Archaeological site of Bolnica in Paraćin and its importance for the prehistory of the Central Morava Region: A contribution in chronology and horizontal and vertical stratigraphy
The paper presents the horizontal and vertical stratigraphy of the site of Bolnica in Paraćin, based on both earlier and the latest archaeological excavations and the material which had been collected for decades by the Hometown Museum in Paraćin, as a result of the construction works conne...
Main Authors: | , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | deu |
Published: |
Institute of Archaeology, Belgrade, Serbia
2019-01-01
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Series: | Starinar |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0350-0241/2019/0350-02411969113F.pdf |
Summary: | The paper presents the horizontal and vertical stratigraphy of the site of
Bolnica in Paraćin, based on both earlier and the latest archaeological
excavations and the material which had been collected for decades by the
Hometown Museum in Paraćin, as a result of the construction works connected
with the constant urbanisation of the area. The presented archaeological
material is attributed to a period from the Early Neolithic to the so-called
Dacian La Tène, meaning the 2nd century AD. One of the subjects discussed in
this paper is the possibility that the sites of Bolnica and Motel Slatina,
in fact, represent one large site, which was artificially divided by the E
75 highway and the Serbian Glass Factory. The comparative analysis, which
encompassed the sites positioned on the right bank of the Velika Morava
River, showed that this is one of the sites with the most independent
chronological sequences in the Central Morava Region. Likewise, the
importance of this site as a strategic point and an important intersection
on the route from the Danube River to the Central Balkans, and further
towards the south and east is underlined. Finally, we analysed the
appearance of Dacian material culture during the 1st and the 2nd century AD
and compared the occurrence of certain forms and decorations with relevant
sites in present-day Romania. The paper cautiously suggests that the Dacian
material culture represents traces of the deportation of 100,000
Transdanubians to the territory of Moesia by the legate Silvanus Aelianus,
possibly between 61 AD and 64 AD, during the reign of Emperor Nero, which
has been partially confirmed by new archaeological excavations at the site
of Gloždak-Lidl during 2018. [Project of the Serbian Ministry of Education,
Science and Technological Development, Grant no. 177020: Cultural Identity,
Integrating Factors, Technological Processes and the Role of the Central
Balkans in the Development of European Prehistory] |
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ISSN: | 0350-0241 2406-0739 |