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Bronze Age funerary practices on the Pešter Plateau and neighbouring regions of Western Serbia

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2022
bitstream_9648.pdf (2.024Mb)
Authors
Ljuština, Marija
Contributors
Schuster, Cristian
Hortopan, Dumitru
Sîrbu, Valeriu
Book part (Published version)
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Abstract
The Pešter plateau and neighbouring regions of southwestern Serbia are characterised by tumular necropolises from the Bronze Age. The earliest burial horizon, confirmed in two mounds at the site of Gomile in Crnoča and one smaller mound at the site of Glavica in Brnjica, can be cautiously connected with the Early Bronze Age. The horizon is characterised by cremation, cenotaphs and some traces of ritual activities which followed the funeral itself. The second horizon, chronologically positioned in the final phase of the Middle Bronze Age and the beginning of the Late Bronze Age, is represented by graves with inhumed deceased in mounds at the sites of Gračanska Polja in Gračane and Latinsko Groblje in Glogovik. The last burial horizon belongs to the bearers of the Late Bronze Age Brnjica culture, who settled the region during the second half of the 2nd millennium BC. Their standard funerary practice included cremation and placing bodily remains in urns covered with larg...e bowls, well protected by stone constructions inside smaller tumuli with peripheral stone enclosures. Such necropolises were discovered at the sites of Humpa in Dojeviće, Igralište in Novopazarska Banja, Utrine in Delimeđe and Latinsko Groblje in Glogovik, and more recently at two sites - Vlaško Groblje and Grčka Crkva - in the village of Pružanj. Some uncertain finds from the sites of Tabačina and Ras - St. Peter and Paul church, and also unsystematically excavated sites in Miščići, Seosko Groblje in Dojeviće, and Mali Divič in Dunište, can be added to this burial horizon. Comprehension of funerary practices, despite being limited to less than fifteen necropolises in the region, sheds light on the Bronze Age communities, their mobility and connectivity during the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC.

Keywords:
Bronze Age / Novi Pazar region / Pešter plateau / necropolises / tumuli.
Source:
Graves, Cenotaphs and Votive Deposits of Weapons in Europe – Bronze and Iron Ages, 2022, 71-86
Publisher:
  • Hortopan

ISBN: 978-606-042-230-3

[ Google Scholar ]
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4055
URI
http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4055
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researcher's publications - Odeljenje za arheologiju
Institution/Community
Arheologija / Archaeology
TY  - CHAP
AU  - Ljuština, Marija
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4055
AB  - The Pešter plateau and neighbouring regions of southwestern Serbia are characterised by tumular 
necropolises from the Bronze Age. The earliest burial horizon, confirmed in two mounds at the site of Gomile in 
Crnoča and one smaller mound at the site of Glavica in Brnjica, can be cautiously connected with the Early 
Bronze Age. The horizon is characterised by cremation, cenotaphs and some traces of ritual activities which 
followed the funeral itself. The second horizon, chronologically positioned in the final phase of the Middle 
Bronze Age and the beginning of the Late Bronze Age, is represented by graves with inhumed deceased in 
mounds at the sites of Gračanska Polja in Gračane and Latinsko Groblje in Glogovik. The last burial horizon 
belongs to the bearers of the Late Bronze Age Brnjica culture, who settled the region during the second half of 
the 2nd millennium BC. Their standard funerary practice included cremation and placing bodily remains in urns 
covered with large bowls, well protected by stone constructions inside smaller tumuli with peripheral stone 
enclosures. Such necropolises were discovered at the sites of Humpa in Dojeviće, Igralište in Novopazarska 
Banja, Utrine in Delimeđe and Latinsko Groblje in Glogovik, and more recently at two sites - Vlaško Groblje 
and Grčka Crkva - in the village of Pružanj. Some uncertain finds from the sites of Tabačina and Ras - St. Peter 
and Paul church, and also unsystematically excavated sites in Miščići, Seosko Groblje in Dojeviće, and Mali 
Divič in Dunište, can be added to this burial horizon. Comprehension of funerary practices, despite being 
limited to less than fifteen necropolises in the region, sheds light on the Bronze Age communities, their mobility 
and connectivity during the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC.
PB  - Hortopan
T2  - Graves, Cenotaphs and Votive Deposits of Weapons in Europe – Bronze and Iron Ages
T1  - Bronze Age funerary practices on the Pešter Plateau and neighbouring regions of Western Serbia
EP  - 86
SP  - 71
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4055
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Ljuština, Marija",
year = "2022",
abstract = "The Pešter plateau and neighbouring regions of southwestern Serbia are characterised by tumular 
necropolises from the Bronze Age. The earliest burial horizon, confirmed in two mounds at the site of Gomile in 
Crnoča and one smaller mound at the site of Glavica in Brnjica, can be cautiously connected with the Early 
Bronze Age. The horizon is characterised by cremation, cenotaphs and some traces of ritual activities which 
followed the funeral itself. The second horizon, chronologically positioned in the final phase of the Middle 
Bronze Age and the beginning of the Late Bronze Age, is represented by graves with inhumed deceased in 
mounds at the sites of Gračanska Polja in Gračane and Latinsko Groblje in Glogovik. The last burial horizon 
belongs to the bearers of the Late Bronze Age Brnjica culture, who settled the region during the second half of 
the 2nd millennium BC. Their standard funerary practice included cremation and placing bodily remains in urns 
covered with large bowls, well protected by stone constructions inside smaller tumuli with peripheral stone 
enclosures. Such necropolises were discovered at the sites of Humpa in Dojeviće, Igralište in Novopazarska 
Banja, Utrine in Delimeđe and Latinsko Groblje in Glogovik, and more recently at two sites - Vlaško Groblje 
and Grčka Crkva - in the village of Pružanj. Some uncertain finds from the sites of Tabačina and Ras - St. Peter 
and Paul church, and also unsystematically excavated sites in Miščići, Seosko Groblje in Dojeviće, and Mali 
Divič in Dunište, can be added to this burial horizon. Comprehension of funerary practices, despite being 
limited to less than fifteen necropolises in the region, sheds light on the Bronze Age communities, their mobility 
and connectivity during the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC.",
publisher = "Hortopan",
journal = "Graves, Cenotaphs and Votive Deposits of Weapons in Europe – Bronze and Iron Ages",
booktitle = "Bronze Age funerary practices on the Pešter Plateau and neighbouring regions of Western Serbia",
pages = "86-71",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4055"
}
Ljuština, M.. (2022). Bronze Age funerary practices on the Pešter Plateau and neighbouring regions of Western Serbia. in Graves, Cenotaphs and Votive Deposits of Weapons in Europe – Bronze and Iron Ages
Hortopan., 71-86.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4055
Ljuština M. Bronze Age funerary practices on the Pešter Plateau and neighbouring regions of Western Serbia. in Graves, Cenotaphs and Votive Deposits of Weapons in Europe – Bronze and Iron Ages. 2022;:71-86.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4055 .
Ljuština, Marija, "Bronze Age funerary practices on the Pešter Plateau and neighbouring regions of Western Serbia" in Graves, Cenotaphs and Votive Deposits of Weapons in Europe – Bronze and Iron Ages (2022):71-86,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4055 .

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