Filipović, Dragana

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Authority KeyName Variants
580ede61-241e-49a3-8531-cc21c70153fa
  • Filipović, Dragana (13)
Projects
Serbian archaeology: cultural identity, integration factors, technological processes and the role of the central Balkans in the development of European prehistory Society, spiritual and material culture and communications in the prehistory and early history of the Balkans
Austrian Science Fund (FWF)Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P32096-G25] DF acknowledges the support of the German Research Foundation Project Ref. 2901391021 -SFB 1266 in the preparation of this paper
EUROFARM [ERC-2012-StG-20111124] German Research Foundation (DFG)German Research Foundation (DFG) [2901391021-SFB 1266]
Innovation Fund of the AAS ('Visualising the Unknown Balkans' project) Koridori Srbije d.o.o.
Museum of Leskovac Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL. Funding for some of the research projects contributing to this study was provided by the European Research Council (ERC), Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG), Fonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung (FWF, Austrian Science Fund) and Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Serbia. The paper is a product of the ERC-project ‘PlantCult: Investigating the Plant Food Cultures of Ancient Europe’ (CoG 682529), Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece; the ERC-project ‘EXPLO: Exploring the dynamics and causes of prehistoric land use change in the cradle of European farming’ (SyG 810586), University of Oxford, UK; the Collaborative Research Centre ‘Scales of Transformation in Prehistoric and Archaic Societies’ (DFG-Ref. 2901391021-SFB1266) and the Excellence Cluster EXC2150 ‘ROOTS: Social, Environmental and Cultural Connectivity in Past Societies’ (DFG-Ref. 390870439), both of Kiel University, Germany.

Author's Bibliography

Household-based food production and the social fabric in the Neolithic Vinča culture of the central Balkans

Obradović, Djurdja; Dimitrijević, Ivana; Bulatović, Jelena; Filipović, Dragana

(Kiel : Kiel University Publishing, 2023)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Obradović, Djurdja
AU  - Dimitrijević, Ivana
AU  - Bulatović, Jelena
AU  - Filipović, Dragana
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/727
AB  - Architectural, artefactual and subsistence evidence from sites of the Late Neolithic Vinča culture network (5400-4500
BC) in southeast Europe suggests that the autonomous household was the basic socio-economic unit. Archaeological
reconstructions posit that one or several adjacent buildings define individual households, and that these (groups of)
structures were the context of economic, social and ritual activities. How/where/when these activities were conducted
was likely defined at the communal level, prescribed by supra-household social controls and embedded in ideological
framework. Although no clear indications of social stratification are observable at Vinča culture sites, some interhousehold status competition would have been present and was negotiated through mechanisms such as sharing and
exchange, and communal works and events, the latter, for instance, documented by the faunal evidence of feasting.
Within the community-wide pattern of behaviour that ensured cohesion, social differentiation could have been
maintained through household-specific food-related practices, food choices and culinary traditions. These could have
served to emphasise individual affinities and identities, to delineate the smallest social units, without damaging the
sense of community. As such, they may have even been encouraged. In this presentation, we look at the archaeobotanical
and zooarchaeological evidence of food production and consumption from a selection of Vinča culture households, and
reconstruct the sources of food, their origin and seasonality. We compare the observations for individual cases, in order
to identify potential inter-household differences in the choice and use of (key) resources. We speculate on what effect
such differences could have had on the social fabric of the community: whether through them the social bonds were
strengthened, undermined, or both; and whether this was of relevance in the context of the dissolution of the Vinča
culture.
PB  - Kiel : Kiel University Publishing
C3  - Kiel Conference 2023: Scales of Social, Environmental and Cultural Change in Past Societies, 13-18 March 2023, Kiel, Abstract book
T1  - Household-based food production and the social fabric in the Neolithic Vinča culture of the central Balkans
SP  - 46
DO  - 10.38071/2023-00120-3
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Obradović, Djurdja and Dimitrijević, Ivana and Bulatović, Jelena and Filipović, Dragana",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Architectural, artefactual and subsistence evidence from sites of the Late Neolithic Vinča culture network (5400-4500
BC) in southeast Europe suggests that the autonomous household was the basic socio-economic unit. Archaeological
reconstructions posit that one or several adjacent buildings define individual households, and that these (groups of)
structures were the context of economic, social and ritual activities. How/where/when these activities were conducted
was likely defined at the communal level, prescribed by supra-household social controls and embedded in ideological
framework. Although no clear indications of social stratification are observable at Vinča culture sites, some interhousehold status competition would have been present and was negotiated through mechanisms such as sharing and
exchange, and communal works and events, the latter, for instance, documented by the faunal evidence of feasting.
Within the community-wide pattern of behaviour that ensured cohesion, social differentiation could have been
maintained through household-specific food-related practices, food choices and culinary traditions. These could have
served to emphasise individual affinities and identities, to delineate the smallest social units, without damaging the
sense of community. As such, they may have even been encouraged. In this presentation, we look at the archaeobotanical
and zooarchaeological evidence of food production and consumption from a selection of Vinča culture households, and
reconstruct the sources of food, their origin and seasonality. We compare the observations for individual cases, in order
to identify potential inter-household differences in the choice and use of (key) resources. We speculate on what effect
such differences could have had on the social fabric of the community: whether through them the social bonds were
strengthened, undermined, or both; and whether this was of relevance in the context of the dissolution of the Vinča
culture.",
publisher = "Kiel : Kiel University Publishing",
journal = "Kiel Conference 2023: Scales of Social, Environmental and Cultural Change in Past Societies, 13-18 March 2023, Kiel, Abstract book",
title = "Household-based food production and the social fabric in the Neolithic Vinča culture of the central Balkans",
pages = "46",
doi = "10.38071/2023-00120-3"
}
Obradović, D., Dimitrijević, I., Bulatović, J.,& Filipović, D.. (2023). Household-based food production and the social fabric in the Neolithic Vinča culture of the central Balkans. in Kiel Conference 2023: Scales of Social, Environmental and Cultural Change in Past Societies, 13-18 March 2023, Kiel, Abstract book
Kiel : Kiel University Publishing., 46.
https://doi.org/10.38071/2023-00120-3
Obradović D, Dimitrijević I, Bulatović J, Filipović D. Household-based food production and the social fabric in the Neolithic Vinča culture of the central Balkans. in Kiel Conference 2023: Scales of Social, Environmental and Cultural Change in Past Societies, 13-18 March 2023, Kiel, Abstract book. 2023;:46.
doi:10.38071/2023-00120-3 .
Obradović, Djurdja, Dimitrijević, Ivana, Bulatović, Jelena, Filipović, Dragana, "Household-based food production and the social fabric in the Neolithic Vinča culture of the central Balkans" in Kiel Conference 2023: Scales of Social, Environmental and Cultural Change in Past Societies, 13-18 March 2023, Kiel, Abstract book (2023):46,
https://doi.org/10.38071/2023-00120-3 . .

Triticum timopheevii s.l. (‘new glume wheat’) finds in regions of southern and eastern Europe across space and time

Filipović, Dragana; Jones, Glynis; Kirleis, Wiebke; Bogaard, Amy; Ballantyne, Rachel; Charles, Michael; de Vareilles, Anne; Ergun, Müge; Gkatzogia, Eugenia; Holguin, Amy; Hristova, Ivanka; Karathanou, Angeliki; Kapcia, Magda; Knežić, Dolores; Kotzamani, Georgia; Lathiras, Pavlos; Livarda, Alexandra; Marinova, Elena; Michou, Stavroula; Mosulishvili, Marine; Mueller-Bieniek, Aldona; Obradović, Djurdja; Padgett, Matthew; Paraskevopoulou, Pelagia; Petridou, Chryssi; Stylianakou, Haroula; Zerl, Tanja; Vidas, Doris; Valamoti, Soultana Maria

