Marić, Miroslav

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869000fa-1227-425b-b78b-9ff002916f7b
  • Marić, Miroslav (7)
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Author's Bibliography

A medieval burial from the site of Supska: an anthropological and contextual analysis of the skeletal remains from grave 1

Jovanović, Jelena; Bogosavljević-Petrović, Vera; Bulatović, Jelena; Marković, Nemanja; Marić, Miroslav

(Београд : Народни музеј Србије, 2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Jovanović, Jelena
AU  - Bogosavljević-Petrović, Vera
AU  - Bulatović, Jelena
AU  - Marković, Nemanja
AU  - Marić, Miroslav
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1189
AB  - In 1956, the Institute of Archaeology and the National Museum in Belgrade
carried out excavations at the site of Supska, near Ćuprija, in Central Serbia. Based on
the material culture findings, the site is mostly known as a Late Neolithic one; however,
archaeological findings from other periods were discovered too. In the 1956 excavations,
the cultural layers, and archaeological features with the Vinča culture archaeological
materials were examined, as well as one grave, marked as Grave 1. The results of
this excavation have been previously published in one monograph; however, an anthropological
analysis of the individual found in Grave 1 has not been conducted before.
In this paper, we present the results of contextual, bioanthropological, stable isotopes
and C14 analyses of human skeletal remains found in Grave 1. The results showed that
a young adult, who had experienced nonspecific metabolic stress during childhood,
as evidenced by traces of linear enamel hypoplasia and porotic hyperostosis, was buried
in this grave. AMS date revealed that this individual lived between 1280–1390 cal.AD, while the results of the stable isotope analyses suggested that it had mixed diet
based on C4 plants (such as millet) and/or C3
plants, with larger amounts of animal
protein, possible deriving from freshwater fish.
PB  - Београд : Народни музеј Србије
T2  - Зборник Народног музеја. Археологија
T1  - A medieval burial from the site of Supska: an anthropological and contextual analysis of the skeletal remains from grave 1
EP  - 485
IS  - 1
SP  - 461
VL  - 26
DO  - https://doi.org/10.18485/znms_arh.2023.26.1.20
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Jovanović, Jelena and Bogosavljević-Petrović, Vera and Bulatović, Jelena and Marković, Nemanja and Marić, Miroslav",
year = "2023",
abstract = "In 1956, the Institute of Archaeology and the National Museum in Belgrade
carried out excavations at the site of Supska, near Ćuprija, in Central Serbia. Based on
the material culture findings, the site is mostly known as a Late Neolithic one; however,
archaeological findings from other periods were discovered too. In the 1956 excavations,
the cultural layers, and archaeological features with the Vinča culture archaeological
materials were examined, as well as one grave, marked as Grave 1. The results of
this excavation have been previously published in one monograph; however, an anthropological
analysis of the individual found in Grave 1 has not been conducted before.
In this paper, we present the results of contextual, bioanthropological, stable isotopes
and C14 analyses of human skeletal remains found in Grave 1. The results showed that
a young adult, who had experienced nonspecific metabolic stress during childhood,
as evidenced by traces of linear enamel hypoplasia and porotic hyperostosis, was buried
in this grave. AMS date revealed that this individual lived between 1280–1390 cal.AD, while the results of the stable isotope analyses suggested that it had mixed diet
based on C4 plants (such as millet) and/or C3
plants, with larger amounts of animal
protein, possible deriving from freshwater fish.",
publisher = "Београд : Народни музеј Србије",
journal = "Зборник Народног музеја. Археологија",
title = "A medieval burial from the site of Supska: an anthropological and contextual analysis of the skeletal remains from grave 1",
pages = "485-461",
number = "1",
volume = "26",
doi = "https://doi.org/10.18485/znms_arh.2023.26.1.20"
}
Jovanović, J., Bogosavljević-Petrović, V., Bulatović, J., Marković, N.,& Marić, M.. (2023). A medieval burial from the site of Supska: an anthropological and contextual analysis of the skeletal remains from grave 1. in Зборник Народног музеја. Археологија
Београд : Народни музеј Србије., 26(1), 461-485.
https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.18485/znms_arh.2023.26.1.20
Jovanović J, Bogosavljević-Petrović V, Bulatović J, Marković N, Marić M. A medieval burial from the site of Supska: an anthropological and contextual analysis of the skeletal remains from grave 1. in Зборник Народног музеја. Археологија. 2023;26(1):461-485.
doi:https://doi.org/10.18485/znms_arh.2023.26.1.20 .
Jovanović, Jelena, Bogosavljević-Petrović, Vera, Bulatović, Jelena, Marković, Nemanja, Marić, Miroslav, "A medieval burial from the site of Supska: an anthropological and contextual analysis of the skeletal remains from grave 1" in Зборник Народног музеја. Археологија, 26, no. 1 (2023):461-485,
https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.18485/znms_arh.2023.26.1.20 . .

