis.
Tiszavalk-Kenderföld, another Early Copper Age burial ground, is located on the western bank of the
Nyárád Stream. Although a large part of the site was presumably demolished (Patay, 1978b,p.7), altogether
54 graves were excavated between 1966 and 1967. The burials were furnished with Bodrogkeresztúr style
grave-goods (Patay, 1978b). 30 burials with 90 vessels were deemed suitable for examination.
At Polgár-Nagy-Kasziba, a group of four Early Copper Age graves with Tiszapolgár style vessels (Raczky
et al., 1997; Solnay, 2018)was excavated in 1996 (Hajdú & Nagy, 1999, p. 149). The site is situated on Polgár
Island (Raczky et al., 2014, p. 323, Figure 4), on the eastern bank of the Kengyel Stream. It can be assumed that
the grave group was part of a larger so far uninvestigated cemetery (Raczky et al., 1997, p. 47).Mostrecent
studies estimate the establishment of the site to 4520 (68.2%)4360 cal BC until 4335 (68.2%)4180 cal BC
(Siklósi & Szilágyi, 2021, p. 16). Three of the burials with 27 vessels were selected for further investigations.
The site of Tiszabábolna-Szilpuszta, located near the Szili Canal, was excavated in 1974 and 1976.
During the excavations, seven Tiszapolgár burials were found. It can also be presumed that the graves
belonged to a larger but now destroyed cemetery (Hillebrandt & Patay, 1977, pp. 4147). Four burials
were included in the analysis along with 18 ceramic grave-goods.
Figure 3: Location of the analysed sites: (1)Tiszapolgár-Basatanya; (2)Tiszavalk-Kenderföld; (3)Polgár-Nagy-Kasziba, (4)
Tiszabábolna-Szilpuszta, (5)Tiszavalk-Tetes, (6)Szabolcs-Kisfalud, (7)Szihalom-Sóhajtó, and (8)Szihalom-Pamlényi-tábla.
6Eszter Solnay
At these four selected sites, the sample size of both the Tiszapolgár and the Bodrogkeresztúr style
ceramics were approximately equal, making the comparison between the two mortuary practices possible.
The statistics for the study were generated by the PAST 3.21 software (Hammer, Harper, & Ryan, 2001).
3.2 Second Group of Selected Sites
Furthermore, four additional burial grounds and grave clusters were included in the present case study: (1)
Tiszavalk-Tetes (Patay, 1978a),(2)Szabolcs-Kisfalud (Ecsedy, 1977),(3)Szihalom-Sóhajtó (Marton & Patay,
2004; Szabó, 1997), and (4)Szihalom-Pamlényi-tábla (Marton & Patay, 2004; Váradi, 1997). The ceramic
metric data have not been fully published from these sites; therefore, the examination and the identication
of the vessels were based on the previously dened morphometric categories along with photographs and
descriptions (Supplement File 2). The analysis of these additional four cemeteries and grave groups aims to
rene the picture outlined by the four initially investigated cemeteries (with larger grave counts)to better
understand the practice of mortuary ceramic oerings in the Upper Tisza Region in Hungary.
The burial ground of Tiszavalk-Tetes contained 25 Early Copper Age graves with Bodrogkeresztúr style
vessels. The site located on the bank of the Tetes Stream was excavated between 1968 and 1975 (Patay,
1978a). Along with the burials, two Early Copper Age pits were also discovered (Patay, 1979). Most recent
chronological studies estimate the beginnings of the burial ground to around 4490 (68.2%)4230 cal BC
until 4315 (68.2%)4030 cal BC (Siklósi & Szilágyi, 2021, p. 23). For this article, 17 burials with 84 vessels
were selected for analysis.
Szabolcs-Kisfalud, an Early Copper Age grave cluster, is situated on the bank of an old meander of the
Tisza River, where 10 Tiszapolgár burials were found during an archaeological investigation between 1971
and 1972 (Ecsedy, 1977). Three of them with 11 vessels were suitable for examination.
The two Early Copper Age sites of Szihalom-Sóhajtó and Szihalom-Pamlényi-tábla were excavated
between 1995 and 1997, in the vicinity of Szihalom. At Szihalom-Sóhajtó, 56 Bodrogkeresztúr burials and
a settlement were unearthed (Marton & Patay, 2004; Szabó, 1997), while at Szihalom-Pamlényi-tábla, a
single Bodrogkeresztúr grave (Marton & Patay, 2004; Váradi, 1997)was discovered separated only by a
shallow depression from the previous site, which ooded periodically (Marton & Patay, 2004, p. 294; Szabó,
1997, p. 54). Contrary to the other sites, Szihalom-Sóhajtó and Szihalom-Pamlényi-tábla have not been fully
published yet; therefore, only the two known graves one from each site with nine vessels are included in
the analysis.