(Springer Nature, 2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Filipović, Dragana
AU  - Jones, Glynis
AU  - Kirleis, Wiebke
AU  - Bogaard, Amy
AU  - Ballantyne, Rachel
AU  - Charles, Michael
AU  - de Vareilles, Anne
AU  - Ergun, Müge
AU  - Gkatzogia, Eugenia
AU  - Holguin, Amy
AU  - Hristova, Ivanka
AU  - Karathanou, Angeliki
AU  - Kapcia, Magda
AU  - Knežić, Dolores
AU  - Kotzamani, Georgia
AU  - Lathiras, Pavlos
AU  - Livarda, Alexandra
AU  - Marinova, Elena
AU  - Michou, Stavroula
AU  - Mosulishvili, Marine
AU  - Mueller-Bieniek, Aldona
AU  - Obradović, Djurdja
AU  - Padgett, Matthew
AU  - Paraskevopoulou, Pelagia
AU  - Petridou, Chryssi
AU  - Stylianakou, Haroula
AU  - Zerl, Tanja
AU  - Vidas, Doris
AU  - Valamoti, Soultana Maria
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/934
AB  - Triticum timopheevii sensu lato (‘new glume wheat’, NGW) was first recognised as a distinct prehistoric cereal crop through work on archaeobotanical finds from Neolithic and Bronze Age sites in northern Greece. This was later followed by its identification in archaeobotanical assemblages from other parts of Europe. This paper provides an overview of the currently known archaeobotanical finds of Timopheev’s wheat in southeastern and eastern Europe and observes their temporal span and spatial distribution. To date, there are 89 prehistoric sites with these finds, located in different parts of the study region and dated from the Neolithic to the very late Iron Age. Their latest recorded presence in the region is in the last centuries BCE. For assemblages from the site as a whole containing at least 30 grain and/or chaff remains of Timopheev’s wheat, we take a brief look at the overall relative proportions of Triticum monococcum (einkorn), T. dicoccum (emmer) and T. timopheevii s.l. (Timopheev’s wheat), the three most common glume wheats in our study region in prehistory. We highlight several sites where the overall proportions of Timopheev’s wheat might be taken to suggest it was a minor component of a mixed crop (maslin), or an unmonitored inclusion in einkorn or emmer fields. At the same sites, however, there are also discrete contexts where this wheat is strongly predominant, pointing to its cultivation as a pure crop. We therefore emphasise the need to evaluate the relative representation of Timopheev’s wheat at the level of individual samples or contexts before making inferences on its cultivation status. We also encourage re-examination of prehistoric and historic cereal assemblages for its remains.
PB  - Springer Nature
T2  - Vegetation History and Archaeobotany
T1  - Triticum timopheevii s.l. (‘new glume wheat’) finds in regions of southern and eastern Europe across space and time
DO  - 10.1007/s00334-023-00954-w
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Filipović, Dragana and Jones, Glynis and Kirleis, Wiebke and Bogaard, Amy and Ballantyne, Rachel and Charles, Michael and de Vareilles, Anne and Ergun, Müge and Gkatzogia, Eugenia and Holguin, Amy and Hristova, Ivanka and Karathanou, Angeliki and Kapcia, Magda and Knežić, Dolores and Kotzamani, Georgia and Lathiras, Pavlos and Livarda, Alexandra and Marinova, Elena and Michou, Stavroula and Mosulishvili, Marine and Mueller-Bieniek, Aldona and Obradović, Djurdja and Padgett, Matthew and Paraskevopoulou, Pelagia and Petridou, Chryssi and Stylianakou, Haroula and Zerl, Tanja and Vidas, Doris and Valamoti, Soultana Maria",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Triticum timopheevii sensu lato (‘new glume wheat’, NGW) was first recognised as a distinct prehistoric cereal crop through work on archaeobotanical finds from Neolithic and Bronze Age sites in northern Greece. This was later followed by its identification in archaeobotanical assemblages from other parts of Europe. This paper provides an overview of the currently known archaeobotanical finds of Timopheev’s wheat in southeastern and eastern Europe and observes their temporal span and spatial distribution. To date, there are 89 prehistoric sites with these finds, located in different parts of the study region and dated from the Neolithic to the very late Iron Age. Their latest recorded presence in the region is in the last centuries BCE. For assemblages from the site as a whole containing at least 30 grain and/or chaff remains of Timopheev’s wheat, we take a brief look at the overall relative proportions of Triticum monococcum (einkorn), T. dicoccum (emmer) and T. timopheevii s.l. (Timopheev’s wheat), the three most common glume wheats in our study region in prehistory. We highlight several sites where the overall proportions of Timopheev’s wheat might be taken to suggest it was a minor component of a mixed crop (maslin), or an unmonitored inclusion in einkorn or emmer fields. At the same sites, however, there are also discrete contexts where this wheat is strongly predominant, pointing to its cultivation as a pure crop. We therefore emphasise the need to evaluate the relative representation of Timopheev’s wheat at the level of individual samples or contexts before making inferences on its cultivation status. We also encourage re-examination of prehistoric and historic cereal assemblages for its remains.",
publisher = "Springer Nature",
journal = "Vegetation History and Archaeobotany",
title = "Triticum timopheevii s.l. (‘new glume wheat’) finds in regions of southern and eastern Europe across space and time",
doi = "10.1007/s00334-023-00954-w"
}
Filipović, D., Jones, G., Kirleis, W., Bogaard, A., Ballantyne, R., Charles, M., de Vareilles, A., Ergun, M., Gkatzogia, E., Holguin, A., Hristova, I., Karathanou, A., Kapcia, M., Knežić, D., Kotzamani, G., Lathiras, P., Livarda, A., Marinova, E., Michou, S., Mosulishvili, M., Mueller-Bieniek, A., Obradović, D., Padgett, M., Paraskevopoulou, P., Petridou, C., Stylianakou, H., Zerl, T., Vidas, D.,& Valamoti, S. M.. (2023). Triticum timopheevii s.l. (‘new glume wheat’) finds in regions of southern and eastern Europe across space and time. in Vegetation History and Archaeobotany
Springer Nature..
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00334-023-00954-w
Filipović D, Jones G, Kirleis W, Bogaard A, Ballantyne R, Charles M, de Vareilles A, Ergun M, Gkatzogia E, Holguin A, Hristova I, Karathanou A, Kapcia M, Knežić D, Kotzamani G, Lathiras P, Livarda A, Marinova E, Michou S, Mosulishvili M, Mueller-Bieniek A, Obradović D, Padgett M, Paraskevopoulou P, Petridou C, Stylianakou H, Zerl T, Vidas D, Valamoti SM. Triticum timopheevii s.l. (‘new glume wheat’) finds in regions of southern and eastern Europe across space and time. in Vegetation History and Archaeobotany. 2023;.
doi:10.1007/s00334-023-00954-w .
Filipović, Dragana, Jones, Glynis, Kirleis, Wiebke, Bogaard, Amy, Ballantyne, Rachel, Charles, Michael, de Vareilles, Anne, Ergun, Müge, Gkatzogia, Eugenia, Holguin, Amy, Hristova, Ivanka, Karathanou, Angeliki, Kapcia, Magda, Knežić, Dolores, Kotzamani, Georgia, Lathiras, Pavlos, Livarda, Alexandra, Marinova, Elena, Michou, Stavroula, Mosulishvili, Marine, Mueller-Bieniek, Aldona, Obradović, Djurdja, Padgett, Matthew, Paraskevopoulou, Pelagia, Petridou, Chryssi, Stylianakou, Haroula, Zerl, Tanja, Vidas, Doris, Valamoti, Soultana Maria, "Triticum timopheevii s.l. (‘new glume wheat’) finds in regions of southern and eastern Europe across space and time" in Vegetation History and Archaeobotany (2023),
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00334-023-00954-w . .
1
1

The first five millennia of plant food production in the central and western Balkans: archaeobotanical evidence from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age

Filipović, Dragana; Obradović, Đurđa; de Vareilles, Anne

(Leiden : Sidestone Press, 2022)

TY  - CHAP
AU  - Filipović, Dragana
AU  - Obradović, Đurđa
AU  - de Vareilles, Anne
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/527
AB  - This paper takes a long-term perspective and looks at the development of plant food economies
from the Neolithic through to the Bronze Age (6300‑1000 BC) in the central and western parts
of the continental Balkans (southeast Europe), more specifically – the territories of Serbia,
*Kosovo1
, and Bosnia and Herzegovina. It does this by overviewing the archaeobotanical
evidence of crop growing from sites archaeologically dated to the selected timespan. Farming
started in the region with the cultivation of at least six crop species early in the Neolithic.
Through time, the range grew steadily as new species were taken into cultivation whilst old
ones were maintained. Some crops changed their role over time, from minor to major or
vice versa, while the importance of others remained constant. Continuity, diversification and
innovation mark the five millennia of farming practice in the region.
PB  - Leiden : Sidestone Press
T2  - Cooking with plants in Ancient Europe and beyond, Interdisciplinary approaches to the archaeology of plant foods
T1  - The first five millennia of plant food production in the central and western Balkans: archaeobotanical evidence from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age
EP  - 174
SP  - 155
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_527
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Filipović, Dragana and Obradović, Đurđa and de Vareilles, Anne",
year = "2022",
abstract = "This paper takes a long-term perspective and looks at the development of plant food economies
from the Neolithic through to the Bronze Age (6300‑1000 BC) in the central and western parts
of the continental Balkans (southeast Europe), more specifically – the territories of Serbia,
*Kosovo1
, and Bosnia and Herzegovina. It does this by overviewing the archaeobotanical
evidence of crop growing from sites archaeologically dated to the selected timespan. Farming
started in the region with the cultivation of at least six crop species early in the Neolithic.
Through time, the range grew steadily as new species were taken into cultivation whilst old
ones were maintained. Some crops changed their role over time, from minor to major or
vice versa, while the importance of others remained constant. Continuity, diversification and
innovation mark the five millennia of farming practice in the region.",
publisher = "Leiden : Sidestone Press",
journal = "Cooking with plants in Ancient Europe and beyond, Interdisciplinary approaches to the archaeology of plant foods",
booktitle = "The first five millennia of plant food production in the central and western Balkans: archaeobotanical evidence from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age",
pages = "174-155",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_527"
}
Filipović, D., Obradović, Đ.,& de Vareilles, A.. (2022). The first five millennia of plant food production in the central and western Balkans: archaeobotanical evidence from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age. in Cooking with plants in Ancient Europe and beyond, Interdisciplinary approaches to the archaeology of plant foods
Leiden : Sidestone Press., 155-174.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_527
Filipović D, Obradović Đ, de Vareilles A. The first five millennia of plant food production in the central and western Balkans: archaeobotanical evidence from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age. in Cooking with plants in Ancient Europe and beyond, Interdisciplinary approaches to the archaeology of plant foods. 2022;:155-174.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_527 .
Filipović, Dragana, Obradović, Đurđa, de Vareilles, Anne, "The first five millennia of plant food production in the central and western Balkans: archaeobotanical evidence from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age" in Cooking with plants in Ancient Europe and beyond, Interdisciplinary approaches to the archaeology of plant foods (2022):155-174,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_527 .