Chronology, economy, and technology of the Late Neolithic site of Jablanica (central Serbia)

Vitezović, Selena; Marković, Nemanja; Bulatović, Jelena; Katić, Velibor; Marić, Miroslav

(Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 2023)

TY  - CHAP
AU  - Vitezović, Selena
AU  - Marković, Nemanja
AU  - Bulatović, Jelena
AU  - Katić, Velibor
AU  - Marić, Miroslav
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/592
AB  - Various socio-economic changes, including the introduction of metallurgy, mark
the long duration of the Vinča culture. For detailed studies of the transformations of the Vinča
societies, analyses of subsistence and economy must also be placed on the chronological
line. The small-sized excavations carried out in 2018 at the Late Neolithic site of Jablanica
(c. 5000–4700 BC) in central Serbia provided a faunal assemblage that enabled analyses of
animal exploitation patterns, bone technology and also provided the samples for radiocarbon
dating. The faunal remains show the predominance of domestic species, especially cattle.
The site also yielded approximately 90 artefacts produced from bone and antler, including
finished objects, preforms and manufacturing debris. Predominant raw materials were bones,
mainly long bones, metapodials and ribs, followed by red deer antlers. Also, one artefact from
Spondylus shell was found. Awls were the most frequent techno-type, and the typological
repertoire also included other pointed tools, scrapers and other tools. Several preforms (mainly
awls) and manufacture debris provided evidence of a working area or workshop within the
settlement. Absolute dates showed that the beginning of the Late Neolithic occupation at the
site of Jablanica could be equated with the relative depths of 4.5 meters at the type site of
Vinča – Belo Brdo, or the late Vinča Pločnik I (Vinča C) period, while the radiocarbon dates
associated with the end of the Late Neolithic occupation of the site can be correlated to layers
between 4.0 and 3.5 meters at the type site of Vinča, i.e., the Vinča Pločnik IIa.
PB  - Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts
T2  - Relatively Absolute. Absolute and Relative Chronologies of the Neolithic Period in Southeast Europe
T1  - Chronology, economy, and technology of the Late Neolithic site of Jablanica (central Serbia)
EP  - 95
SP  - 81
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_592
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Vitezović, Selena and Marković, Nemanja and Bulatović, Jelena and Katić, Velibor and Marić, Miroslav",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Various socio-economic changes, including the introduction of metallurgy, mark
the long duration of the Vinča culture. For detailed studies of the transformations of the Vinča
societies, analyses of subsistence and economy must also be placed on the chronological
