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Rise of Metallurgy Project: Background

 

 

This project originated in the collaboration between Prof Thilo Rehren, Institute of Archaeology, UCL, Dr Miljana Radivojević and the National Museum in Belgrade, Serbia in 2007.

The analysis of the copper smelting slags at Belovode provided the core of Dr Radivojević's MSc thesis which subsequently led on to a PhD thesis (2008-2012) incorporating metallurgical remains from the Vinča culture sites of Pločnik, Gornja Tuzla, Vinča, Gomolava and the Early Neolithic sites of Lepenski Vir, Vlasac and Kolubara-Jaričište. 

The project builds on two decades of excavations at Jarmovac, Belovode and Pločnik conducted by the National Museum, Belgrade; the Museum of Toplica, Prokuplje and Homeland Museum of Priboj all of which were, and continue to be, funded by the Serbian Ministry of Culture

 

 

 

 

Archaeological Background-Vinča Culture

The origins, chronological phasing, and coherency of Vinča culture have been disputed for over a century. It is currently conventionally dated to c. 5300-4600 BC. The Vinča culture is distinguished primarily by large tell villages which range up to 100 ha in size, thus exceeding many contemporary Near Eastern settlements, and also by its distinctive pottery. If these two are taken as diagnostic, then the extent of the Vinča culture would be up to c. 190,000 km2.

No Vinča site has been sufficiently excavated to provide good enough data for estimating its population size but estimates have been made of 50-200 for smaller sites (c. 1-1.9 ha) and 1000-2500 people for large sites (>29 ha), all under the assumption that the entire site area was used simultaneously (Chapman 1981: 51).

 

 

Early metallurgy in the Balkans has attracted scholarly attention for almost a century and is closely associated with Vinča culture sites, from the discovery of metal artefacts at the Vinča culture settlement of Pločnik (Grbić 1929) and the excavation of Vinča culture pottery in copper mining shafts at Jarmovac (Davies 1937), both in Serbia. The region became a major focus for early mining and metallurgy with the excavation of the copper mining sites Rudna Glava and Ai Bunar (Jovanović 1980; Chernykh 1978).

While pioneering provenance studies demonstrated these mines were exploited by local communities to make large copper tools during the 5th millennium BC (Pernicka et al. 1993; Pernicka et al. 1997), the recent political situation has meant that the quantity and scale of excavations and surveys decreased dramatically since 1990 due to political instability. Thus, despite this mining evidence and c.4.7 tonnes of contemporary copper objects recovered in the region, there was little evidence for actual metal production until the recent findings at Belovode (Radivojević et al. 2010).