New Muli-disciplinary Data from the Neolithic in Serbia. The 2019 and 2021 Excavations at Svinjarička Čuka

Horejs, Barbara; Bulatović, Aleksandar; Bulatović, Jelena; Burke, Clare; Brandl, Michael; Dietrich, Laura; Filipović, Dragana; Milić, Bogdana; Mladenović, Ognjen; Schinnerl, Nora; Schroedter, T. M.; Webster, Lyndelle

(Wien : Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Horejs, Barbara
AU  - Bulatović, Aleksandar
AU  - Bulatović, Jelena
AU  - Burke, Clare
AU  - Brandl, Michael
AU  - Dietrich, Laura
AU  - Filipović, Dragana
AU  - Milić, Bogdana
AU  - Mladenović, Ognjen
AU  - Schinnerl, Nora
AU  - Schroedter, T. M.
AU  - Webster, Lyndelle
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/604
AB  - The excavations at Svinjarička Čuka in the South Morava Valley in Serbia are presented with new primary data from the field and related material and scientific analyses. Newly recovered architectural remains from the classical Starčevo period revealed a variety of domestic features, so far belonging to an earlier and later occupation phase at the river terrace dating between 5700/5600 and 5500 BC. Details of the stratigraphy and certain materials are presented for selected domestic contexts, including one potential ‘Starčevo house’. Archaeological and scientific analyses are discussed and contextualised within the Neolithisation process in the chapters on new radiocarbon data and their Bayesian modelling, pottery studies, chipped stones and their raw material analyses, grinding kits, animal remains, archaeobotanical results and charcoal analysis. The later occupation at the site is presented with new results for the Middle and Late Bronze Age and the Early Iron Age, including domestic contexts, radiocarbon data and materials.
AB  - Der Text bietet einen Überblick zu neuen Ergebnissen der Ausgrabungen und naturwissenschaftlichen Untersuchungen an der Fundstelle Svinjarička Čuka im südlichen Morava-Tal in Serbien. Kürzlich gefundene Architekturreste der klassischen Starčevo Kultur belegen eine Reihe unterschiedlicher Siedlungsbefunde, die sich bislang einer früheren und einer späteren Besiedlungsphase auf der Flussterrasse zuordnen lassen, die absolut zwischen 5700/5600 und 5500 calBC datiert werden kann. Die Stratigraphie und Aspekte des Fundmaterials ausgewählter Kontexte werden vorgestellt, darunter ein potentielles „Starčevo Haus“. Archäologische und naturwissenschaftliche Untersuchungen werden diskutiert und im Rahmen des Neolithisierungsprozesses kontextualisiert, mit Abschnitten zu neuen Radiokarbondatierungen und ihrer Bayesschen Modellierung, Keramikuntersuchungen, der geschlagenen Steinindustrie mit ihren Rohstoffquellen, Reibsteinen, den Faunenresten, den Ergebnissen von archäobotanischen und Holzkohleuntersuchungen. Die späteren Besiedlungsphasen des Fundplatzes werden mit neuen Ergebnissen zu Siedlungskontexten, Radiokarbondatierungen und Fundmaterial der mittleren und späten Bronzezeit und der frühen Eisenzeit vorgestellt.
PB  - Wien : Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften
T2  - Archaeologia Austriaca
T1  - New Muli-disciplinary Data from the Neolithic in Serbia. The 2019 and 2021 Excavations at Svinjarička Čuka
IS  - 106
DO  - 10.1553/archaeologia106s255
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Horejs, Barbara and Bulatović, Aleksandar and Bulatović, Jelena and Burke, Clare and Brandl, Michael and Dietrich, Laura and Filipović, Dragana and Milić, Bogdana and Mladenović, Ognjen and Schinnerl, Nora and Schroedter, T. M. and Webster, Lyndelle",
year = "2022",
abstract = "The excavations at Svinjarička Čuka in the South Morava Valley in Serbia are presented with new primary data from the field and related material and scientific analyses. Newly recovered architectural remains from the classical Starčevo period revealed a variety of domestic features, so far belonging to an earlier and later occupation phase at the river terrace dating between 5700/5600 and 5500 BC. Details of the stratigraphy and certain materials are presented for selected domestic contexts, including one potential ‘Starčevo house’. Archaeological and scientific analyses are discussed and contextualised within the Neolithisation process in the chapters on new radiocarbon data and their Bayesian modelling, pottery studies, chipped stones and their raw material analyses, grinding kits, animal remains, archaeobotanical results and charcoal analysis. The later occupation at the site is presented with new results for the Middle and Late Bronze Age and the Early Iron Age, including domestic contexts, radiocarbon data and materials., Der Text bietet einen Überblick zu neuen Ergebnissen der Ausgrabungen und naturwissenschaftlichen Untersuchungen an der Fundstelle Svinjarička Čuka im südlichen Morava-Tal in Serbien. Kürzlich gefundene Architekturreste der klassischen Starčevo Kultur belegen eine Reihe unterschiedlicher Siedlungsbefunde, die sich bislang einer früheren und einer späteren Besiedlungsphase auf der Flussterrasse zuordnen lassen, die absolut zwischen 5700/5600 und 5500 calBC datiert werden kann. Die Stratigraphie und Aspekte des Fundmaterials ausgewählter Kontexte werden vorgestellt, darunter ein potentielles „Starčevo Haus“. Archäologische und naturwissenschaftliche Untersuchungen werden diskutiert und im Rahmen des Neolithisierungsprozesses kontextualisiert, mit Abschnitten zu neuen Radiokarbondatierungen und ihrer Bayesschen Modellierung, Keramikuntersuchungen, der geschlagenen Steinindustrie mit ihren Rohstoffquellen, Reibsteinen, den Faunenresten, den Ergebnissen von archäobotanischen und Holzkohleuntersuchungen. Die späteren Besiedlungsphasen des Fundplatzes werden mit neuen Ergebnissen zu Siedlungskontexten, Radiokarbondatierungen und Fundmaterial der mittleren und späten Bronzezeit und der frühen Eisenzeit vorgestellt.",
publisher = "Wien : Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften",
journal = "Archaeologia Austriaca",
title = "New Muli-disciplinary Data from the Neolithic in Serbia. The 2019 and 2021 Excavations at Svinjarička Čuka",
number = "106",
doi = "10.1553/archaeologia106s255"
}
Horejs, B., Bulatović, A., Bulatović, J., Burke, C., Brandl, M., Dietrich, L., Filipović, D., Milić, B., Mladenović, O., Schinnerl, N., Schroedter, T. M.,& Webster, L.. (2022). New Muli-disciplinary Data from the Neolithic in Serbia. The 2019 and 2021 Excavations at Svinjarička Čuka. in Archaeologia Austriaca
Wien : Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.(106).
https://doi.org/10.1553/archaeologia106s255
Horejs B, Bulatović A, Bulatović J, Burke C, Brandl M, Dietrich L, Filipović D, Milić B, Mladenović O, Schinnerl N, Schroedter TM, Webster L. New Muli-disciplinary Data from the Neolithic in Serbia. The 2019 and 2021 Excavations at Svinjarička Čuka. in Archaeologia Austriaca. 2022;(106).
doi:10.1553/archaeologia106s255 .
Horejs, Barbara, Bulatović, Aleksandar, Bulatović, Jelena, Burke, Clare, Brandl, Michael, Dietrich, Laura, Filipović, Dragana, Milić, Bogdana, Mladenović, Ognjen, Schinnerl, Nora, Schroedter, T. M., Webster, Lyndelle, "New Muli-disciplinary Data from the Neolithic in Serbia. The 2019 and 2021 Excavations at Svinjarička Čuka" in Archaeologia Austriaca, no. 106 (2022),
https://doi.org/10.1553/archaeologia106s255 . .

Agricultural niche building in the Neolithic central Balkans

Filipović, Dragana; Obradović, Djurdja

(2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Filipović, Dragana
AU  - Obradović, Djurdja
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1610
AB  - Agronomic studies emphasise that agriculture is modelled by different groups of
factors that form complex and dynamic socio-ecological systems of agricultural
production. Biological by nature, this form of production is influenced by natural
environment, many aspects of which are not under farmer’s control, such as, for
instance, species suitability, (micro-)regional climate, pests and diseases.
Farming decisions are further shaped by economic goals, including ensuring
dietary sustenance and generating income. Finally, agricultural activities are
embedded in the social contexts created and reproduced by the farming
households and societies.
This presentation is concerned with plant-based agricultural production in the
Neolithic in the central part of the Balkan Peninsula. It observes how crop
cultivation practices varied between the settlements and how they changed
through the c. 1700-year long period (6200-4500 BC). Two transformational
developments punctuate this sequence: (1) transmission in the late 7th
millennium BC of the Early Neolithic farming practices northwards from the
Aegean and into the continental parts of the Balkan Peninsula. We track
adaptations that these practices underwent, as evidence of adjustment to local
environments and climate; such adaptations underpinned creation of the
regional socio-economic context known as the Starčevo culture; (2) emergence
of a new socio-economic context, the Vinča culture, in the 2nd half of the 6th
millennium BC, accompanied by new pottery technology and settlement pattern,
an apparent increase in the population size, and followed by the beginning of
extractive metallurgy at the turn of the millennia; we illustrate how changes in
crop production were one additional element of this general economic growth.
For archaeobotanical inferences on the adaptations and modifications in plant
production, we rely on the analysis of crop and wild diversity (=the range of
species and their relative abundance) in the assemblages from Starčevo and
Vinča culture sites in Serbia.
C3  - 19th Conference of the International Workgroup for Palaeoethnobotany, České Budějovice, 13 - 17 June 2022, Abstract Book
T1  - Agricultural niche building in the Neolithic central Balkans
EP  - 206
SP  - 206
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1610
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Filipović, Dragana and Obradović, Djurdja",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Agronomic studies emphasise that agriculture is modelled by different groups of
factors that form complex and dynamic socio-ecological systems of agricultural
production. Biological by nature, this form of production is influenced by natural
environment, many aspects of which are not under farmer’s control, such as, for
instance, species suitability, (micro-)regional climate, pests and diseases.
Farming decisions are further shaped by economic goals, including ensuring
dietary sustenance and generating income. Finally, agricultural activities are
embedded in the social contexts created and reproduced by the farming
households and societies.
This presentation is concerned with plant-based agricultural production in the
Neolithic in the central part of the Balkan Peninsula. It observes how crop
cultivation practices varied between the settlements and how they changed
through the c. 1700-year long period (6200-4500 BC). Two transformational
developments punctuate this sequence: (1) transmission in the late 7th
millennium BC of the Early Neolithic farming practices northwards from the
Aegean and into the continental parts of the Balkan Peninsula. We track
adaptations that these practices underwent, as evidence of adjustment to local
environments and climate; such adaptations underpinned creation of the
regional socio-economic context known as the Starčevo culture; (2) emergence
of a new socio-economic context, the Vinča culture, in the 2nd half of the 6th
millennium BC, accompanied by new pottery technology and settlement pattern,
an apparent increase in the population size, and followed by the beginning of
extractive metallurgy at the turn of the millennia; we illustrate how changes in
crop production were one additional element of this general economic growth.
For archaeobotanical inferences on the adaptations and modifications in plant
production, we rely on the analysis of crop and wild diversity (=the range of
species and their relative abundance) in the assemblages from Starčevo and
Vinča culture sites in Serbia.",
journal = "19th Conference of the International Workgroup for Palaeoethnobotany, České Budějovice, 13 - 17 June 2022, Abstract Book",
title = "Agricultural niche building in the Neolithic central Balkans",
pages = "206-206",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1610"
}
Filipović, D.,& Obradović, D.. (2022). Agricultural niche building in the Neolithic central Balkans. in 19th Conference of the International Workgroup for Palaeoethnobotany, České Budějovice, 13 - 17 June 2022, Abstract Book, 206-206.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1610
Filipović D, Obradović D. Agricultural niche building in the Neolithic central Balkans. in 19th Conference of the International Workgroup for Palaeoethnobotany, České Budějovice, 13 - 17 June 2022, Abstract Book. 2022;:206-206.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1610 .
Filipović, Dragana, Obradović, Djurdja, "Agricultural niche building in the Neolithic central Balkans" in 19th Conference of the International Workgroup for Palaeoethnobotany, České Budějovice, 13 - 17 June 2022, Abstract Book (2022):206-206,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1610 .