line. The small-sized excavations carried out in 2018 at the Late Neolithic site of Jablanica
(c. 5000–4700 BC) in central Serbia provided a faunal assemblage that enabled analyses of
animal exploitation patterns, bone technology and also provided the samples for radiocarbon
dating. The faunal remains show the predominance of domestic species, especially cattle.
The site also yielded approximately 90 artefacts produced from bone and antler, including
finished objects, preforms and manufacturing debris. Predominant raw materials were bones,
mainly long bones, metapodials and ribs, followed by red deer antlers. Also, one artefact from
Spondylus shell was found. Awls were the most frequent techno-type, and the typological
repertoire also included other pointed tools, scrapers and other tools. Several preforms (mainly
awls) and manufacture debris provided evidence of a working area or workshop within the
settlement. Absolute dates showed that the beginning of the Late Neolithic occupation at the
site of Jablanica could be equated with the relative depths of 4.5 meters at the type site of
Vinča – Belo Brdo, or the late Vinča Pločnik I (Vinča C) period, while the radiocarbon dates
associated with the end of the Late Neolithic occupation of the site can be correlated to layers
between 4.0 and 3.5 meters at the type site of Vinča, i.e., the Vinča Pločnik IIa.",
publisher = "Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts",
journal = "Relatively Absolute. Absolute and Relative Chronologies of the Neolithic Period in Southeast Europe",
booktitle = "Chronology, economy, and technology of the Late Neolithic site of Jablanica (central Serbia)",
pages = "95-81",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_592"
}
Vitezović, S., Marković, N., Bulatović, J., Katić, V.,& Marić, M.. (2023). Chronology, economy, and technology of the Late Neolithic site of Jablanica (central Serbia). in Relatively Absolute. Absolute and Relative Chronologies of the Neolithic Period in Southeast Europe
Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts., 81-95.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_592
Vitezović S, Marković N, Bulatović J, Katić V, Marić M. Chronology, economy, and technology of the Late Neolithic site of Jablanica (central Serbia). in Relatively Absolute. Absolute and Relative Chronologies of the Neolithic Period in Southeast Europe. 2023;:81-95.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_592 .
Vitezović, Selena, Marković, Nemanja, Bulatović, Jelena, Katić, Velibor, Marić, Miroslav, "Chronology, economy, and technology of the Late Neolithic site of Jablanica (central Serbia)" in Relatively Absolute. Absolute and Relative Chronologies of the Neolithic Period in Southeast Europe (2023):81-95,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_592 .