4 Methods
The methodology for this analysis involved two steps (Figure 2). First, the vesselssimplied geometric
forms were determined to establish the basic morphological categories for the analysis of the graves
ceramic composition (Figure 2b). The second step included the metric analysis of the established morpho-
logical categories to draw up morphometric groups, from which the utilitarian function of certain vessel
types can be inferred (Figure 2c). Finally, the morphological composition of the graves was re-examined
with regard to ceramics, in the light of the metric analysis, to gain a better insight into Early Copper Age
funerary practices.
To determine the simplied geometric form of burial ceramics, eight metric measurements were
recorded on each vessel (Figure 4):(1)the absolute height of the entire vessel, (2)the height of the bowl
part (for pedestalled vessels, this value is dierent from the absolute height),(3)the diameter of the rim, (4)
the diameter of the base (for pedestalled vessels, the base diameter of the bowl part),(5)the height of the
neck, (6)the maximum width of the body, (7)the height of the pedestal, and (8)the diameter of the pedestal
(Martinez-Carrillo & Barcelo, 2017, p. 589; Read, 2007, pp. 230239). Since the main focus was to simplify
Everything Has a Role To Play 7
the over-detailed traditional typology by dening the primary geometric form of vessels, restricted and
unrestricted forms were not divided if the basic geometric form was similar (for example, between vessels
called conical and biconical bowls in traditional typology). For neckless potteries, the maximum width of
the body generally diers from the diameter of the rim by only a few centimetres. Therefore, the denition of
the maximum width of the body was considered irrelevant in the case of these vessels.
Following the methodological steps described by Read (2007, pp. 228240)and Kramberger (2015,
p. 233), the vessels were divided into neckless variants and types with necks in the rst round of examina-
tions and were analysed separately. Then, following the method by Prudence Rice, the neckless variants
were compared in a scatter plot by the ratio of their rim diameter and the height of their bowl-part (Figure 5)
(Rice, 1987, pp. 215216). According to this, two groups could be identied; the shallow (rim diameter
bowl-part height)and the deep (rim diameter <bowl-part height)vessels. In contrast, vessels with necks
could not be examined by these parameters, because the height of the bowl-part is always larger than the
rim diameter, as well as the maximum width of their body (Figure 6). Therefore, the vessels with necks
cannot be separated only by these ratios. Finally, to determine the simplied geometric forms of the
ceramics, the pedestalled vessels and the vessels without pedestals had to be separated in each previously
dened category (i.e. to shallow and deep vessels and vessels with necks). As a result, six simplied
geometrical categories were established (Figure 2);(1)shallow neckless vessels (A1 =without pedestal,
A2 =pedestalled),(2)deep neckless vessels (B1 =without pedestal, B2 =pedestalled), and (3)vessels with
necks (C1 =without pedestal, C2 =pedestalled). However, the quantity of the deep neckless pedestalled
vessels (B2)and the pedestalled vessels with necks (C2)is low. Based on these categories, the ceramic
morphological composition of burials was examined at each site, using a series of correspondence analyses
and Kernel density estimations, where the number of burials allowed it.
The morphological analysis was followed by the metric examination of the simplied geometric form
categories aided by scatter plots and Kernel density estimations to distinguish between vessels of the same
form but dierent size and to establish morphometric categories (Figures 7 and 8). However, the exact
metric boundaries of these categories can vary within the range of a few centimetres across the sites
examined. This could be explained by dierent potting traditions at these sites, but other factors, such
as technological knowledge, experience, and skills of the potters, as well as community or individual
preferences, might also have inuenced the size of the vessels (Apel, 2008; Crown, 2001; Gandon et al.,
2011; Kamp, 2001; Stark, 1999, p. 40; Wayessa, 2011, p. 308). However, these dierences were presumably
too minor to aect the general use of the vessels (Smith, 1988, pp. 914915). The metric examination of the
neckless ceramics resulted in the identication of three vessel groups (Figure 2):(1)small, shallow neckless
Figure 4: Metric data recorded on each vessel.
8Eszter Solnay
pieces (almost entirely represented by form A1)was the most dominant vessel category: rim diameter
<18 cm or 8 cm; bowl height <14 cm, depending on the site, (2)wide, shallow neckless vessels occurring
with or without pedestal (classied mainly as form A2, but some pieces resembling form A1 also belong
here): rim diameter 18 cm; bowl height <14 cm, and (3)large, 1/1 ratio neckless vessels (represented by
form B1 and form A1): bowl height <14 cm or <8 cm, depending on the site, but their rim diameter and
height increase equally to almost 1:1. Metric examinations focusing on vessels with neck parts were able to
distinguish two groups (Figure 2):(1)regular-sized ceramics with necks (the vast majority of which
Figure 5: Scatter plot of neckless vessels at: (a)Tiszapolgár-Basatanya; (b)Tiszavalk-Kenderföld; and (c)Polgár-Nagy-Kasziba
and Tiszabábolna-Szilpuszta (the legends contain the traditional typological terms to visualise their metrical distribution).