Along the Rivers and into the Plain: Early Crop Diversity in the Central and Western Balkans and Its Relationship with Environmental and Cultural Variables

de Vareilles, Anne; Filipović, Dragana; Obradović, Đurđa; Vander Linden, Marc

(Mdpi, Basel, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - de Vareilles, Anne
AU  - Filipović, Dragana
AU  - Obradović, Đurđa
AU  - Vander Linden, Marc
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/390
AB  - Agriculture is a complex and dynamic socio-ecological system shaped by environmental, economic, and social factors. The crop resource pool is its key component and one that best reflects environmental limitations and socio-economic concerns of the farmers. This pertains in particular to small-scale subsistence production, as was practised by Neolithic farmers. We investigated if and how the environment and cultural complexes shaped the spectrum and diversity of crops cultivated by Neolithic farmers in the central-western Balkans and on the Hungarian Plain. We did so by exploring patterns in crop diversity between biogeographical regions and cultural complexes using multivariate statistical analyses. We also examined the spectrum of wild-gathered plant resources in the same way. We found that the number of species in Neolithic plant assemblages is correlated with sampling intensity (the number and volume of samples), but that this applies to all archaeological cultures. Late Neolithic communities of the central and western Balkans exploited a large pool of plant resources, whose spectrum was somewhat different between archaeological cultures. By comparison, the earliest Neolithic tradition in the region, the Starcevo-Koros-Cris phenomenon, seems to have used a comparatively narrower range of crops and wild plants, as did the Linearbandkeramik culture on the Hungarian Plain.
PB  - Mdpi, Basel
T2  - Quaternary
T1  - Along the Rivers and into the Plain: Early Crop Diversity in the Central and Western Balkans and Its Relationship with Environmental and Cultural Variables
IS  - 1
VL  - 5
DO  - 10.3390/quat5010006
ER  - 
@article{
author = "de Vareilles, Anne and Filipović, Dragana and Obradović, Đurđa and Vander Linden, Marc",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Agriculture is a complex and dynamic socio-ecological system shaped by environmental, economic, and social factors. The crop resource pool is its key component and one that best reflects environmental limitations and socio-economic concerns of the farmers. This pertains in particular to small-scale subsistence production, as was practised by Neolithic farmers. We investigated if and how the environment and cultural complexes shaped the spectrum and diversity of crops cultivated by Neolithic farmers in the central-western Balkans and on the Hungarian Plain. We did so by exploring patterns in crop diversity between biogeographical regions and cultural complexes using multivariate statistical analyses. We also examined the spectrum of wild-gathered plant resources in the same way. We found that the number of species in Neolithic plant assemblages is correlated with sampling intensity (the number and volume of samples), but that this applies to all archaeological cultures. Late Neolithic communities of the central and western Balkans exploited a large pool of plant resources, whose spectrum was somewhat different between archaeological cultures. By comparison, the earliest Neolithic tradition in the region, the Starcevo-Koros-Cris phenomenon, seems to have used a comparatively narrower range of crops and wild plants, as did the Linearbandkeramik culture on the Hungarian Plain.",
publisher = "Mdpi, Basel",
journal = "Quaternary",
title = "Along the Rivers and into the Plain: Early Crop Diversity in the Central and Western Balkans and Its Relationship with Environmental and Cultural Variables",
number = "1",
volume = "5",
doi = "10.3390/quat5010006"
}
de Vareilles, A., Filipović, D., Obradović, Đ.,& Vander Linden, M.. (2022). Along the Rivers and into the Plain: Early Crop Diversity in the Central and Western Balkans and Its Relationship with Environmental and Cultural Variables. in Quaternary
Mdpi, Basel., 5(1).
https://doi.org/10.3390/quat5010006
de Vareilles A, Filipović D, Obradović Đ, Vander Linden M. Along the Rivers and into the Plain: Early Crop Diversity in the Central and Western Balkans and Its Relationship with Environmental and Cultural Variables. in Quaternary. 2022;5(1).
doi:10.3390/quat5010006 .
de Vareilles, Anne, Filipović, Dragana, Obradović, Đurđa, Vander Linden, Marc, "Along the Rivers and into the Plain: Early Crop Diversity in the Central and Western Balkans and Its Relationship with Environmental and Cultural Variables" in Quaternary, 5, no. 1 (2022),
https://doi.org/10.3390/quat5010006 . .
2
7
8

Food economy during and after the neolithiceneolithic transition in the central Balkans: Contextualising crops and domestic animals from Eneolithic Bubanj, southern Serbia