Late Neolithic chronology in the contact zone between the south edge of the Carpathian Mountains and the Pannonian plain. The case study of Vršac region

Marić, Miroslav; Bulatović, Jelena; Marković, Nemanja; Pantović, Ivana

(Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 2023)

TY  - CHAP
AU  - Marić, Miroslav
AU  - Bulatović, Jelena
AU  - Marković, Nemanja
AU  - Pantović, Ivana
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/591
AB  - The Late Neolithic period in Southeast Serbian Banat is marked by a host of Vinča
culture sites located between the Danube and the Vršac mountains, the south end of the
Carpathian mountain range in this area. It is a predominantly flat landscape enclosed by
extensive former marshes of Mali and Veliki Rit in the northwest, Vršac mountains in the
northeast, and Deliblato sands and River Nera in the southwest and the southeast. Over
40 late Neolithic sites are known throughout the area, most from surveys, but some also
excavated. Between 2020 and 2022, as part of the Regional Absolute Chronologies of the
Late Neolithic in Serbia project, funded by the Science Fund of the Republic of Serbia, At and
Potporanj sites were radiocarbon dated to produce detailed, Bayesian statistical model-based
chronologies that could be used as a local chronological reference for future researchers
of the Late Neolithic in the region. In this chapter, we present unified chronological data
attributable to the beginning and ending phases of the Neolithic in this region.
PB  - Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts
T2  - Relatively Absolute. Absolute and Relative Chronologies of the Neolithic Period in Southeast Europe
T1  - Late Neolithic chronology in the contact zone between the south edge of the Carpathian Mountains and the Pannonian plain. The case study of Vršac region
EP  - 118
SP  - 97
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_591
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Marić, Miroslav and Bulatović, Jelena and Marković, Nemanja and Pantović, Ivana",
year = "2023",
abstract = "The Late Neolithic period in Southeast Serbian Banat is marked by a host of Vinča
culture sites located between the Danube and the Vršac mountains, the south end of the
Carpathian mountain range in this area. It is a predominantly flat landscape enclosed by
extensive former marshes of Mali and Veliki Rit in the northwest, Vršac mountains in the
northeast, and Deliblato sands and River Nera in the southwest and the southeast. Over
40 late Neolithic sites are known throughout the area, most from surveys, but some also
excavated. Between 2020 and 2022, as part of the Regional Absolute Chronologies of the
Late Neolithic in Serbia project, funded by the Science Fund of the Republic of Serbia, At and
Potporanj sites were radiocarbon dated to produce detailed, Bayesian statistical model-based
chronologies that could be used as a local chronological reference for future researchers
of the Late Neolithic in the region. In this chapter, we present unified chronological data
attributable to the beginning and ending phases of the Neolithic in this region.",
publisher = "Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts",
journal = "Relatively Absolute. Absolute and Relative Chronologies of the Neolithic Period in Southeast Europe",
booktitle = "Late Neolithic chronology in the contact zone between the south edge of the Carpathian Mountains and the Pannonian plain. The case study of Vršac region",
pages = "118-97",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_591"
}
Marić, M., Bulatović, J., Marković, N.,& Pantović, I.. (2023). Late Neolithic chronology in the contact zone between the south edge of the Carpathian Mountains and the Pannonian plain. The case study of Vršac region. in Relatively Absolute. Absolute and Relative Chronologies of the Neolithic Period in Southeast Europe
Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts., 97-118.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_591
Marić M, Bulatović J, Marković N, Pantović I. Late Neolithic chronology in the contact zone between the south edge of the Carpathian Mountains and the Pannonian plain. The case study of Vršac region. in Relatively Absolute. Absolute and Relative Chronologies of the Neolithic Period in Southeast Europe. 2023;:97-118.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_591 .
Marić, Miroslav, Bulatović, Jelena, Marković, Nemanja, Pantović, Ivana, "Late Neolithic chronology in the contact zone between the south edge of the Carpathian Mountains and the Pannonian plain. The case study of Vršac region" in Relatively Absolute. Absolute and Relative Chronologies of the Neolithic Period in Southeast Europe (2023):97-118,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_591 .

Regional Absolute Chronologies of the Late Neolithic in Serbia. The case study of At near Vršac

Marić, Miroslav; Marković, Nemanja; Bulatović, Jelena; Pantović, Ivana

(Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences of the University of Zagreb, Zagreb, 2022)