Everything Has a Role To Play 9
belonged to form C1): widest point of body 20 cm and (2)large-sized vessels with necks (represented by
form C1): widest point of body >20 cm. Due to the small amount of the deep, neckless pedestalled vessels
(B2)and the pedestalled vessels with necks (C2), these morphological categories fell below signicant
representation during the metric analysis. Finally, after the establishment of the morphometric categories,
the morphological composition of the burials was re-examined and morphometric-based vessel assem-
blages in each burial were dened.
Figure 6: Scatter plot of vessels with neck at: (a)Tiszapolgár-Basatanya; (b)Tiszavalk-Kenderföld; and (c)Polgár-Nagy-Kasziba
and Tiszabábolna-Szilpuszta (the legends contain the traditional typological terms to visualise their metrical distribution).
10 Eszter Solnay
Figure 7: Kernel density plot of neckless vessels at: (a)Tiszapolgár-Basatanya; (b)Tiszavalk-Kenderföld; and (c)Polgár-Nagy-
Kasziba and Tiszabábolna-Szilpuszta.
Everything Has a Role To Play 11
5 Results
5.1 Tiszapolgár-Basatanya
Ninety burials (Σ=417 vessels)and their ceramic assemblages were suitable for examination, which
included 48 Tiszapolgár, 38 Bodrogkeresztúr, and 8 transitional graves. Morphological analyses concluded
that the shallow neckless vessels (A1)and vessels with necks (C1)occurred most frequently, but the amount
of the shallow neckless ceramics with pedestals (A2)and deep neckless vessels (B1)was also signicant
(Table 1).
The rst correspondence analysis showed the transitional graves to be independent of both the
Tiszapolgár and the Bodrogkeresztúr burials (Figure 9a), which could be explained by the lack of so-called
culture-specicceramic types (i.e. the shallow neckless vessels [A1], vessels with necks [C1], and shallow
neckless open ceramics with pedestals [A2]), and the large number of undiagnostic, deep neckless ceramics
(B1). However, the second correspondence analysis with the omission of transitional graves suggested a
dierent vessel distribution, by which two groups could be identied (Figure 9b and 9c):(1)burials where
the presence of the shallow neckless vessels (A1)and vessels with necks (C1)was dominant and (2)burials
where these ceramic forms could be present but were not dominant in the ceramic assemblage as a whole.
Figure 8: Kernel density plot of vessels with neck at: (a)Tiszapolgár-Basatanya and (b)Tiszavalk-Kenderföld.
12 Eszter Solnay
Table 1: The number and percentage of graves containing various vessel forms at Tiszapolgár-Basatanya
Shallow neckless vessels
without pedestal (A1)
Shallow neckless
vessels with
pedestal (A2)
Deep neckless vessels
without pedestal (B1)
Deep neckless vessels
with pedestal (B2)
Vessels with necks
without pedestal (C1)
Vessels with necks
with pedestal (C2)
Tiszapolgár style burials
(Σ=45)
40 (89%)39 (87%)20 (44%)1(2%)37 (82%)7(16%)
Bodrogkeresztúr style burials
(Σ=37)
32 (86%)6(16%)14 (38%)030(81%)6(16%)
Transitional burials (Σ=8)1(13%)07
(88%)002(25%)
Total (Σ=90)73 (81%)45 (50%)41 (46%)1(1%)67 (74%)15 (17%)
The table includes binary data indicating only the presence or absence of these forms in the graves, not the exact quantity of each ceramic form.
Everything Has a Role To Play 13
Figure 9: (a)Correspondence analysis of the graves from Tiszapolgár-Basatanya with 1σellipse and the separation of the
transitional graves. (b)Correspondence analysis of the graves from Tiszapolgár-Basatanya with the omission of transitional
graves. (c)Kernel density plot generated from the second correspondence analysis from Tiszapolgár-Basatanya.
14 Eszter Solnay
The rst scenario was typical of the graves of both ceramic styles, while the second was mainly character-
istic of the Tiszapolgár burials.
Based on the metric analysis of the simplied morphological ceramic categories, the following
morphometric vessel assemblages could be observed: the most commonly occurring vessel combination
included small, shallow neckless vessels and regular-sized vessels with necks found in 67% of the burials
at Tiszapolgár-Basatanya (Tables 2 and 3) The dierence between the Tiszapolgár and the Bodrogkeresztúr
burial assemblages is also reected by the third ceramic category included in the graves (Table 4). In the
Tiszapolgár burials, the wide, shallow neckless vessels represented the most frequently occurring ceramic
category, while in the Bodrogkeresztúr burials, this particular ceramic category was rare. The presence of
the large, 1/1 ratio neckless vessels is notable too, occurring in an approximately equal number of graves of
both ceramic styles. The number of large-size vessels with necks was limited and found mainly in the
Tiszapolgár graves.
