The Neolithic Settlement at Drenovac, Serbia: Settlement History and Spatial Organisation
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2020
Authors
Perić, Slaviša
Bajčev, Olga

Stojanović, Ivana
Obradović, Đurđa

Contributors
Tasić, NenadUrem-Kotsou, Dushka
Burić, Marcel
Book part (Published version)

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Show full item recordAbstract
The Neolithic settlement at Drenovac, in the region of the Middle Morava Valley in
central Serbia, is notable for its size and long-term occupation. It is a deeply stratified site, with
cultural deposits of up to 6.50 m in depth, and spans two main periods of occupation, separated
by a hiatus of ca. 700 years: the Early Neolithic Starčevo culture (6100–5900 BC) and the Late
Neolithic Vinča culture (5300/5200–4700/4500 BC). In this paper we will discuss the complex
stratigraphy and dynamics of the formation processes, settlement history and the use of living
space in Drenovac. These first insights are based on recent excavations, geomagnetic survey and
reconnaissance. Extensive research into the latest building horizon at Drenovac, dating to the Late
Neolithic (Vinča-Pločnik phase), provided the most valuable data on settlement size and spatial
organisation.
Keywords:
Neolithic / Drenovac / settlement history / settlement organisationSource:
Making Spaces into Places, The North Aegean, the Balkans and Western Anatolia in the Neolithic, 2020, 181-189Publisher:
- Oxford : BAR Publishing