Filipović, Dragana; Bulatović, Jelena; Bulatović, Aleksandar

(Srpsko arheološko društvo, Beograd, 2020)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Filipović, Dragana
AU  - Bulatović, Jelena
AU  - Bulatović, Aleksandar
PY  - 2020
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/364
AB  - Druga polovina 5. i veći deo 4. milenijuma pre nove ere na centralnom Balkanu označava se kao period prelaza iz kasnog neolita (tj. vinčanske kulture) u rani eneolit, i eneolitski period. Na osnovu značajnih promena u obrascima naseljavanja i veličini naselja, u pogrebnoj praksi i u materijalnoj kulturi, smatra se da je tokom prelaznog perioda došlo do razvoja novih obrazaca u društvenim odnosima i organizaciji, u ekonomiji i proizvodnji i u ideologiji postvinčanskih zajednica, koje su, za razliku od prethodnih velikih, dugotrajnih naselja, počele da osnivaju manje, relativno kratkotrajne naseobine, uglavnom na prethodno nenaseljenim lokacijama. Različiti faktori su predloženi kao pokretači ovih transformacija - društveni sukobi, invazije sa strane, klimatske promene, te pad raspoloživih prirodnih resursa i nedovoljno hrane. Za razmatranje eventualnih klimatskih promena tokom eneolita ne postoje nikakvi podaci, a doskora se veoma malo znalo i o ekonomiji zasnovanoj na biljkama i životinjama u postneolitskom periodu. Najjasnije formulisan zaključak o uzrocima raspada kasnoneolitskog društva, koji nalazi i najviše potpore u arheološkim saznanjima, jeste taj da su vinčanske zajednice dostigle granice održivosti zajedničkog života (u sociološkom smislu), što je dovelo do "fisije" i fragmentacije velikih zajednica na manje grupe. Sličan model kasnoneolitsko-ranoeneolitskih društvenih promena predložen je i za Karpatski basen - "popuštanje" društvene kohezije kao odgovor na moguće društvene tenzije. Pored promena i novih trendova koje nastupaju početkom i tokom eneolita na centralnom Balkanu, primetan je i visok stepen sličnosti/kontinuiteta u pojedinim aspektima života; na primer, pored manjih, razvijaju se i velika, dugotrajna eneolitska naselja, poput onih na lokalitetima Bubanj i Velika Humska Čuka u južnoj Srbiji. Dok su ovi i drugi aspekti eneolitskih zajednica u izvesnoj meri poznati i istraženi, proizvodnja hrane je doskora bila velika nepoznanica. Do sada je pak zooarheološki i arheobotanički istraženo nekoliko eneolitskih lokaliteta, a nova iskopavanja na Bubnju donela su važne podatke o uzgajanju i upotrebi domaćih biljaka i životinja. Iako su podaci i dalje skromni, posebno oni o poljoprivrednim aktivnostima, sada je ipak moguć uvid u pojedine aspekte proizvodnje hrane. U ovom radu smo do sada prikupljene zooarheološke i arheobotaničke podatke sa Bubnja razmotrili u širem geografskom i hronološkom kontekstu tako što smo uporedili saznanja o uzgajanju i upotrebi životinja i biljaka sa do sada analiziranih kasnoneolitskih i eneolitskih nalazišta na teritoriji Srbije. Uporedna analiza pokazala je da su iste vrste domaćih životinja - goveda, ovce/koze i svinje - gajene i u neolitu i u eneolitu. S druge strane, ostaci ovaca i koza i svinja su, spram govečeta, zastupljeniji u uzorcima sa eneolitskih nalazišta. Utisak je, stoga, da je značaj ovaca i koza, kao i svinja, bio veći u eneolitu, što je važna razlika u odnosu na kasni neolit, tokom kog je goveče bilo dominantno. Postoje, međutim, i izuzeci od ovog opšteg zapažanja; na primer, na nalazištu Vinča - Belo brdo, relativni odnos ekonomski najznačajnih domaćih životinja je manje-više isti tokom oba perioda. Takođe, na kasnoeneolitskom nalazištu Kudoš-Šašinci, većina ostataka pripada domaćem govečetu. Preliminarni zaključak je da generalno ujednačena slika karakteristična za kasni neolit postaje raznovrsnija tokom eneolita i javljaju se jasne regionalne i hronološke razlike u pogledu značaja domaćih životinja. Arheobotanički podaci pokazuju da se spektar gajenih vrsta na nalazištima kasnog neolita i eneolita u Srbiji uveliko preklapa, te da osnovne kulture poznate iz neolita - jednozrna i dvozrna pšenica - ostaju osnov poljoprivredne proizvodnje i tokom eneolita. I ovde se, međutim, kao i kod domaćih životinja, uočavaju moguće razlike između lokaliteta. Recimo, u kasnoeneolitskom sloju Gomolave zabeležena je veća količina ječma, što je za sada jedini slučaj kako za neolit tako i za eneolit, jer se ječam na drugim analiziranim lokalitetima iz ovih perioda javlja samo u tragovima. Podaci sa Bubnja ukazuju na mogući rast u važnosti mahunarki, tačnije sočiva, od ranog ka kasnom eneolitu, te manje značajnu ulogu dvozrne pšenice kroz vreme, ali je broj ostataka izuzetno Mali za čvrste zaključke. Dok relativno nepromenjen izbor gajenih vrsta kroz kasni neolit i eneolit ističe kontinuitet, donekle su vidljive potencijalne razlike između lokaliteta u stepenu proizvodnje pojedinih poljoprivrednih kultura. Moguće je da dolazi do promene u metodama i intenzitetu zemljoradnje, a vrlo verovatno u vezi sa promenama u stočarstvu, recimo u pogledu potrebe za proizvodnjom stočne hrane ili varijacijama u veličini površina pod usevima ili onim namenjenim za ispašu. Uvid u ove i slične aspekte proizvodnje hrane u eneolitu zahteva znatno veću količinu podataka od one koja je sada na raspolaganju.
AB  - In the central Balkans, the period from the second half of the 5th through the mid-3rd millennium BC is known as the Eneolithic. The earlier part of this period has been described as the transition between the Late Neolithic and Early Eneolithic and the time of transformations-societal, economic and ideological. Prevailing understanding of the archaeological record from this period is that the remarkable shifts in the settlement system reflect disintegration of the Neolithic society. What effect did this have on food economy? This question has not yet been addressed using the direct evidence of food production and consumption from archaeological sites. Although such evidence is scarce, it has in recent years been enlarged through new excavations, including those at the long-lasting site of Bubanj in southern Serbia. This paper combines the archaeobotanical and zooarchaeological datasets from Bubanj and examines the integrated evidence from a broader chronological and geographical perspective using the information from other Eneolithic and, also, Late Neolithic sites in Serbia. A picture of agricultural diversity emerges, perhaps reflecting diachronic changes in the production methods and choices. These may have been driven by the social and ecological factors that led to the cultural transformations during and after the transitional period.
PB  - Srpsko arheološko društvo, Beograd
T2  - Glasnik Srpskog arheološkog društva
T1  - Food economy during and after the neolithiceneolithic transition in the central Balkans: Contextualising crops and domestic animals from Eneolithic Bubanj, southern Serbia
EP  - 56
IS  - 36
SP  - 27
DO  - 10.18485/gsad.2020.36.2
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Filipović, Dragana and Bulatović, Jelena and Bulatović, Aleksandar",
year = "2020",
abstract = "Druga polovina 5. i veći deo 4. milenijuma pre nove ere na centralnom Balkanu označava se kao period prelaza iz kasnog neolita (tj. vinčanske kulture) u rani eneolit, i eneolitski period. Na osnovu značajnih promena u obrascima naseljavanja i veličini naselja, u pogrebnoj praksi i u materijalnoj kulturi, smatra se da je tokom prelaznog perioda došlo do razvoja novih obrazaca u društvenim odnosima i organizaciji, u ekonomiji i proizvodnji i u ideologiji postvinčanskih zajednica, koje su, za razliku od prethodnih velikih, dugotrajnih naselja, počele da osnivaju manje, relativno kratkotrajne naseobine, uglavnom na prethodno nenaseljenim lokacijama. Različiti faktori su predloženi kao pokretači ovih transformacija - društveni sukobi, invazije sa strane, klimatske promene, te pad raspoloživih prirodnih resursa i nedovoljno hrane. Za razmatranje eventualnih klimatskih promena tokom eneolita ne postoje nikakvi podaci, a doskora se veoma malo znalo i o ekonomiji zasnovanoj na biljkama i životinjama u postneolitskom periodu. Najjasnije formulisan zaključak o uzrocima raspada kasnoneolitskog društva, koji nalazi i najviše potpore u arheološkim saznanjima, jeste taj da su vinčanske zajednice dostigle granice održivosti zajedničkog života (u sociološkom smislu), što je dovelo do "fisije" i fragmentacije velikih zajednica na manje grupe. Sličan model kasnoneolitsko-ranoeneolitskih društvenih promena predložen je i za Karpatski basen - "popuštanje" društvene kohezije kao odgovor na moguće društvene tenzije. Pored promena i novih trendova koje nastupaju početkom i tokom eneolita na centralnom Balkanu, primetan je i visok stepen sličnosti/kontinuiteta u pojedinim aspektima života; na primer, pored manjih, razvijaju se i velika, dugotrajna eneolitska naselja, poput onih na lokalitetima Bubanj i Velika Humska Čuka u južnoj Srbiji. Dok su ovi i drugi aspekti eneolitskih zajednica u izvesnoj meri poznati i istraženi, proizvodnja hrane je doskora bila velika nepoznanica. Do sada je pak zooarheološki i arheobotanički istraženo nekoliko eneolitskih lokaliteta, a nova iskopavanja na Bubnju donela su važne podatke o uzgajanju i upotrebi domaćih biljaka i životinja. Iako su podaci i dalje skromni, posebno oni o poljoprivrednim aktivnostima, sada je ipak moguć uvid u pojedine aspekte proizvodnje hrane. U ovom radu smo do sada prikupljene zooarheološke i arheobotaničke podatke sa Bubnja razmotrili u širem geografskom i hronološkom kontekstu tako što smo uporedili saznanja o uzgajanju i upotrebi životinja i biljaka sa do sada analiziranih kasnoneolitskih i eneolitskih nalazišta na teritoriji Srbije. Uporedna analiza pokazala je da su iste vrste domaćih životinja - goveda, ovce/koze i svinje - gajene i u neolitu i u eneolitu. S druge strane, ostaci ovaca i koza i svinja su, spram govečeta, zastupljeniji u uzorcima sa eneolitskih nalazišta. Utisak je, stoga, da je značaj ovaca i koza, kao i svinja, bio veći u eneolitu, što je važna razlika u odnosu na kasni neolit, tokom kog je goveče bilo dominantno. Postoje, međutim, i izuzeci od ovog opšteg zapažanja; na primer, na nalazištu Vinča - Belo brdo, relativni odnos ekonomski najznačajnih domaćih životinja je manje-više isti tokom oba perioda. Takođe, na kasnoeneolitskom nalazištu Kudoš-Šašinci, većina ostataka pripada domaćem govečetu. Preliminarni zaključak je da generalno ujednačena slika karakteristična za kasni neolit postaje raznovrsnija tokom eneolita i javljaju se jasne regionalne i hronološke razlike u pogledu značaja domaćih životinja. Arheobotanički podaci pokazuju da se spektar gajenih vrsta na nalazištima kasnog neolita i eneolita u Srbiji uveliko preklapa, te da osnovne kulture poznate iz neolita - jednozrna i dvozrna pšenica - ostaju osnov poljoprivredne proizvodnje i tokom eneolita. I ovde se, međutim, kao i kod domaćih životinja, uočavaju moguće razlike između lokaliteta. Recimo, u kasnoeneolitskom sloju Gomolave zabeležena je veća količina ječma, što je za sada jedini slučaj kako za neolit tako i za eneolit, jer se ječam na drugim analiziranim lokalitetima iz ovih perioda javlja samo u tragovima. Podaci sa Bubnja ukazuju na mogući rast u važnosti mahunarki, tačnije sočiva, od ranog ka kasnom eneolitu, te manje značajnu ulogu dvozrne pšenice kroz vreme, ali je broj ostataka izuzetno Mali za čvrste zaključke. Dok relativno nepromenjen izbor gajenih vrsta kroz kasni neolit i eneolit ističe kontinuitet, donekle su vidljive potencijalne razlike između lokaliteta u stepenu proizvodnje pojedinih poljoprivrednih kultura. Moguće je da dolazi do promene u metodama i intenzitetu zemljoradnje, a vrlo verovatno u vezi sa promenama u stočarstvu, recimo u pogledu potrebe za proizvodnjom stočne hrane ili varijacijama u veličini površina pod usevima ili onim namenjenim za ispašu. Uvid u ove i slične aspekte proizvodnje hrane u eneolitu zahteva znatno veću količinu podataka od one koja je sada na raspolaganju., In the central Balkans, the period from the second half of the 5th through the mid-3rd millennium BC is known as the Eneolithic. The earlier part of this period has been described as the transition between the Late Neolithic and Early Eneolithic and the time of transformations-societal, economic and ideological. Prevailing understanding of the archaeological record from this period is that the remarkable shifts in the settlement system reflect disintegration of the Neolithic society. What effect did this have on food economy? This question has not yet been addressed using the direct evidence of food production and consumption from archaeological sites. Although such evidence is scarce, it has in recent years been enlarged through new excavations, including those at the long-lasting site of Bubanj in southern Serbia. This paper combines the archaeobotanical and zooarchaeological datasets from Bubanj and examines the integrated evidence from a broader chronological and geographical perspective using the information from other Eneolithic and, also, Late Neolithic sites in Serbia. A picture of agricultural diversity emerges, perhaps reflecting diachronic changes in the production methods and choices. These may have been driven by the social and ecological factors that led to the cultural transformations during and after the transitional period.",
publisher = "Srpsko arheološko društvo, Beograd",
journal = "Glasnik Srpskog arheološkog društva",
title = "Food economy during and after the neolithiceneolithic transition in the central Balkans: Contextualising crops and domestic animals from Eneolithic Bubanj, southern Serbia",
pages = "56-27",
number = "36",
doi = "10.18485/gsad.2020.36.2"
}
Filipović, D., Bulatović, J.,& Bulatović, A.. (2020). Food economy during and after the neolithiceneolithic transition in the central Balkans: Contextualising crops and domestic animals from Eneolithic Bubanj, southern Serbia. in Glasnik Srpskog arheološkog društva
Srpsko arheološko društvo, Beograd.(36), 27-56.
https://doi.org/10.18485/gsad.2020.36.2
Filipović D, Bulatović J, Bulatović A. Food economy during and after the neolithiceneolithic transition in the central Balkans: Contextualising crops and domestic animals from Eneolithic Bubanj, southern Serbia. in Glasnik Srpskog arheološkog društva. 2020;(36):27-56.
doi:10.18485/gsad.2020.36.2 .
Filipović, Dragana, Bulatović, Jelena, Bulatović, Aleksandar, "Food economy during and after the neolithiceneolithic transition in the central Balkans: Contextualising crops and domestic animals from Eneolithic Bubanj, southern Serbia" in Glasnik Srpskog arheološkog društva, no. 36 (2020):27-56,
https://doi.org/10.18485/gsad.2020.36.2 . .
1

