“Early Classical Settlements” and the Iron Age of the Central Balkans: Issues of Ethnic Identity

In the Balkan archaeologies, ethnic identity has been traditionally treated as a stable and monolithic category, readily recognizable in the material culture. The issue of “ethnogenesis” of the Palaeo-Balkan “peoples” is the dominant topic and the basic research subject in culture-historical archaeo...

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Main Author: Ivan Vranić
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Belgrade 2016-03-01
Series:Etnoantropološki Problemi
Online Access:http://eap-iea.org/index.php/eap/article/view/599
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spelling doaj-c0d8f7265b8343ca87d7bb42c918d5e62020-11-24T23:23:20ZengUniversity of BelgradeEtnoantropološki Problemi 0353-15892334-88012016-03-0163659678597“Early Classical Settlements” and the Iron Age of the Central Balkans: Issues of Ethnic IdentityIvan Vranić0Arheološki institut, BeogradIn the Balkan archaeologies, ethnic identity has been traditionally treated as a stable and monolithic category, readily recognizable in the material culture. The issue of “ethnogenesis” of the Palaeo-Balkan “peoples” is the dominant topic and the basic research subject in culture-historical archaeology, today regarded as the consequence of the modern European nationalisms. Starting from the constructivist point, the paper seeks to examine the interpretations of ethnicity in the Balkan Iron Age, on the example of the so-called “early Classical settlements” – a series of mutually very similar fortified settlements located in the vast lands of the Balkan hinterland, today in the territory of several modern states. These settlements are broadly dated into the period from the 5th to the 3rd centuries BC, and have traditionally been interpreted as the final phase of the ethnogenesis of the Palaeo-Balkan communities, supposed to have been living in “tribal states”, whose population has been recognized as “people” or even “nation”. In the traditional literature, the ethnic characteristics have been readily recognized, projecting directly the modern socio-political structures onto the communities of the past that could have been founded on completely different group identity or political organization. The paper deals with the issue of the political aspects of these interpretations in various Balkan countries, favoring certain Palaeo-Balkan communities, and an attempt is made to contextualize these nationalistic narratives into the present.http://eap-iea.org/index.php/eap/article/view/599
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ivan Vranić
spellingShingle Ivan Vranić
“Early Classical Settlements” and the Iron Age of the Central Balkans: Issues of Ethnic Identity
Etnoantropološki Problemi
author_facet Ivan Vranić
author_sort Ivan Vranić
title “Early Classical Settlements” and the Iron Age of the Central Balkans: Issues of Ethnic Identity
title_short “Early Classical Settlements” and the Iron Age of the Central Balkans: Issues of Ethnic Identity
title_full “Early Classical Settlements” and the Iron Age of the Central Balkans: Issues of Ethnic Identity
title_fullStr “Early Classical Settlements” and the Iron Age of the Central Balkans: Issues of Ethnic Identity
title_full_unstemmed “Early Classical Settlements” and the Iron Age of the Central Balkans: Issues of Ethnic Identity
title_sort “early classical settlements” and the iron age of the central balkans: issues of ethnic identity
publisher University of Belgrade
series Etnoantropološki Problemi
issn 0353-1589
2334-8801
publishDate 2016-03-01
description In the Balkan archaeologies, ethnic identity has been traditionally treated as a stable and monolithic category, readily recognizable in the material culture. The issue of “ethnogenesis” of the Palaeo-Balkan “peoples” is the dominant topic and the basic research subject in culture-historical archaeology, today regarded as the consequence of the modern European nationalisms. Starting from the constructivist point, the paper seeks to examine the interpretations of ethnicity in the Balkan Iron Age, on the example of the so-called “early Classical settlements” – a series of mutually very similar fortified settlements located in the vast lands of the Balkan hinterland, today in the territory of several modern states. These settlements are broadly dated into the period from the 5th to the 3rd centuries BC, and have traditionally been interpreted as the final phase of the ethnogenesis of the Palaeo-Balkan communities, supposed to have been living in “tribal states”, whose population has been recognized as “people” or even “nation”. In the traditional literature, the ethnic characteristics have been readily recognized, projecting directly the modern socio-political structures onto the communities of the past that could have been founded on completely different group identity or political organization. The paper deals with the issue of the political aspects of these interpretations in various Balkan countries, favoring certain Palaeo-Balkan communities, and an attempt is made to contextualize these nationalistic narratives into the present.
url http://eap-iea.org/index.php/eap/article/view/599
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