5.2 Tiszavalk-Kenderföld
Thirty Bodrogkeresztúr style burials (Σ=90 vessels)were included in the examinations. The morphological
analysis showed that shallow neckless vessels (A1)and vessels with necks (C1)were by far the most
dominant forms, but deep neckless ceramics (B1)were signicant too (Table 5).
Table 2: The number of graves containing minimum one small, shallow neckless vessel and minimum one regular-sized vessel
with neck at Tiszapolgár-Basatanya
Vessel combination of minimum one small, shallow neckless vessel and
minimum one regular-sized vessel with neck
Tiszapolgár style burials (Σ=45)35 (78%)
Bodrogkeresztúr style burials (Σ=37)25 (68%)
Transitional burials (Σ=8)0
Total (Σ=90)60 (67%)
Table 3: The vessel combinations in graves which did not contain minimum one small, shallow neckless vessel and minimum
one regular-sized vessel with neck at Tiszapolgár-Basatanya
Vessel combination of minimum
one small, shallow neckless
vessel and minimum one large,
deep vessel
Vessel combination of minimum
one large, 1/1 ratio neckless vessel
and minimum one wide, shallow
neckless vessel
Just one ceramic
morphometric type
Tiszapolgár style burials
(Σ=12)
3(25%)3(25%)4(33%)
Bodrogkeresztúr style
burials (Σ=10)
5(50%)06(60%)
Transitional burials
(Σ=8)
00 6(75%)
Total (Σ=30)8(27%)3(10%)16 (53%)
Vessel combinations not mentioned here were of negligible quantity.

1Generally, one or two shallow neckless ceramics (A1)and a single vessel with a neck (C1).
Everything Has a Role To Play 15
The correspondence analysis identied two groups (Figure 10a and 10b):(1)burials accompanied only
by shallow neckless vessels (A1)and vessels with necks (C1)(53%)and (2)burials with deep neckless
ceramics (B1)as well as shallow neckless vessels (A1)and vessels with necks (C1)(30%).
Morphometric analyses of the burial assemblages have shown that the most frequently occurring vessel
combinations were of small, shallow neckless ceramics and regular-sized vessels with neck found in 90% of
the graves. The presence of the large, deep vessels was also signicant; however, the wide, shallow neckless
vessels were completely absent, contrary to the situation documented at Tiszapolgár-Basatanya.
5.3 Polgár-Nagy-Kasziba and Tiszabábolna-Szilpuszta
Altogether seven Tiszapolgár style burials (Σ=45 vessels)from the sites of Polgár-Nagy-Kasziba (Σ=27
vessels)and Tiszabábolna-Szilpuszta (Σ=18 vessels)could be included in the analysis (Table 6). These two
sites are discussed together due to the small number of graves deemed suitable for analysis, to provide a
better understanding of the occurring vessel categories. The morphological analysis indicated that the most
numerous ceramic forms were the shallow neckless vessel (A1), but vessels with necks (C1)and shallow
neckless ceramics with pedestals (A2)also occurred frequently, while the number of the deep neckless
vessels (B1)was signicant too. Due to the small number of burials, multivariate statistics could not be
carried out at these sites.
The two main ceramic combinations based on morphometrics were (1)small, shallow neckless vessels
and regular-sized vessels with necks and (2)small, shallow neckless vessels and wide, shallow neckless
vessels.
5.4 Szabolcs, Tiszavalk-Tetes, Szihalom-Sóhajtó, and Szihalom-Pamlényi-tábla
The morphometric analysis of mortuary ceramics from the rst four sites (Tiszapolgár-Basatanya,
Tiszavalk-Kenderföld, Polgár-Nagy-Kasziba, and Tiszabábolna-Szilpuszta)has shown high levels of
homogeneity among the Tiszapolgár and Bodrogkeresztúr style graves, the key dierence being the
representation of wide, shallow neckless vessels. This could be due to either the variations between
the two ceramic styles or the dierent individual characters of the sites under study. To investigate
this issue further, altogether 21 graves (Σ=104 vessels)were examined from four other, not fully pub-
lished Tiszapolgár and Bodrogkeresztúr sites (in terms of the ceramic metric data)and achieved the
identication of the morphometric categories established by the analyses based on the four major, fully
published sites (Table 7).
