Vinča-Belo Brdo

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Vinča-Belo Brdo
Винча-Бело брдо
Vinča-Belo Brdo is located in Belgrade
Vinča-Belo Brdo
Shown within Belgrade
LocationVinča, Serbia
Coordinates44°45′43″N 20°37′23″E / 44.76194°N 20.62306°E / 44.76194; 20.62306Coordinates: 44°45′43″N 20°37′23″E / 44.76194°N 20.62306°E / 44.76194; 20.62306
TypeSettlement
Area10 ha (25 acres)
History
FoundedApproximately 5700 BCE
PeriodsNeolithic, Copper Age, Bronze Age, Iron Age, Medieval
CulturesStarčevo, Vinča, Bodrogkeresztúr, Baden, Kostolac, Vatin, Celtic
TypeArchaeological Site of Exceptional Importance
Designated1950/1965
Reference no.АН 5

Vinča-Belo Brdo (Serbian: Винча-Бело брдо) is an archaeological site in Vinča, a suburb of Belgrade, Serbia. The tell of Belo Brdo ('White Hill') is almost entirely made up of the remains of human settlement, and was occupied several times from the Early Neolithic (c. 5700 BCE) through to the Medieval period. The most substantial archaeological deposits are from the Neolithic-Eneolithic Vinča culture, of which Vinča-Belo Brdo is the type site.

Geography[edit]

Vinča is situated on the right bank of the Danube, 14 km downstream from Belgrade, on a high loess terrace. This location was attractive to its Neolithic settlers: the Danube on one side provided water and fishing while on the other the valley of the river Bolecica connected it to a hinterland rich in minerals, ores, hunting grounds and fertile agricultural soils. Belo Brdo is one of the largest tell sites in the Balkans, covering 10 hectares of land with 9 metres of cultural deposits and a total height of 10.5 metres.[1][2]

Excavations[edit]

Information signboard on closed Vinča-Belo Brdo archeological site, 2011
Archaeological site after landslide in 2011

The first archaeological excavations at Vinča were carried out by prominent Serbian archaeologist Miloje Vasić starting in 1908. These were interrupted by the outbreak of World War I and, apart from a brief season in 1924, Vasić was unable to obtain the necessary funding to continue working on the site from the impoverished postwar Yugoslav government. However, with the financial backing of British businessman and archaeologist Sir Charles Hyde, Vasić was able to resume excavations, on a much larger scale, between 1929 and 1931. These piqued the interest of the British press and the site was subsequently visited by several prominent intellectuals of the time, including Hyde, John Myres, Veselin Čajkanović, W. A. Hurtley and Bogdan Popović.[1] Finds from these excavations are now in several UK museums including the Ashmolean Museum and the British Museum.[3]

New excavations were begun in 1978 under the auspices of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. From 1978 to 1982 the project focused on the Bronze Age and later layers, under the direction of Nikola Tasic and Gordana Vujovic. In 1982 excavations began on the more prominent Neolithic occupation, investigation of which continues to the present, led by Milutin Garasanin and Dragoslav Srejovic. Unfortunately in the 47 years between Vasić's and the present research the site suffered considerable damage from unauthorized excavations and looting.[1]

Occupation[edit]

Starčevo period, c. 5700–5300 BCE[edit]

The earliest deposits at Belo Brdo date to around 5700 BCE[4] and belong to the Early Neolithic Starčevo culture. Evidence for this phase of occupation is scant owing to the disruption of the later Vinča settlement, and consists mainly of one large grave containing the remains of eleven males. This collective burial is unusual for Starčevo sites, where individual inhumations are the norm. Otherwise the Starčevo finds at Belo Brdo are unremarkable, and it is only one of several contemporary Starčevo settlements in the vicinity of modern Belgrade.[5]

Vinča period, c. 5200–4900 BCE[edit]

A clay figurine from Vinča-Belo Brdo on display at the British Museum.[6]

A century after the abandonment[7] of the Starčevo settlement Belo Brdo was occupied by people of the Vinča culture. A total of thirteen building horizons from this period make up the majority of the tell's stratigraphy, as new buildings were constructed on the debris left by periodic fires.[8] Belo Brdo was a major Vinča centre and, at its peak, one of the largest settlements in Neolithic Europe.[1] However, it was abandoned by 4900 BCE, some five centuries before the wider collapse of the Vinča culture.[9][10]

As in the earlier Starčevo occupation, the Vinča houses at Belo Brdo were constructed primarily from wood and clay, but they also made use of levelled foundations, insulation and decoration with paint and wall coverings. In later phases large (40 x 60 m2) rectangular buildings with internal divisions and fixed furniture (benches, braziers, waterwheels, tables, etc.) appeared alongside the predominant one-roomed dwellings. The Vinča settlement was arranged on straight streets, fenced and considerably larger than that of the Starčevo period.[1] The inhabitants' subsisted based both on the cultivation of grains (einkorn, emmer and barley) and husbandry of domesticated animals (primarily cattle, but also goats, sheep and pigs).[citation needed] These agricultural practices probably continued to be supplemented by hunting and fishing in the surrounding environs.

