Partial investigation (800 m2) of a cemetery of the Przeworsk culture at Bielawy-Łuby, distr. Łowicz, woj. mazowieckie, discovered by accident in 1938, yielded 42 cremation graves. Of these only 19 could be determined as to type, basing on the at present incomplete documentation. Three deposits were urned, the rest were pit graves. A number of graves dating from the Roman Period produced stones of diverse size; one of them was probably a grave-stone. Chronologically, the investigated part of the cemetery spans the Late PreRoman and the Roman Period (19 and 13 features respectively). The oldest funerary deposits date from phase A2 while the youngest graves contained sherds from turned pottery, indicating that the site continued in use during Late Roman period phase C1b. Graves associated with phases A3, B1 and B2 suggest that the burial ground was being used throughout this period. Grave goods include two iron geschweifte brooches as well as a silver-inlaid fibula Almgren series 8th, group V. Weapons are represented by a shield-boss Bohnsack type 4, three spearheads, (one of them with blade with cut notches) and lance-shoe. Tools included a knife and a number of fired clay spindlewhorls. Among typical Przeworsk culture pottery there were two heavily eroded Samian ware fragments. The cemetery at Bielawy-Łuby is one of many sites forming a large settlement concentration recorded in the basin of the Bzura River dated to the Late PreRoman and the Roman Period. The presence of stones – imaginably the remains of above-ground structures – suggests links with the Wielbark culture sphere.