The results have shown the clear dominance of the small, shallow neckless vessels and regular-sized
ceramics with necks in the assemblages, independent from the style (Table 8). However, wide, shallow
neckless vessels were represented mainly among the Tiszapolgár style graves and were generally absent
from the Bodrogkeresztúr style burials. At Tiszavalk-Tetes, almost 70% of the analysed burials contained
Table 4: The third ceramic morphometric type in graves containing the vessel combination of minimum one small, shallow
neckless vessel and minimum one regular-sized vessel with neck at Tiszapolgár-Basatanya
Wide, shallow neckless vessels
with or without pedestal
Large, 1/1 ratio
neckless vessels
Large-sized
vessels with necks
Tiszapolgár style burials (Σ=35)31 (89%)13 (3%)14 (40%)
Bodrogkeresztúr style burials (Σ=25)5(20%)8(32%)2(8%)
Transitional burials (Σ=0)000
Total (Σ=60)36 (60%)21 (35%)16 (27%)
16 Eszter Solnay
Table 5: The number and percentage of graves containing various vessel forms at Tiszavalk-Kenderföld
Shallow neckless vessels
without pedestal (A1)
Shallow neckless vessels
with pedestal (A2)
Deep neckless vessels
without pedestal (B1)
Deep neckless vessels
with pedestal (B2)
Vessels with necks
without pedestal (C1)
Vessels with necks with
pedestal (C2)
Total
(Σ=30)
29 (97%)2(7%)10 (33%)028(93%)2(7%)
The table includes binary data indicating only the presence or absence of these forms in the graves, not the exact quantity of each ceramic form.
Everything Has a Role To Play 17
wide, shallow neckless vessels, despite that the cemetery was previously classied as Bodrogkeresztúr
style. This implies that the presence of this particular morphometric type in graves cannot be seen auto-
matically as culture-specic, even if they were dominant at sites associated clearly with a certain ceramic
style.
6 Discussion
Instead of a typological assessment, the denition of basic morphological categories and the establish-
ment of morphometric groups made it possible for the ceramic assemblages of the Tiszapolgár and
Bodrogkeresztúr burials can be compared, and the utilitarian function of the vessels to be outlined
(Figure 11). The morphometric analyses demonstrated very similar funerary ceramic assemblages present
in the graves of both the Tiszapolgár and the Bodrogkeresztúr styles in the Upper Tisza Region. Generally,
the ceramic assemblages in the burials of both ceramic styles contain a regular-sized vessel type with
Figure 10: (a)Correspondence analysis of the graves from Tiszavalk-Kenderföld. (b)Kernel density plot generated from the
correspondence analysis from Tiszavalk-Kenderföld.
18 Eszter Solnay
Table 6: The number and percentage of graves containing a variety of vessel forms at Polgár-Nagy-Kasziba and Tiszabábolna-Szilpuszta
Shallow neckless vessels
without pedestal (A1)
Shallow neckless vessels
with pedestal (A2)
Deep neckless vessels
without pedestal (B1)
Deep neckless, vessels
with pedestal (B2)
Vessels with necks
without pedestal (C1)
Vessels with necks with
pedestal (C2)
Total (Σ=7)6(97%)5(71%)4(33%)2(29%)5(71%)0
The table includes binary data indicating only the presence or absence of these forms in the graves, not the exact quantity of each ceramic form.
Everything Has a Role To Play 19
Table 7: The number and percentage of graves containing various vessel forms at Szabolcs, Tiszavalk-Tetes, Szihalom-Sóhajtó and Szihalom-Pamlényi-tábla
Shallow neckless vessels
without pedestal (A1)
Shallow neckless vessels
with pedestal (A2)
Deep neckless vessels
without pedestal (B1)
Deep neckless vessels
with pedestal (B2)
Vessels with necks
without pedestal (C1)
Vessels with necks
with pedestal (C2)
Total at Szabolcs (Σ=3)3(100%)1(33%)2(67%)02(67%)1(33%)
Total at Tiszavalk-Tetes
(Σ=16)
16 (100%)9(56%)9(56%)2(13%)15 (94%)4(25%)
Total at Szihalom-
Sóhajtó (Σ=1)
1(100%)0001(100%)0
Total at Szihalom-
Pamlényi-tábla (Σ=1)
1(100%)0001(100%)0
The table includes binary data indicating only the presence or absence of these forms in the graves, not the exact quantity of each ceramic form.
20 Eszter Solnay
neck and at least one small, shallow neckless vessel type, which can be identied as a basic set’–as it is
going to be referred to henceforth. In the basic set, small, shallow neckless vessels correspond with the
cups and small bowls described by the typology of Bognár-Kutzián (1963, pp. 259264, 288292),while
regular-sized vessel types with necks equate mainly to jars, jugs, and milk jugs (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963,
pp. 244247, 276).
