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Featured researches published by Monika Badura.


The Holocene | 2011

Holocene history of Lac des Lauzons (2180 m a.s.l.), reconstructed from multiproxy analyses of Coleoptera, plant macroremains and pollen (Hautes-Alpes, France)

Philippe Ponel; Mona Court-Picon; Monika Badura; Frédéric Guiter; Jacques-Louis de Beaulieu; V. Andrieu-Ponel; Morteza Djamali; Michèle Leydet; Emmanuel Gandouin; Alexandre Buttler

A 1.70 m core extracted from the Lac des Lauzons, Haut Champsaur, French Alps, at 2180 m altitude, provided a detailed Holocene record of beetles, pollen and plant macrofossils, enabling the reconstruction of local palaeoenvironmental changes during the last 10 000 years. After an early phase of colonization by plants and insects, corresponding to the Lateglacial interstadial, a long phase of relative stability of the ecosystems (at least in the vicinity of the lake) is recorded. Strikingly, there is no evidence from beetle and plant macrofossils that the treeline reached the altitude of Lauzons during the Holocene climate optimum, although this period is characterized by major forest expansion in many high-altitude sites in the southern French Alps. The uppermost part of the record is blurred by the infilling of the lake, progressively turning into a peat bog. This sequence also provides an opportunity to compare the records of coprophilous fungal spores and coprophilous beetles and to improve the interpretation of these proxies in terms of their significance as proxies for pastoralism.


Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2015

The comparison of archaeobotanical data and the oldest documentary records (14th–15th century) of useful plants in medieval Gdańsk, northern Poland

Monika Badura; Beata Możejko; Joanna Święta-Musznicka; Małgorzata Latałowa

This paper presents a comparison of archaeobotanical data with information about useful plants from the oldest (14th–15th century) written sources that have survived in the archives of Gdańsk, northern Poland. The main information on plant products, available in medieval documents from Gdańsk, concerns taxa traded by merchants as well as those used by the Teutonic Knights or the city council of Gdańsk. In these sources, as well as from many records about cereals, numerous spices and vegetables are listed which do not have counterparts in the archaeobotanical remains which have been found. On the other hand, the archaeobotanical data complement our knowledge on the use of common plants, both cultivated and collected in the wild, which written sources do not mention. This situation is most apparent in the case of local fruits like plums, cherries or berries, of which numerous remains are proof of their considerable popularity in Gdańsk. This would be impossible to conclude on the basis of historical documents only, whose attention is focused on the more expensive and imported plant products.


European Journal of Archaeology | 2015

Survival at the Frontier of Holy War: Political Expansion, Crusading, Environmental Exploitation and the Medieval Colonizing Settlement at Biała Góra, North Poland

Zbigniew Sawicki; Aleksander Pluskowski; Alexander Brown; Monika Badura; Daniel Makowiecki; Lisa-Marie Shillito; Mirosława Zabilska-Kunek; Krish Seetah

AbstractBetween the eleventh and thirteenth centuries AD, the Lower Vistula valley represented a permeable and shifting frontier between Pomerelia (eastern Pomerania), which had been incorporated into the Polish Christian state by the end of the tenth century, and the territories of western Prussian tribes, who had resisted attempts at Christianization. Pomeranian colonization eventually began to falter in the latter decades of the twelfth and early thirteenth centuries, most likely as a result of Prussian incursions, which saw the abandonment of sites across the borderland. Subsequently, the Teutonic Order and its allies led a protracted holy war against the Prussian tribes, which resulted in the conquest of the region and its incorporation into a theocratic state by the end of the thirteenth century. This was accompanied by a second wave of colonization, which resulted in the settlement pattern that is still visible in the landscape of north-central Poland today. However, not all colonies were destroyed...


Antiquity | 2014

Biała Góra: The forgotten colony in the medieval Pomeranian-Prussian borderlands

Aleksander Pluskowski; Zbigniew Sawicki; Lisa-Marie Shillito; Monika Badura; Daniel Makowiecki; Mirosława Zabilska-Kunek; Krish Seetah; Alexander Brown

Biała Góra 3 is a small settlement founded in the late twelfth or early thirteenth century AD in the disputed Christian borderlands of Northern Europe. The incorporation of Pomerania into the Polish state in the tenth century was followed by a process of colonisation across the lower Vistula valley, which then stalled before resuming in the thirteenth century under the Teutonic Order. Biała Góra 3 is unusual in falling between the two expansionist phases and provides detailed insight into the ethnicity and economy of this borderland community. Pottery and metalwork show strong links with both Pomeranian and German colonists, and caches of bricks and roof tiles indicate durable buildings of the kind associated with the monastic and military orders. Evidence for the presence of merchants suggests Biała Góra 3 was one of many outposts in the commercial network that shadowed the Crusades.


Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2018

Environmental context and the role of plants at the early medieval artificial island in the lake Paklicko Wielkie, Nowy Dworek, western Poland

Monika Badura; Agnieszka M. Noryśkiewicz; Wojciech Chudziak; Ryszard Kaźmierczak

AbstractThis paper reports the archaeobotanical investigation of the early medieval lake site near Nowy Dworek, in the west of Poland, focussing on the role of plants on and around the site. The construction of a small, artificial island in a lake similar to Irish crannogs, traces of a wooden bridge and archaeological artefacts all indicate that the site was a special place for the local Slav community in the 9th–10th centuries ad. Plant macroremains and pollen also demonstrate the uniqueness of the place. A large number of the cultivated and wild plant taxa are connected with the local environment and reveal an interest in plants as an element of beliefs. Pollen from dung pellets provides information about plants used as fodder and complements the picture of plant communities on the land around the island.


Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2003

Archaeobotanical samples from non-specific urban contexts as a tool for reconstructing environmental conditions (examples from Elbląg and Kołobrzeg, northern Poland)

Małgorzata Latałowa; Monika Badura; Joanna Jarosińska


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2013

Combined pollen and macrofossil data as a source for reconstructing mosaic patterns of the early medieval urban habitats – a case study from Gdańsk, N. Poland

Joanna Święta-Musznicka; Małgorzata Latałowa; Monika Badura; Andrzej Gołembnik


Journal of Paleolimnology | 2011

Salvinia natans in medieval wetland deposits in Gdańsk, northern Poland: evidence for the early medieval climate warming

Joanna Święta-Musznicka; Małgorzata Latałowa; Józef Szmeja; Monika Badura


Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2003

Pimenta officinalis Lindl. (pimento, myrtle pepper) from early modern latrines in Gdansk (northern Poland)

Monika Badura


Archive | 2013

Thirteenth century cultural deposits at the castle of the Teutonic Order in Karksi

Heiki Valk; Alexander Brown; Eve Rannamäe; Monika Badura; Lembi Lõugas; Aleks Pluskowski

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Daniel Makowiecki

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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Mirosława Zabilska-Kunek

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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