TY  - CHAP
AU  - Marić, Miroslav
AU  - Marković, Nemanja
AU  - Bulatović, Jelena
AU  - Pantović, Ivana
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1376
AB  - The paper presents the concept, methodology and preliminary results of the project Regional Absolute Chronologies of
the Late Neolithic in Serbia that started in 2020 using a case study from the site of At near Vršac in northeast Serbia. The
aim of the project is to create multiple new regional chronological strands consisting of Bayesian modelled radiocarbon
dates from sites with material culture belonging to the tradition of the Late Neolithic period Vinča culture. Combining
statistical seriation of pottery assemblages and the Bayesian statistical modelling framework of several case studies from
various regions of Serbia, new regional chronological anchor points will be created, thus avoiding constant comparison
with the assemblage and dating of the eponymous site of Belo Brdo in Vinča. This approach will overcome the effects of
the regionalization of material culture evident in most ceramic assemblages located further than 100 kilometres away
from the type site. Using archival archaeological records from previous excavations will enable an establishment of a
geography of chronological reference points which would then provide new insights into the dynamics of the evolution of
the Late Neolithic Vinča societies and changes that occurred throughout its territory during the late sixth and the larger
part of the fifth millennia BCE.
PB  - Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences of the University of Zagreb, Zagreb
T2  - Proceedings from the 8th and 9th Scientific Conference Methodology and Archaeometry
T1  - Regional Absolute Chronologies of the Late Neolithic in Serbia. The case study of At near Vršac
EP  - 91
SP  - 75
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1376
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Marić, Miroslav and Marković, Nemanja and Bulatović, Jelena and Pantović, Ivana",
year = "2022",
abstract = "The paper presents the concept, methodology and preliminary results of the project Regional Absolute Chronologies of
the Late Neolithic in Serbia that started in 2020 using a case study from the site of At near Vršac in northeast Serbia. The
aim of the project is to create multiple new regional chronological strands consisting of Bayesian modelled radiocarbon
dates from sites with material culture belonging to the tradition of the Late Neolithic period Vinča culture. Combining
statistical seriation of pottery assemblages and the Bayesian statistical modelling framework of several case studies from
various regions of Serbia, new regional chronological anchor points will be created, thus avoiding constant comparison
with the assemblage and dating of the eponymous site of Belo Brdo in Vinča. This approach will overcome the effects of
the regionalization of material culture evident in most ceramic assemblages located further than 100 kilometres away
from the type site. Using archival archaeological records from previous excavations will enable an establishment of a
geography of chronological reference points which would then provide new insights into the dynamics of the evolution of
the Late Neolithic Vinča societies and changes that occurred throughout its territory during the late sixth and the larger
part of the fifth millennia BCE.",
publisher = "Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences of the University of Zagreb, Zagreb",
journal = "Proceedings from the 8th and 9th Scientific Conference Methodology and Archaeometry",
booktitle = "Regional Absolute Chronologies of the Late Neolithic in Serbia. The case study of At near Vršac",
pages = "91-75",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1376"
}
Marić, M., Marković, N., Bulatović, J.,& Pantović, I.. (2022). Regional Absolute Chronologies of the Late Neolithic in Serbia. The case study of At near Vršac. in Proceedings from the 8th and 9th Scientific Conference Methodology and Archaeometry
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences of the University of Zagreb, Zagreb., 75-91.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1376
Marić M, Marković N, Bulatović J, Pantović I. Regional Absolute Chronologies of the Late Neolithic in Serbia. The case study of At near Vršac. in Proceedings from the 8th and 9th Scientific Conference Methodology and Archaeometry. 2022;:75-91.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1376 .
Marić, Miroslav, Marković, Nemanja, Bulatović, Jelena, Pantović, Ivana, "Regional Absolute Chronologies of the Late Neolithic in Serbia. The case study of At near Vršac" in Proceedings from the 8th and 9th Scientific Conference Methodology and Archaeometry (2022):75-91,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1376 .

Severe traumatic lesions in the Late Neolithic cattle from the site of At-Vršac

Marković, Nemanja; Bulatović, Jelena; Krstić, Nikola; Marinković, Darko; Pantović, Ivana; Russell, Nerissa; Rothschild, Bruce; Marić, Miroslav