Use of space in a Late Neolithic/Early Eneolithic building at the site of Vinča–Belo Brdo in the Central Balkans

Borojević, Ksenija; Antonović, Dragana; Vuković, Jasna; Dimitrijević, Vesna; Filipović, Dragana; Marić, Miroslav; Penezić, Kristina; Tripković, Boban; Bogosavljević-Petrović, Vera; Tasić, Nenad

(Oxford : BAR Publishing, 2020)

TY  - CHAP
AU  - Borojević, Ksenija
AU  - Antonović, Dragana
AU  - Vuković, Jasna
AU  - Dimitrijević, Vesna
AU  - Filipović, Dragana
AU  - Marić, Miroslav
AU  - Penezić, Kristina
AU  - Tripković, Boban
AU  - Bogosavljević-Petrović, Vera
AU  - Tasić, Nenad
PY  - 2020
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1258
AB  - The Late Neolithic/Early Eneolithic Building 01/06 at the site of Vinča-Belo Brdo on the
Danube burned suddenly. The daub sealed the interior of the three-room structure and preserved
its contents as they stood in the 46th century BC. The building was preserved so well that the
details of its interior can be reconstructed. On the floor, under thick layers of destruction, ovens,
querns, and deposits of artefacts and ecofacts were discovered, capturing a moment in time. The
systematic retrieval of remarkably well-preserved plant macro-remains and other materials, and
subsequent analyses, offer new information about practices such as food processing and storage
and the use of space towards the end of the occupation of the site. In this article, we present a
detailed examination of the interior architecture, and of finds of ceramics, stone, plant and animal
remains within each of the three rooms of Building 01/06. Our detailed contextual analysis of the
building’s internal configuration and of its contents, coupled with the precise dating of organic
material, provides new data for the interpretation of a Vinča-style building and its use.
PB  - Oxford : BAR Publishing
T2  - Making Spaces into Places. The North Aegean, the Balkans and Western Anatolia in the Neolithic (Bar International Series S3001)
T1  - Use of space in a Late Neolithic/Early Eneolithic building at the site of Vinča–Belo Brdo in the Central Balkans
EP  - 180
SP  - 157
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1258
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Borojević, Ksenija and Antonović, Dragana and Vuković, Jasna and Dimitrijević, Vesna and Filipović, Dragana and Marić, Miroslav and Penezić, Kristina and Tripković, Boban and Bogosavljević-Petrović, Vera and Tasić, Nenad",
year = "2020",
abstract = "The Late Neolithic/Early Eneolithic Building 01/06 at the site of Vinča-Belo Brdo on the
Danube burned suddenly. The daub sealed the interior of the three-room structure and preserved
its contents as they stood in the 46th century BC. The building was preserved so well that the
details of its interior can be reconstructed. On the floor, under thick layers of destruction, ovens,
querns, and deposits of artefacts and ecofacts were discovered, capturing a moment in time. The
systematic retrieval of remarkably well-preserved plant macro-remains and other materials, and
subsequent analyses, offer new information about practices such as food processing and storage
and the use of space towards the end of the occupation of the site. In this article, we present a
detailed examination of the interior architecture, and of finds of ceramics, stone, plant and animal
remains within each of the three rooms of Building 01/06. Our detailed contextual analysis of the
building’s internal configuration and of its contents, coupled with the precise dating of organic
material, provides new data for the interpretation of a Vinča-style building and its use.",
publisher = "Oxford : BAR Publishing",
journal = "Making Spaces into Places. The North Aegean, the Balkans and Western Anatolia in the Neolithic (Bar International Series S3001)",
booktitle = "Use of space in a Late Neolithic/Early Eneolithic building at the site of Vinča–Belo Brdo in the Central Balkans",
pages = "180-157",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1258"
}
Borojević, K., Antonović, D., Vuković, J., Dimitrijević, V., Filipović, D., Marić, M., Penezić, K., Tripković, B., Bogosavljević-Petrović, V.,& Tasić, N.. (2020). Use of space in a Late Neolithic/Early Eneolithic building at the site of Vinča–Belo Brdo in the Central Balkans. in Making Spaces into Places. The North Aegean, the Balkans and Western Anatolia in the Neolithic (Bar International Series S3001)
Oxford : BAR Publishing., 157-180.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1258
Borojević K, Antonović D, Vuković J, Dimitrijević V, Filipović D, Marić M, Penezić K, Tripković B, Bogosavljević-Petrović V, Tasić N. Use of space in a Late Neolithic/Early Eneolithic building at the site of Vinča–Belo Brdo in the Central Balkans. in Making Spaces into Places. The North Aegean, the Balkans and Western Anatolia in the Neolithic (Bar International Series S3001). 2020;:157-180.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1258 .
Borojević, Ksenija, Antonović, Dragana, Vuković, Jasna, Dimitrijević, Vesna, Filipović, Dragana, Marić, Miroslav, Penezić, Kristina, Tripković, Boban, Bogosavljević-Petrović, Vera, Tasić, Nenad, "Use of space in a Late Neolithic/Early Eneolithic building at the site of Vinča–Belo Brdo in the Central Balkans" in Making Spaces into Places. The North Aegean, the Balkans and Western Anatolia in the Neolithic (Bar International Series S3001) (2020):157-180,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1258 .

New Insights into the Later Stage of the Neolithisation Process of the Central Balkans. First Excavations at Svinjaricka Cuka 2018

Horejs, Barbara; Bulatović, Aleksandar; Bulatović, Jelena; Brandl, Michael; Burke, Clare; Filipović, Dragana; Mili', Bogdana

