Culture melting pot?: Mixed pottery traditions in the 5th millennium western Serbia
Апстракт
The end of the Late Neolithic and the beginning of the Early Copper
Age in the area of modern-day western Serbia is characterized by so-called
mixed ceramic assemblages. Pottery traditions originating from different
geographic areas (Vinča and Bubanj of the Central Balkans, and
Tiszapolgár, Lengyel, and Lasinja of the Pannonian Plain) are observable on
pottery from several sites. These traditions differ in technological
procedures, but also the execution techniques and the appearance of
decorative patterns. Their presence in the same archaeological contexts
opens up questions concerning the origin and distribution of pottery, as
well as the issues related to the identities of both the potters and pottery
users.
Извор:
Pots as media: Decoration, technology, and message transmission, Book of abstracts, 2022, 56-56Издавач:
- Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade
- Institute of Archaeology, Belgrade
Институција/група
Arheologija / ArchaeologyTY - JOUR AU - Vuković, Jasna AU - Tripković, Boban PY - 2022 UR - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3764 AB - The end of the Late Neolithic and the beginning of the Early Copper Age in the area of modern-day western Serbia is characterized by so-called mixed ceramic assemblages. Pottery traditions originating from different geographic areas (Vinča and Bubanj of the Central Balkans, and Tiszapolgár, Lengyel, and Lasinja of the Pannonian Plain) are observable on pottery from several sites. These traditions differ in technological procedures, but also the execution techniques and the appearance of decorative patterns. Their presence in the same archaeological contexts opens up questions concerning the origin and distribution of pottery, as well as the issues related to the identities of both the potters and pottery users. PB - Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade PB - Institute of Archaeology, Belgrade T2 - Pots as media: Decoration, technology, and message transmission, Book of abstracts T1 - Culture melting pot?: Mixed pottery traditions in the 5th millennium western Serbia EP - 56 SP - 56 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3764 ER -
@article{ author = "Vuković, Jasna and Tripković, Boban", year = "2022", abstract = "The end of the Late Neolithic and the beginning of the Early Copper Age in the area of modern-day western Serbia is characterized by so-called mixed ceramic assemblages. Pottery traditions originating from different geographic areas (Vinča and Bubanj of the Central Balkans, and Tiszapolgár, Lengyel, and Lasinja of the Pannonian Plain) are observable on pottery from several sites. These traditions differ in technological procedures, but also the execution techniques and the appearance of decorative patterns. Their presence in the same archaeological contexts opens up questions concerning the origin and distribution of pottery, as well as the issues related to the identities of both the potters and pottery users.", publisher = "Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade, Institute of Archaeology, Belgrade", journal = "Pots as media: Decoration, technology, and message transmission, Book of abstracts", title = "Culture melting pot?: Mixed pottery traditions in the 5th millennium western Serbia", pages = "56-56", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3764" }
Vuković, J.,& Tripković, B.. (2022). Culture melting pot?: Mixed pottery traditions in the 5th millennium western Serbia. in Pots as media: Decoration, technology, and message transmission, Book of abstracts Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade., 56-56. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3764
Vuković J, Tripković B. Culture melting pot?: Mixed pottery traditions in the 5th millennium western Serbia. in Pots as media: Decoration, technology, and message transmission, Book of abstracts. 2022;:56-56. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3764 .
Vuković, Jasna, Tripković, Boban, "Culture melting pot?: Mixed pottery traditions in the 5th millennium western Serbia" in Pots as media: Decoration, technology, and message transmission, Book of abstracts (2022):56-56, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3764 .