One of the key pieces of the basic setis the regular-sized vessel with neck. As ethnoarchaeological
examples have shown, the presence of the neck indicates either a long-term storage function or the storage
of liquids of some kind (Kramberger, 2015, p. 233; Rice, 1987, p. 241; Skibo, 2013, pp. 3031; Smith, 1988,
p. 914). However, given the relatively small size of these vessels under study here compared to an average-
sized storage vessel makes the long-term storage of everyday goods, such as cereal grains, fruits or
vegetables, highly unlikely (Henrickson & McDonald, 1983, p. 634; Smith, 1988, p. 914). These vessels
seem more suitable for the transportation of liquids (Pechtl, 2015, p. 565, Figure 29.4), serving, or short-
term storage functions (Blitz, 1993, p. 84), but could have been used for the long-term storage of small
amounts of valuable goods, for example, special herbs, or fruits. Lipid analyses carried out on milk jugs
showed evidence of animal fat residues in a signicant number of vessels, as opposed to signatures related
to dairy fats, which only one of the vessels contained (Craig et al., 2003, p. 258; Hoekman-Sites, 2011, pp.
176178). However, only one examined sample came from a site included in the present article from
Tiszavalk-Tetes (Craig et al., 2003, p. 254).
Another key element of the basic setis the class of small, shallow neckless vessels, which could have
been intended for personal use at mealtimes (Pechtl, 2015, p. 565, Figure 29.4), as demonstrated by ethno-
graphic examples (Henrickson & McDonald, 1983, p. 632; Trias, Rosselló, Molina, & Santacreu, 2015, p. 91).
Depending on the depth, these small shallow potteries could have equally been suitable for the consump-
tion of liquid or solid foods (Hally, 1986, p. 270). However, in burials, these vessels were generally placed
near regular-sized vessels with necks particularly in Bodrogkeresztúr style graves (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963,
p. 290; Patay, 1978b, pp. 36, 49)²which could have been connected to smaller amount of liquid or solid
food. Thus, this close position of the small, shallow neckless vessels suggests a function for the consump-
tion of liquids or solid food, while in some burials, they could have also served as lids (Bognár-Kutzián,
1963, pp. 290, 298).
The basic setsare likely to have been associated with, or belonged to single individuals. Elements of
the basic set, particularly the regular-sized vessels with necks, were placed in front of the face of the
deceased or around the skull in the Bodrogkeresztúr style burials (Patay, 1978b,p.37). Such vessels were
deposited in a similar position in the Tiszapolgár graves too, although in some cases they also occur beside
the legs. This characteristic vessel placement appears to have roots in the Late Neolithic Tisza-Herpály-
Csőszhalom complex, where in the rare cases when ceramics were found in graves the vessels were
largely installed near the skull or around the legs (Sebők, 2012, p. 108, Tables 3 and 4). However, the Early
Copper Age basic set’–containing one small, shallow neckless vessel type and a regular-sized vessel type
Table 8: The number of graves containing minimum one small, shallow neckless vessel and minimum one regular-sized vessel
with neck at Szabolcs, Tiszavalk-Tetes, Szihalom-Sóhajtó, and Szihalom-Pamlényi-tábla
Vessel combination of minimum one small, shallow neckless vessel and minimum
one regular-sized vessel with neck
Szabolcs (Σ=3)2(67%)
Tiszavalk-Tetes (Σ=16)14 (88%)
Szihalom-Sóhajtó (Σ=1)1(100%)
Szihalom-Pamlényi-tábla (Σ=1)1(100%)

2These could be represented mainly by the jugs and milk jugs in the typology of Bognár-Kutzián (1963, p. 276).
Everything Has a Role To Play 21
with neck could not yet been identied in the Late Neolithic period. Therefore, following on from these
early deposition practices of ceramic grave goods, it could be suggested that a highly individualised basic
setwas established only by the period of the Early Copper Age.
Besides the basic set, the other regularly occurring ceramic types are the wide, shallow neckless
vessels with or without pedestals, which generally, but not exclusively, are found in Tiszapolgár style
graves. These could be equated to the hollow-pedestalled bowls or goblets and the wide bowls described
in the typology by Bognár-Kutzián (1963, pp. 248258, 285286). Depending on their depths (not including
their pedestal, if they had one), they could have been used for serving liquids, or more likely solid foods
(Henrickson & McDonald, 1983, p. 632; Kramberger, 2015, p. 241; Smith, 1988, p. 914). Their potential
utilisation as tablewares may have been emphasised even further by the tall hollow-pedestals in some
instances, as pedestals may have made access to food easier (Kramberger, 2015, pp. 241242, 245). Based on
ethnographic examples, the wide, shallow neckless vessel types could have generally been used for com-
munal meals by a family or household (Hally, 1986, p. 289; Mills, 1999, pp. 102103, 2007). The wide,
shallow neckless vessel types with or without pedestals could have been used during communal feasts;
however, their size is only suitable for serving about a dozen people at one time. It is more likely that they
were used by nuclear families or smaller households. Some of these vessels might have already been
emptied by the time they were placed into the grave (Csányi, Raczky, & Tárnoki, 2009, p. 17), which implies
a funerary meal or small feasting event prior to the burial.