(Verlag Der Oesterreichischen Akad Wissenschaften, Vienna, 2019)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Horejs, Barbara
AU  - Bulatović, Aleksandar
AU  - Bulatović, Jelena
AU  - Brandl, Michael
AU  - Burke, Clare
AU  - Filipović, Dragana
AU  - Mili', Bogdana
PY  - 2019
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/313
AB  - This article discusses recent findings from the newly identified archaeological site of Svinjaricka Cuka, situated next to the Southern Morava River in southern Serbia. We will present the latest results from the excavation, material studies, bioarchaeological analyses and contextualised radiocarbon data, focusing on the Stare'evo Neolithic horizon within the context of the new NEOTECH project. The interdisciplinary approach aims to shed light on the Neolithisation process of the region along one of the main communication routes between the Aegean and the Danube by the Axios-Vardar-Morava river system. The work so far has uncovered remains of Early to Middle Neolithic features dating around 5600 calBC, with analyses of faunal remains, ceramics and lithics contributing new insights into animal exploitation, raw materials and technological practices during this important time of socio-economic transition.
PB  - Verlag Der Oesterreichischen Akad Wissenschaften, Vienna
T2  - Archaeologia Austriaca
T1  - New Insights into the Later Stage of the Neolithisation Process of the Central Balkans. First Excavations at Svinjaricka Cuka 2018
EP  - 226
IS  - 103
SP  - 175
DO  - 10.1553/archaeologia103s175
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Horejs, Barbara and Bulatović, Aleksandar and Bulatović, Jelena and Brandl, Michael and Burke, Clare and Filipović, Dragana and Mili', Bogdana",
year = "2019",
abstract = "This article discusses recent findings from the newly identified archaeological site of Svinjaricka Cuka, situated next to the Southern Morava River in southern Serbia. We will present the latest results from the excavation, material studies, bioarchaeological analyses and contextualised radiocarbon data, focusing on the Stare'evo Neolithic horizon within the context of the new NEOTECH project. The interdisciplinary approach aims to shed light on the Neolithisation process of the region along one of the main communication routes between the Aegean and the Danube by the Axios-Vardar-Morava river system. The work so far has uncovered remains of Early to Middle Neolithic features dating around 5600 calBC, with analyses of faunal remains, ceramics and lithics contributing new insights into animal exploitation, raw materials and technological practices during this important time of socio-economic transition.",
publisher = "Verlag Der Oesterreichischen Akad Wissenschaften, Vienna",
journal = "Archaeologia Austriaca",
title = "New Insights into the Later Stage of the Neolithisation Process of the Central Balkans. First Excavations at Svinjaricka Cuka 2018",
pages = "226-175",
number = "103",
doi = "10.1553/archaeologia103s175"
}
Horejs, B., Bulatović, A., Bulatović, J., Brandl, M., Burke, C., Filipović, D.,& Mili', B.. (2019). New Insights into the Later Stage of the Neolithisation Process of the Central Balkans. First Excavations at Svinjaricka Cuka 2018. in Archaeologia Austriaca
Verlag Der Oesterreichischen Akad Wissenschaften, Vienna.(103), 175-226.
https://doi.org/10.1553/archaeologia103s175
Horejs B, Bulatović A, Bulatović J, Brandl M, Burke C, Filipović D, Mili' B. New Insights into the Later Stage of the Neolithisation Process of the Central Balkans. First Excavations at Svinjaricka Cuka 2018. in Archaeologia Austriaca. 2019;(103):175-226.
doi:10.1553/archaeologia103s175 .
Horejs, Barbara, Bulatović, Aleksandar, Bulatović, Jelena, Brandl, Michael, Burke, Clare, Filipović, Dragana, Mili', Bogdana, "New Insights into the Later Stage of the Neolithisation Process of the Central Balkans. First Excavations at Svinjaricka Cuka 2018" in Archaeologia Austriaca, no. 103 (2019):175-226,
https://doi.org/10.1553/archaeologia103s175 . .
3
3
1
4

Plant storage in Neolithic southeast Europe: synthesis of the archaeological and archaeobotanical evidence from Serbia

Filipović, Dragana; Obradović, Đurđa; Tripković, Boban

(Springer, New York, 2018)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Filipović, Dragana
AU  - Obradović, Đurđa
AU  - Tripković, Boban
PY  - 2018
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/293
AB  - This paper presents and evaluates the archaeobotanical and archaeological evidence of plant product storage from Early and Late Neolithic sites in Serbia, southeast Europe. The commonly stated and widely accepted archaeological evidence of storage in the region includes ceramic pots, clay bins and pits. However, as shown in our study, the archaeobotanical evidence does not always support the interpretation of these structures and objects as plant storage containers, as it is often of secondary origin and composed of discarded plant material such as by-products of plant use. On the other hand, the available botanical record points to some other possible ways of storing plant products, such as in perishable containers that do not normally survive archaeologically in this part of the world. Although limited, the combined evidence indicates variability in plant storage practices and solutions within the cultural phenomena associated with the Neolithic Starevo and Vina cultures of the region. For instance, plant storage in large clay pots was noted at some of the sites, and in clay bins at others. Also, different structures and features may have been used for storing crop products, whilst wild plants seem to have been kept in perishable and/or small ceramic containers. A further impression is that finds of the same plant (type) in different containers may reflect different stages in processing.
PB  - Springer, New York
T2  - Vegetation History and Archaeobotany
T1  - Plant storage in Neolithic southeast Europe: synthesis of the archaeological and archaeobotanical evidence from Serbia
EP  - 44
IS  - 1
SP  - 31
VL  - 27
DO  - 10.1007/s00334-017-0638-7
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Filipović, Dragana and Obradović, Đurđa and Tripković, Boban",
year = "2018",
abstract = "This paper presents and evaluates the archaeobotanical and archaeological evidence of plant product storage from Early and Late Neolithic sites in Serbia, southeast Europe. The commonly stated and widely accepted archaeological evidence of storage in the region includes ceramic pots, clay bins and pits. However, as shown in our study, the archaeobotanical evidence does not always support the interpretation of these structures and objects as plant storage containers, as it is often of secondary origin and composed of discarded plant material such as by-products of plant use. On the other hand, the available botanical record points to some other possible ways of storing plant products, such as in perishable containers that do not normally survive archaeologically in this part of the world. Although limited, the combined evidence indicates variability in plant storage practices and solutions within the cultural phenomena associated with the Neolithic Starevo and Vina cultures of the region. For instance, plant storage in large clay pots was noted at some of the sites, and in clay bins at others. Also, different structures and features may have been used for storing crop products, whilst wild plants seem to have been kept in perishable and/or small ceramic containers. A further impression is that finds of the same plant (type) in different containers may reflect different stages in processing.",
publisher = "Springer, New York",
journal = "Vegetation History and Archaeobotany",
title = "Plant storage in Neolithic southeast Europe: synthesis of the archaeological and archaeobotanical evidence from Serbia",
pages = "44-31",
number = "1",
volume = "27",
doi = "10.1007/s00334-017-0638-7"
}
Filipović, D., Obradović, Đ.,& Tripković, B.. (2018). Plant storage in Neolithic southeast Europe: synthesis of the archaeological and archaeobotanical evidence from Serbia. in Vegetation History and Archaeobotany
Springer, New York., 27(1), 31-44.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00334-017-0638-7
Filipović D, Obradović Đ, Tripković B. Plant storage in Neolithic southeast Europe: synthesis of the archaeological and archaeobotanical evidence from Serbia. in Vegetation History and Archaeobotany. 2018;27(1):31-44.
doi:10.1007/s00334-017-0638-7 .
Filipović, Dragana, Obradović, Đurđa, Tripković, Boban, "Plant storage in Neolithic southeast Europe: synthesis of the archaeological and archaeobotanical evidence from Serbia" in Vegetation History and Archaeobotany, 27, no. 1 (2018):31-44,
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00334-017-0638-7 . .
13
6
14

Насеље из гвозденог доба на локалитету Меаниште у Панутовцу код Врања

Bulatović, Aleksandar; Filipović, Dragana; Kapuran, Aleksandar

(Beograd : Arheološki institut, 2016)

TY  - CHAP
AU  - Bulatović, Aleksandar
AU  - Filipović, Dragana
AU  - Kapuran, Aleksandar
PY  - 2016
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/580
AB  - На локалитету Меаниште у Ранутовцу, у зони експропријације истражени су остаци насеља из раног, односно старијег гвозденог доба. Од затворених целина евидентиране су земунице и јаме различитих намена. Живот у насељу одвијао се између XI/X и IV века пре н.е. а није сигурно да ли је у овом периоду постојао хијатус или је насељавање текло континуирано. 
Док су у старијем периоду (рано гвоздено доба) на аутохтону културу утицале и културе са севера и с југа, у млађем периоду (VII–IV век пре н.е.) примећује се интензиван утицај са југа, који је крајем овог периода довео до хеленизације аутохтоне материјалне културе.
PB  - Beograd : Arheološki institut
T2  - Археолошка истраживања на аутопуту Е75 : 2011-2014 / Archaeological investigations along the highway route Е75
T1  - Насеље из гвозденог доба на локалитету Меаниште у Панутовцу код Врања
T1  - The iron age settlement at the site of Meanište in Ranutovac near Vranje
EP  - 114
SP  - 91
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_580
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Bulatović, Aleksandar and Filipović, Dragana and Kapuran, Aleksandar",
year = "2016",
abstract = "На локалитету Меаниште у Ранутовцу, у зони експропријације истражени су остаци насеља из раног, односно старијег гвозденог доба. Од затворених целина евидентиране су земунице и јаме различитих намена. Живот у насељу одвијао се између XI/X и IV века пре н.е. а није сигурно да ли је у овом периоду постојао хијатус или је насељавање текло континуирано. 
Док су у старијем периоду (рано гвоздено доба) на аутохтону културу утицале и културе са севера и с југа, у млађем периоду (VII–IV век пре н.е.) примећује се интензиван утицај са југа, који је крајем овог периода довео до хеленизације аутохтоне материјалне културе.",
publisher = "Beograd : Arheološki institut",
journal = "Археолошка истраживања на аутопуту Е75 : 2011-2014 / Archaeological investigations along the highway route Е75",
booktitle = "Насеље из гвозденог доба на локалитету Меаниште у Панутовцу код Врања, The iron age settlement at the site of Meanište in Ranutovac near Vranje",
pages = "114-91",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_580"
}
Bulatović, A., Filipović, D.,& Kapuran, A.. (2016). Насеље из гвозденог доба на локалитету Меаниште у Панутовцу код Врања. in Археолошка истраживања на аутопуту Е75 : 2011-2014 / Archaeological investigations along the highway route Е75
Beograd : Arheološki institut., 91-114.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_580
Bulatović A, Filipović D, Kapuran A. Насеље из гвозденог доба на локалитету Меаниште у Панутовцу код Врања. in Археолошка истраживања на аутопуту Е75 : 2011-2014 / Archaeological investigations along the highway route Е75. 2016;:91-114.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_580 .
Bulatović, Aleksandar, Filipović, Dragana, Kapuran, Aleksandar, "Насеље из гвозденог доба на локалитету Меаниште у Панутовцу код Врања" in Археолошка истраживања на аутопуту Е75 : 2011-2014 / Archaeological investigations along the highway route Е75 (2016):91-114,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_580 .