In the Early Vinča phase Belo Brdo seems to have developed into a ritual centre for the entire region. The manufacture of various types of cult objects, including 'mushroom amulet' and 'animal head' jewellery made from semi-precious stones, first appeared there and then spread to other Vinča sites. The raw material for these objects often had to be imported from considerable distance, indicating also that from its earliest phase the site was part of large-scale exchange networks.[11] It is therefore thought that Belo Brdo was a key place in a wider Vinča prestige economy, and an abundance of ritual paraphernalia, especially anthropomorphic figurines, is characteristic of the site. Another ritual innovation of Early Vinča phase Belo Brdo was the bucranium cult, where the painted skulls of cattle were fixed to the interior of houses. It is speculated that this practice may be linked to the wealth of individual households as measured in cattle.[10] Later, however, Belo Brdo was to some degree eclipsed by the nearby site of Vršac, which became the centre of the much more widespread exchange of ornaments made from Spondylus shells.[12] Subsequently, in the Late Vinča phase figurines became less widely circulated, and at the same time more standardised in form (in contrast to the many idiosyncratic styles of the Early Vinča phase). They also began to be inscribed with Vinča symbols, which perhaps indicates that competition and conflict was arising between different groups within Belo Brdo trying to assert control over the flow of ritual goods.[10]

Post-Vinča occupations[edit]

Belo Brdo has been occupied several times since the abandonment of the Vinča settlement, but not on the same scale. From the Copper Age there are four graves belonging to the Bodrogkeresztúr culture, a very small Baden culture settlement and some evidence of visits by people of the Kostolac culture. There was a large but short-lived Bronze Age settlement belonging to the Vatin culture. In the Iron Age the size of the tell made it an attractive location for a significant Celtic hill fort complete with defensive earthworks.[4][13] The most recent historical use of the site was a substantial Old Serbian necropolis.[1]

Tourism[edit]

Vinča-Belo Brdo is classified as an Archaeological Site of Exceptional Importance by the Serbian government, entitling it to the highest level of state protection.[14] Artefacts from the site are on display in exhibitions at the archaeological park, the National Museum of Belgrade, the Belgrade City Museum and the University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy.[15]

Currently, the entire Vinča archeological site is closed for tourists and protected with a thick layer of sand due to the landslide problems.

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Tasic, Srejovic & Stojanovic 1990.
  2. ^ Chapman 1981, p. 6.
  3. ^ British Museum Collection
  4. ^ a b Chapman 2000, p. 206.
  5. ^ Chapman 2000, pp. 205–207.
  6. ^ British Museum Collection
  7. ^ Chapman 2000, p. 239.
  8. ^ Chapman 2000, pp. 205–206.
  9. ^ Chapman 2000, p. 205.
  10. ^ a b c Chapman 2000, p. 217.
  11. ^ Chapman 2000, pp. 208–212.
  12. ^ Chapman 2000, p. 215.
  13. ^ Chapman 2000, p. 219.
  14. ^ Monuments of Culture in Serbia: Винча-Локалитет Бели Брег (SANU) (in Serbian and English)
  15. ^ "Vinca Archaeological Spot - Belgrade, Serbia". Belgrade Eye. Retrieved 10 September 2010.

References[edit]

  • Chapman, John (1981). The Vinča culture of south-east Europe: Studies in chronology, economy and society (2 vols). BAR International Series. 117. Oxford: B.A.R. ISBN 0-86054-139-8.
  • Chapman, John (2000). Fragmentation in Archaeology: People, Places, and Broken Objects. London: Routledge. p. 233. ISBN 978-0-415-15803-9.
  • Tasic, Nikola; Srejovic, Dragoslav; Stojanovic, Bratislav (1990). Vinča: Centre of the Neolithic culture of the Danubian region. Belgrade: Project Rastko. Retrieved 9 September 2010.

Further reading[edit]

  • Antonović, Dragana (1992). Predmeti od glačanog kamena iz Vinče. Beograd: Universitet u Beogradu.
  • Srejović, Dragoslav, ed. (1984). Okresana kamena oruđa iz Vinče: iskopavanja 1929–1934 [The chipped stone industry from Vinča: excavations 1929–1934]. Beograd: Centar za arheološka istraživanja, Univerzitet u Beogradu.
  • Marjanović-Vujović, Gordana (1979). Nécropole médiévale Vinča. Inventaria archaeologica Jugoslavija fasc. 22. Belgrade: L'Association des sociétés archéologiques de Yougoslavie.
  • Vasić, Miloje (1932). Preistorijska Vinča I [Prehistoric Vinča I]. Beograd.
  • Vasić, Miloje (1936). Preistorijska Vinča II [Prehistoric Vinča II]. Beograd.
  • Vasić, Miloje (1936). Preistorijska Vinča III [Prehistoric Vinča III]. Beograd.
  • Vasić, Miloje (1936). Preistorijska Vinča IV [Prehistoric Vinča IV]. Beograd.
  • Filipović Dragana, Tasić Nenad N. (2012). "Vinča-Belo Brdo, a late neolithic site in Serbia consideration of the macro-botanical remains as indicators of dietary habits". Balcanica. 43: 7–27.

External links[edit]