Figure 11: The dierent ceramic morphometric categories and their possible function in Early Copper Age graves.
22 Eszter Solnay
Another frequently occurring morphometric category is the large, 1/1 ratio neckless vessels. These could
be represented mainly by the owerpot-like vessels in the typology of Bognár-Kutzián (1985, pp. 240242,
271274). Due to their aperture being quite wide, and their overall size much smaller than an average
storage vessel, their function as long-term storage containers seems unlikely (Henrickson & McDonald,
1983, pp. 632633; Skibo, 2013, p. 33). However, large, deep vessels could have been suitable for cooking
(Bognár-Kutzián, 1985, pp. 242, 274, 250), as their thick, coarse walls (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963, p. 355; Solnay,
2018, p. 185)and traces of secondary burning detected on their exterior indicate. Furthermore, small, shallow
neckless vessels (which do not form part of the basic set)were often found inside these large, 1/1 ratio
neckless vessels (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963, p. 264), perhaps functioning as scoops or ladles. This suggests that
these large, 1/1 ratio neckless vessels could have contained liquids or small pieces of solid foods.
The group of the large, 1/1 ratio neckless vessels was the only morphometric group where a regularly
occurring association was observed between the placement of the vessels and the age of the deceased
individual. Large, 1/1 ratio neckless containers were found placed next to the body in inhumation burials
laid on their left side i.e. mainly women (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963, p. 355; Chapman, 2000, p. 82; Kadrow,
2010, p. 58; Lichter, 2001, pp. 277278; Meisenheimer, 1989, p. 3; Raczky et al., 2014, p. 329; Sofaer
Derevenski, 1997, p. 877)almost in every case in the examined cemeteries (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963, p.
242)and grave clusters. Furthermore, more than a half of these vessels were placed in the graves of females
over 40 years of age at Tiszapolgár-Basatanya and at Polgár-Nagy-Kasziba (osteological examinations had
not been carried out on burials from other cemeteries and grave clusters). The relationship between cooking
pots and the female gender can be observed in wide ranging ethnographic contexts since these vessels are
strongly linked to the labour and domestic roles of women (Anderson, 2019, p. 142; Haaland, 1997, p. 378;
Hastorf, 2016, p. 183). It is possible that there could be a certain symbolic association between the large, 1/1
ratio neckless vessels and mature women in the Early Copper Age burials.
The last morphometric ceramic category was the large-sized vessels with necks, which are only known
from Tiszapolgár-Basatanya. These could be represented mainly by the cooking pots and storage jars in the
typology of Ida Bognár-Kutzián (Bognár-Kutzián, 1963, pp. 242244, 247248, 274275). Due to the presence
of the neck, the long-term storage function or storage of liquids of some kind can be assumed (Kramberger,
2015, p. 233; Rice, 1987, p. 241; Skibo, 2013, pp. 3031; Smith, 1988, p. 914). However, based on ethnographic
examples, their size is slightly smaller than the average long-term storage vessels of liquid or solid foods
(Henrickson & McDonald, 1983, pp. 632633): the diameter of the rim is 10.721 cm, the maximum width of
the body is 2027 cm, and the absolute height of the entire vessel was 2137 cm. Thus, these were probably
used for long-term storage of medium quantities. In comparison, on the Late Neolithic Great Hungarian
Plain, the diameter of the rim of storage jars was dened around 2136 cm, the maximum width of the body
was around 2136 cm, and the absolute height of the entire vessel was around 2646 cm (Füzesi & Raczky,
2018, pp. 142146). Moreover, on the Middle Bronze Age Great Hungarian Plain, the absolute height of
storage jars was between 60 and 80 cm (Szathmári, 2009, p. 298).
7 Conclusions
Since the previous Early Copper Age studies of ceramic usage were always based on some generalisations
like the previously discussed issue of milk jugs and complicated typologies, the identication of the
utilitarian function of mortuary pottery assemblages has never been carried out before. This study has
shown the eectiveness of the morphometric analysis on potteries not only for identifying the most optimal
use of ceramics but also for exploring the consistent pattern in the selection and deposition of mortuary
vessels. Moreover, this approach helps to clarify and compare the functional concept in Tiszapolgár and
Bodrogkeresztúr style burials, which could not be studied with the previously applied analytical methods.