(John Wiley & Sons, Njujork, SAD, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Marković, Nemanja
AU  - Bulatović, Jelena
AU  - Krstić, Nikola
AU  - Marinković, Darko
AU  - Pantović, Ivana
AU  - Russell, Nerissa
AU  - Rothschild, Bruce
AU  - Marić, Miroslav
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1322
AB  - This paper aims to assess the etiology and differential diagnosis of severe pathological
lesions in wild and domestic cattle from the Late Neolithic site of At-Vršac in the
northeast part of the present-day Serbia. Excavations of this multilayered site
revealed the remains of a Late Neolithic settlement belonging to the Vinča culture
network of the Central Balkans. An aurochs metacarpal bone, two domestic cattle
fragments of fused ulna and radius and of tibia, all with massive bone proliferations
were recovered during the archaeological excavations in 1976. Paleopathological
study was undertaken using an interdisciplinary approach, including AMS dating, radiography,
computed tomography (CT), and histopathology. The results show severe
oblique healed fracture with secondary pronounced bone reaction in the aurochs
metacarpal bone and in the domestic cattle ulna–radius, while traumatic alteration
infected with disseminated osteomyelitis was found in the domestic cattle tibia.
These pathologies of wild and domestic cattle are discussed to reveal the level of
environmental and human influence on the origin and development of the lesions in
the Late Neolithic cattle.
PB  - John Wiley & Sons, Njujork, SAD
T2  - International Journal of Osteoarchaeology
T1  - Severe traumatic lesions in the Late Neolithic cattle from the site of At-Vršac
IS  - 32 (6)
DO  - https://doi.org/10.1002/oa.3147
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Marković, Nemanja and Bulatović, Jelena and Krstić, Nikola and Marinković, Darko and Pantović, Ivana and Russell, Nerissa and Rothschild, Bruce and Marić, Miroslav",
year = "2022",
abstract = "This paper aims to assess the etiology and differential diagnosis of severe pathological
lesions in wild and domestic cattle from the Late Neolithic site of At-Vršac in the
northeast part of the present-day Serbia. Excavations of this multilayered site
revealed the remains of a Late Neolithic settlement belonging to the Vinča culture
network of the Central Balkans. An aurochs metacarpal bone, two domestic cattle
fragments of fused ulna and radius and of tibia, all with massive bone proliferations
were recovered during the archaeological excavations in 1976. Paleopathological
study was undertaken using an interdisciplinary approach, including AMS dating, radiography,
computed tomography (CT), and histopathology. The results show severe
oblique healed fracture with secondary pronounced bone reaction in the aurochs
metacarpal bone and in the domestic cattle ulna–radius, while traumatic alteration
infected with disseminated osteomyelitis was found in the domestic cattle tibia.
These pathologies of wild and domestic cattle are discussed to reveal the level of
environmental and human influence on the origin and development of the lesions in
the Late Neolithic cattle.",
publisher = "John Wiley & Sons, Njujork, SAD",
journal = "International Journal of Osteoarchaeology",
title = "Severe traumatic lesions in the Late Neolithic cattle from the site of At-Vršac",
number = "32 (6)",
doi = "https://doi.org/10.1002/oa.3147"
}
Marković, N., Bulatović, J., Krstić, N., Marinković, D., Pantović, I., Russell, N., Rothschild, B.,& Marić, M.. (2022). Severe traumatic lesions in the Late Neolithic cattle from the site of At-Vršac. in International Journal of Osteoarchaeology
John Wiley & Sons, Njujork, SAD.(32 (6)).
https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1002/oa.3147
Marković N, Bulatović J, Krstić N, Marinković D, Pantović I, Russell N, Rothschild B, Marić M. Severe traumatic lesions in the Late Neolithic cattle from the site of At-Vršac. in International Journal of Osteoarchaeology. 2022;(32 (6)).
doi:https://doi.org/10.1002/oa.3147 .
Marković, Nemanja, Bulatović, Jelena, Krstić, Nikola, Marinković, Darko, Pantović, Ivana, Russell, Nerissa, Rothschild, Bruce, Marić, Miroslav, "Severe traumatic lesions in the Late Neolithic cattle from the site of At-Vršac" in International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, no. 32 (6) (2022),
https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1002/oa.3147 . .

Zooarchaeology Beyond Food: Osteobiographies of Early Medieval Dog and Pig Skeletons at the Divičmeđ Site (Serbia)

