0000000001173021
AUTHOR
Sylvie Lourdaux-jurietti
Une recherche foisonnante sur un phénomène complexe
Bric-à-brac pour les dieux ?
This book accompanies the exhibition "Bric-à-brac pour les dieux?", produced by the Lons-le-saunier museum in 2017. Some fifteen specialists present the Bronze Age and the state of knowledge concerning the practice of depositing objects in a non-funerary context: analysis of the composition of the sets, study of the forms of the deposits and the places chosen for these practices, morphometric approaches to the objects, etc. The most significant sets are presented in the form of inserts, along with the various summary texts.
Une recherche foisonnante et un phénomène complexe
ensemble cultuel du site inférieur - état des connaissances - rapport 6/8 2020
Histoire de la recherche sur les dépôts de l'âge du Bronze : le cas de la France orientale
Sondages - Villards d'Héria - rapport 7/8 2020
Les cuirasses de Véria (Jura)
Le dépôt de Nebra (Allemagne)
Villards d'Héria, occupation du territoire, continuité et évolution - PCR - année probatoire 2019
Néolithique. Les villages de Chalain & Clairvaux, patrimoine de l’humanité
This book accompanies the exhibition « Neolithic. The villages of Chalain & Clairvaux, heritage of humanity ». The history of research on the different stations on the shores of Chalain and Clairvaux is retraced, in particular the work directed by Pierre and Anne-Marie Pétrequin over the past fifty years. The inscription of these sites on the UNESCO World Heritage List, within the serial property "Prehistoric Pile Dwellings around the Alps" is explained. The book then addresses the daily life in these neolithic villages around five themes: consuming the wild, agriculture and livestock, construction, daily life in the house, exchanges and innovations. Finally, the issue of preservation of si…
Les collections d’Archéologie au musée de Lons-le-Saunier, Centre de Conservation et d’étude René Rémond
La gestion des collections d’archéologie : retour sur vingt ans d’expérience(s) au musée de Lons-le-Saunier (Jura)
The Lons-le-Saunier museum houses archaeological material from the whole of the Jura department, which represents a considerable volume of collections. These collections often entered the museum without an inventory. We have been trying for nearly 20 years, when the computerisation of the inventory began, to remedy this little by little. This feedback is an opportunity to note the progress made and to consider solutions to resolve the problems encountered.
Etude mobilier - Villards d'Héria - rapport 8/8 2020
Les collections protohistoriques au musée de Lons-le-Saunier, Centre de Conservation et d’étude René Rémond
Since its creation in 1817, the Lons-le-Saunier museum has been intended to house all the archaeological objects unearthed in the Jura department. Even if some collections are not included, the reserves contain most of the finds from the Jura. Protohistory plays an important role, with emblematic sites such as the Planches cave or the Chavéria necropolis. However, these collections have different legal statuses: collections listed in the museum's inventory (old collections and recent acquisitions) and collections kept in the museum but whose entry has not been regularised. With the aim of building a new museum, a vast project must be carried out in order to make the necessary acquisitions a…
Exposer l’âge du Bronze
Exhibitions about the Bronze Age in France are quire a recent affair and only eighteen temporary exhibitions, most with their own catalogue, have been curated since 1986. This conference has given us the opportunity to overviev, the exhibitions that have given eirher a regional perspective of the Bronze Age or have focused on a particular theme. ln the last few years, several exhibitions have highlighred non-funerary metal deposits. The museography and public ourreach have varied for each exhibition, but ail have dealt with the difficult question of recontextualisation and how we understand and interpret archaeological data. This is particularly relevant, as the public still knows lirrle o…