The morphometric analysis of Early Copper Age graves in the Upper Tisza Region (Eastern Hungary)
revealed ve main categories of ceramic function, each of which could be interpreted as fullling dierent
utilitarian functions. In the vast majority of the graves, the most dominant category is the highly
Everything Has a Role To Play 23
individualised basic set, which contained at least one small, shallow neckless vessel type and a regular-
sized vessel type with neck. Besides, the wide, shallow neckless vessels with or without pedestals (could
have served as tableware), as well as the large, 1/1 ratio neckless vessels (can be linked to mature women
and the roles they played), were often found in the burials. The large-sized vessels with neck presumably
used for long-term storage were the least common category.
In the case study area of the Upper Tisza Region, neither the Tiszapolgár nor the Bodrogkeresztúr style
funerary assemblages could unequivocally be distinguished from one another based on ceramic morpho-
metry.³ The ceramic assemblages of both the Tiszapolgár and the Bodrogkeresztúr styles contained iden-
tical morphometric categories with similar utilitarian functions associated with them. Although there could
be some level of dierence observed in the preferences of certain vessel types in funerary assemblages
between the two ceramic styles (especially with regard to the wide, shallow neckless vessel forms), as the
site of Tiszavalk-Tetes clearly demonstrates, these dierences are due to local variations rather than
dierences between the Tiszapolgár and the Bodrogkeresztúr ceramic style overall.
This case study highlights the issue of the utilitarian function of ceramic grave-goods and provides a
possible interpretation of the vessel function through the morphometric analysis of the ceramic assem-
blages in the burials.
Acknowledgements: Hereby, I would like to express my gratitude to Zsuzsanna Siklósi for her numerous
comments and her continuous support. I wish to thank András Füzesi, Norbert Faragó, Márton Szilágyi, and
Péter Csippán for their help in preparing the statistics and their useful insights into the data. I am also
grateful to Borbála Nyíri for proofreading the English text. Finally, I thank the editors and reviewers for their
constructive comments.
Funding information: This article was supported by the ÚNKP-21-3 and ÚNKP-22-3 New National Excellence
Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology from the source of the National Research,
Development and Innovation Fund (grant numbers: ÚNKP-21-3-I-ELTE-153 and ÚNKP-22-3-I-ELTE-125).
Author contributions: The author has accepted responsibility for the entire content of this article.
Conict of interest: Author states no conict of interest.
Data availability statement: All data generated or analysed during this study are included in this published
article and its supplementary information les.
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28 Eszter Solnay
... The meaning of the motif of the second specimen from Šanac-Izba could be somewhat different. According to some authors, pedestalled vessels were probably primarily used for the serving of (solid) foodstuffs (Kramberger 2015, Solnay 2023. If this was the case, the incised hatched triangle on the foot exterior was also displayed and was in the line of sight of consumers of the food during the meal. ...
... In the Transdanubian region, a project on a broad spectrum of Neolithic ceramic production and use is being coordinated by Tibor Marton . In the Alföld region, Eszter Solnay has started to work on ceramic technology under the mentorship of L. Gomart (Solnay, 2021(Solnay, , 2023. ...
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This book offers a global perspective on the role food has played in shaping human societies, through both individual and collective identities. It integrates ethnographic and archaeological case studies from the European and Near Eastern Neolithic, Han China, ancient Cahokia, Classic Maya, the Inka and many other periods and regions, to ask how the meal in particular has acted as a social agent in the formation of society, economy, culture and identity. Drawing on a range of social theorists, Hastorf provides a theoretical toolkit essential for any archaeologist interested in foodways. Studying the social life of food, this book engages with taste, practice, the meal and the body to discuss power, identity, gender and meaning that creates our world as it created past societies.
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En 1986, paraissait l’ouvrage séminal d’Alain Gallay L’archéologie demain. À l’occasion du trentième anniversaire de ce livre, il convient de s’interroger : l’archéologie de demain est-elle devenue celle d’aujourd’hui ? Science en constante évolution depuis ses origines, à l’interface de multiples disciplines avec lesquelles elle partage les outils et les méthodes, l’archéologie contemporaine est une discipline protéiforme. De la fouille au laboratoire, de l’analyse des vestiges à celle des sociétés, les bases méthodologiques sur lesquelles elle repose font désormais appel aussi bien aux sciences humaines qu’aux sciences dites « dures ». La recherche archéologique est aujourd’hui de plus en plus souvent complétée par d’autres approches permettant de produire de nouvelles données, de poser un regard différent sur les données préexistantes ou d’en approfondir l’étude à travers de nouvelles problématiques. Le volume présente les actes de la 11e journée doctorale d’archéologie de l’ED 112. Les articles réunis offrent une réflexion épistémologique sur la discipline archéologique dans son ensemble à travers 3 axes principaux : – Les problématiques, les enjeux et les limites de l’archéologie contemporaine ; – La place de l’archéologie au sein des autres sciences et le rôle de l’interdisciplinarité dans la pratique archéologique comme dans la construction de la discipline elle-même ; – Les démarches intellectuelles de l’archéologue.