Archaeobotany at Neolithic sites in Serbia: a critical overview of the methods and results

Filipović, Dragana; Obradović, Đurđa

(Beograd : Srpsko arheološko društvo, 2013)

TY  - CHAP
AU  - Filipović, Dragana
AU  - Obradović, Đurđa
PY  - 2013
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/525
AB  - This paper summarises archaeobotanical research in Serbia, more specifically, the analysis of plant
remains from Neolithic sites and deposits (c. 6200–4500 cal BC). It offers an overview of the type of material
analysed (macro- and micro-remains) and the relevant literature, and describes the charred seed assemblages in
terms of the recovery method, the archaeological context, and the identified crop and wild taxa. Certain past and
present methodological issues and problems regarding archaeobotanical analysis in Serbia are recognised, and
the ‘usefulness’ of the obtained results for archaeological interpretations and reconstructions discussed.
AB  - U radu je predstavljen istorijat arheobotaničkih istraživanja neolitskih nalazišta (6200–4500 p.n.e.) na
tlu Srbije i pregled metoda prikupljanja biljnih ostataka, a sumirani su i rezultati dosadašnjih analiza – metod
uzimanja uzoraka, arheološki konteksti, identifikovane vrste žitarica i divlje vrste. Na primeru ovih lokaliteta
i raspoloživih arheobotaničkih podataka razmotreni su ključni problemi u vezi sa načinom izdvajanja biljnih
ostataka tokom iskopavanja, odnosno uzimanjem arheobotaničkih uzoraka, kao i sa mogućnošću upotrebe dobijenih
rezultata u interpretaciji arheoloških konteksta i rekonstrukciji aktivnosti u vezi sa eksploatacijom biljnih
resursa.
PB  - Beograd : Srpsko arheološko društvo
PB  - Sremska Mitrovica : Blago Sirmijuma
T2  - Bioarheologija na Balkanu: Bilans i perspektive = Bioarchaeology in the Balkans: Balance and Perspectives
T1  - Archaeobotany at Neolithic sites in Serbia: a critical overview of the methods and results
EP  - 55
SP  - 25
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_525
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Filipović, Dragana and Obradović, Đurđa",
year = "2013",
abstract = "This paper summarises archaeobotanical research in Serbia, more specifically, the analysis of plant
remains from Neolithic sites and deposits (c. 6200–4500 cal BC). It offers an overview of the type of material
analysed (macro- and micro-remains) and the relevant literature, and describes the charred seed assemblages in
terms of the recovery method, the archaeological context, and the identified crop and wild taxa. Certain past and
present methodological issues and problems regarding archaeobotanical analysis in Serbia are recognised, and
the ‘usefulness’ of the obtained results for archaeological interpretations and reconstructions discussed., U radu je predstavljen istorijat arheobotaničkih istraživanja neolitskih nalazišta (6200–4500 p.n.e.) na
tlu Srbije i pregled metoda prikupljanja biljnih ostataka, a sumirani su i rezultati dosadašnjih analiza – metod
uzimanja uzoraka, arheološki konteksti, identifikovane vrste žitarica i divlje vrste. Na primeru ovih lokaliteta
i raspoloživih arheobotaničkih podataka razmotreni su ključni problemi u vezi sa načinom izdvajanja biljnih
ostataka tokom iskopavanja, odnosno uzimanjem arheobotaničkih uzoraka, kao i sa mogućnošću upotrebe dobijenih
rezultata u interpretaciji arheoloških konteksta i rekonstrukciji aktivnosti u vezi sa eksploatacijom biljnih
resursa.",
publisher = "Beograd : Srpsko arheološko društvo, Sremska Mitrovica : Blago Sirmijuma",
journal = "Bioarheologija na Balkanu: Bilans i perspektive = Bioarchaeology in the Balkans: Balance and Perspectives",
booktitle = "Archaeobotany at Neolithic sites in Serbia: a critical overview of the methods and results",
pages = "55-25",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_525"
}
Filipović, D.,& Obradović, Đ.. (2013). Archaeobotany at Neolithic sites in Serbia: a critical overview of the methods and results. in Bioarheologija na Balkanu: Bilans i perspektive = Bioarchaeology in the Balkans: Balance and Perspectives
Beograd : Srpsko arheološko društvo., 25-55.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_525
Filipović D, Obradović Đ. Archaeobotany at Neolithic sites in Serbia: a critical overview of the methods and results. in Bioarheologija na Balkanu: Bilans i perspektive = Bioarchaeology in the Balkans: Balance and Perspectives. 2013;:25-55.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_525 .
Filipović, Dragana, Obradović, Đurđa, "Archaeobotany at Neolithic sites in Serbia: a critical overview of the methods and results" in Bioarheologija na Balkanu: Bilans i perspektive = Bioarchaeology in the Balkans: Balance and Perspectives (2013):25-55,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_525 .

Wild Plant Resources and Land Use in Mesolithic and Early Neolithic South-­East Europe. Archaeobotanical Evidence from the Danube Catchment of Bulgaria and Serbia

Marinova, Elena; Filipović, Dragana; Obradović, Đurđa; Allué, Ethel

(2013)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Marinova, Elena
AU  - Filipović, Dragana
AU  - Obradović, Đurđa
AU  - Allué, Ethel
PY  - 2013
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/602
AB  - Das archäobotanische Material (Samen/Früchte und Holzkohle) von einem mesolithischen und
mehreren frühneolithischen Fundplätzen in Südosteuropa im Einzugsbereich der mittleren Donau
wird vorgestellt und mit dem aus der Region vorliegenden archäobotanischen und paläo­ökologischen
Material verglichen. Die Taxa der Makroreste werden als Hinweis auf Landnutzung und Verwertung
476
von Wildplanzen sowie als indirekter Beleg der um
die Fundplätze vorherrschenden Vegetation gewertet.
Die Ma kroreste umfassen hauptsächlich sich gut erhaltende planzenteile – zum Beispiel Obstkerne und
Nussschalen – und zeigen an, dass als häuigste Arten
Kornelkirsche (Cornus mas), Hasel (Corylus avellana)
und Holunder (Sambucus sp.) gesammelt wurden.
Die Holzkohlenfunde lassen vermuten, dass die
mesolithische und frühneolithische Bevölkerung offenen Wald und Waldsteppe nutzte sowie Eichenwälder und die Ufervegetation von Gewässern. Die
Zusammensetzung der Proben von verschiedenen
Plätzen deutet auf eine allgemeine Kontinuität in
der Nutzung gleichartiger Wildplanzen und Landschaten im Arbeitsgebiet während der untersuchten
Zeitspanne hin (7500–5500 cal BC).
T2  - Offa. Berichte und Mitteilungen zur Urgeschichte, Frühgeschichte und Mittelalterarchäologie
T1  - Wild Plant Resources and Land Use in Mesolithic and Early Neolithic South-­East Europe. Archaeobotanical Evidence from the Danube Catchment of Bulgaria and Serbia
EP  - 478
SP  - 467
VL  - 69/70
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_602
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Marinova, Elena and Filipović, Dragana and Obradović, Đurđa and Allué, Ethel",
year = "2013",
abstract = "Das archäobotanische Material (Samen/Früchte und Holzkohle) von einem mesolithischen und
mehreren frühneolithischen Fundplätzen in Südosteuropa im Einzugsbereich der mittleren Donau
wird vorgestellt und mit dem aus der Region vorliegenden archäobotanischen und paläo­ökologischen
Material verglichen. Die Taxa der Makroreste werden als Hinweis auf Landnutzung und Verwertung
476
von Wildplanzen sowie als indirekter Beleg der um
die Fundplätze vorherrschenden Vegetation gewertet.
Die Ma kroreste umfassen hauptsächlich sich gut erhaltende planzenteile – zum Beispiel Obstkerne und
Nussschalen – und zeigen an, dass als häuigste Arten
Kornelkirsche (Cornus mas), Hasel (Corylus avellana)
und Holunder (Sambucus sp.) gesammelt wurden.
Die Holzkohlenfunde lassen vermuten, dass die
mesolithische und frühneolithische Bevölkerung offenen Wald und Waldsteppe nutzte sowie Eichenwälder und die Ufervegetation von Gewässern. Die
Zusammensetzung der Proben von verschiedenen
Plätzen deutet auf eine allgemeine Kontinuität in
der Nutzung gleichartiger Wildplanzen und Landschaten im Arbeitsgebiet während der untersuchten
Zeitspanne hin (7500–5500 cal BC).",
journal = "Offa. Berichte und Mitteilungen zur Urgeschichte, Frühgeschichte und Mittelalterarchäologie",
title = "Wild Plant Resources and Land Use in Mesolithic and Early Neolithic South-­East Europe. Archaeobotanical Evidence from the Danube Catchment of Bulgaria and Serbia",
pages = "478-467",
volume = "69/70",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_602"
}
Marinova, E., Filipović, D., Obradović, Đ.,& Allué, E.. (2013). Wild Plant Resources and Land Use in Mesolithic and Early Neolithic South-­East Europe. Archaeobotanical Evidence from the Danube Catchment of Bulgaria and Serbia. in Offa. Berichte und Mitteilungen zur Urgeschichte, Frühgeschichte und Mittelalterarchäologie, 69/70, 467-478.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_602
Marinova E, Filipović D, Obradović Đ, Allué E. Wild Plant Resources and Land Use in Mesolithic and Early Neolithic South-­East Europe. Archaeobotanical Evidence from the Danube Catchment of Bulgaria and Serbia. in Offa. Berichte und Mitteilungen zur Urgeschichte, Frühgeschichte und Mittelalterarchäologie. 2013;69/70:467-478.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_602 .
Marinova, Elena, Filipović, Dragana, Obradović, Đurđa, Allué, Ethel, "Wild Plant Resources and Land Use in Mesolithic and Early Neolithic South-­East Europe. Archaeobotanical Evidence from the Danube Catchment of Bulgaria and Serbia" in Offa. Berichte und Mitteilungen zur Urgeschichte, Frühgeschichte und Mittelalterarchäologie, 69/70 (2013):467-478,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_602 .