Marković, Nemanja; Bulatović, Jelena; Katić, Velibor; Marić, Miroslav

(University of Toronto, Toronto (Canada), 2021)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Marković, Nemanja
AU  - Bulatović, Jelena
AU  - Katić, Velibor
AU  - Marić, Miroslav
PY  - 2021
UR  - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1374
AB  - Zooarchaeological studies of the early medieval contexts are very scarce in present-day Serbia. Only a few studies dealing with the role of animals in funerary rites or the animal economy of settlements are currently available. For the first time, a detailed analysis of two complete animal skeletons from one early medieval settlement in the country will be presented in this paper. Excavations at the multilayered archaeological site of Divičmeđ in central Serbia have revealed the remains of a fortified early medieval settlement dated to the tenth–eleventh centuries. The excavations inside the settlement ramparts, among other features, revealed an oven most likely used for pottery production. A completely preserved dog skeleton was discovered at the bottom, while a pig skeleton was found in the oven’s upper layers. These skeletons indicate secondary use of the oven and prompt further questions about possible cultural impact and depositional scenarios, and they also shed light on the everyday life management within the settlement. In this paper, an interdisciplinary approach will be applied to dog and pig skeletons, which will further give us a rare opportunity to reconstruct their osteobiographies. Radiocarbon dating of the skeletons will provide us with the absolute chronology necessary for a better understanding and reconstruction of deposition processes. This study will also help us to address research questions about broader contexts of human–animal interactions in the country during the early medieval period.
PB  - University of Toronto, Toronto (Canada)
T2  - 2nd Faunal Interest Group Symposium: Zooarchaeology Beyond Food, University of Toronto, March 19th and 20th, 2021, Toronto (Canada)
T1  - Zooarchaeology Beyond Food: Osteobiographies of Early Medieval Dog and Pig Skeletons at the Divičmeđ Site (Serbia)
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1374
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Marković, Nemanja and Bulatović, Jelena and Katić, Velibor and Marić, Miroslav",
year = "2021",
abstract = "Zooarchaeological studies of the early medieval contexts are very scarce in present-day Serbia. Only a few studies dealing with the role of animals in funerary rites or the animal economy of settlements are currently available. For the first time, a detailed analysis of two complete animal skeletons from one early medieval settlement in the country will be presented in this paper. Excavations at the multilayered archaeological site of Divičmeđ in central Serbia have revealed the remains of a fortified early medieval settlement dated to the tenth–eleventh centuries. The excavations inside the settlement ramparts, among other features, revealed an oven most likely used for pottery production. A completely preserved dog skeleton was discovered at the bottom, while a pig skeleton was found in the oven’s upper layers. These skeletons indicate secondary use of the oven and prompt further questions about possible cultural impact and depositional scenarios, and they also shed light on the everyday life management within the settlement. In this paper, an interdisciplinary approach will be applied to dog and pig skeletons, which will further give us a rare opportunity to reconstruct their osteobiographies. Radiocarbon dating of the skeletons will provide us with the absolute chronology necessary for a better understanding and reconstruction of deposition processes. This study will also help us to address research questions about broader contexts of human–animal interactions in the country during the early medieval period.",
publisher = "University of Toronto, Toronto (Canada)",
journal = "2nd Faunal Interest Group Symposium: Zooarchaeology Beyond Food, University of Toronto, March 19th and 20th, 2021, Toronto (Canada)",
title = "Zooarchaeology Beyond Food: Osteobiographies of Early Medieval Dog and Pig Skeletons at the Divičmeđ Site (Serbia)",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1374"
}
Marković, N., Bulatović, J., Katić, V.,& Marić, M.. (2021). Zooarchaeology Beyond Food: Osteobiographies of Early Medieval Dog and Pig Skeletons at the Divičmeđ Site (Serbia). in 2nd Faunal Interest Group Symposium: Zooarchaeology Beyond Food, University of Toronto, March 19th and 20th, 2021, Toronto (Canada)
University of Toronto, Toronto (Canada)..
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1374
Marković N, Bulatović J, Katić V, Marić M. Zooarchaeology Beyond Food: Osteobiographies of Early Medieval Dog and Pig Skeletons at the Divičmeđ Site (Serbia). in 2nd Faunal Interest Group Symposium: Zooarchaeology Beyond Food, University of Toronto, March 19th and 20th, 2021, Toronto (Canada). 2021;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1374 .
Marković, Nemanja, Bulatović, Jelena, Katić, Velibor, Marić, Miroslav, "Zooarchaeology Beyond Food: Osteobiographies of Early Medieval Dog and Pig Skeletons at the Divičmeđ Site (Serbia)" in 2nd Faunal Interest Group Symposium: Zooarchaeology Beyond Food, University of Toronto, March 19th and 20th, 2021, Toronto (Canada) (2021),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1374 .

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 .