Brunn 03 compressed (original) (raw)

The Brunn 3 site of the Milanovce phase of the Linear Pottery culture

(2021) D. Garvăn, A. Frînculeasa - Linear Pottery Culture on the Lower Danube

Sprawozdania Archeologiczne 73/1, 2021

Archaeological excavations carried out at Sudiţi (Buzău County, Romania) some decades ago unearthed several Linear Pottery culture features which were subsequently interpreted and used by various researchers in an attempt to explain the origin of Chalcolithic cultures (such as Boian). The poorly published findings generated conflicting or arguable theories. Even if it is not the only discovery of its kind, the Neolithic feature from Sudiţi is the most complex one from Wallachia. Until new, accurate field research is undertaken, this old discovery is still appropriate for further discussion, offering some valid points regarding the relation between the local culture and Linear Pottery at the turn of the fifth millennium.

MEDiEVAl pOTTERY FROM THE BORiNCi-CRKViŠTE-CRNi GAJ SiTE DiSCOVERED IN 1961

The fragments of ceramic vessels found in 1961 at the Borinci-Crkvište-Crni gaj site held in the Collection of the Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in Zagreb are published in this work. The fragments are compared to already published whole vessels found at the same site. An attempt is made to respond to the question as to whether they belong to the settlement or cemetery of the eleventh/twelfth century or if these account for several different locales within the site that do not date to the same time. The author believes that these are chronologically separate cemeteries situated at roughly the same position. The oldest finds date to the eighth and ninth centuries.

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Ch 29 Amicone 2021 Pločnik: technology of pottery production

Radivojević, M., Roberts, B. W., Marić, M., Kuzmanović Cvetković, J., & Rehren, Th. (Eds.). The Rise of Metallurgy in Eurasia: Evolution, Organisation and Consumption of Early Metal in the Balkans. Oxford: Archaeopress, 2021