Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-qxdb6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T21:37:56.059Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The social context of the emergence, development and abandonment of the Varna cemetery, Bulgaria

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2017

John Chapman
Affiliation:
Durham University, UK
Tom Higham
Affiliation:
University of Oxford, UK
Vladimir Slavchev
Affiliation:
Varna Archaeological Museum, Bulgaria
Bisserka Gaydarska
Affiliation:
Durham University, UK
Noah Honch
Affiliation:
University of Oxford, UK

Abstract

In this article we outline some of the key characteristics of the social structure of the Climax Copper Age in the eastern Balkans and the contributions of the Varna cemetery to those developments. We continue by examining the implications of the new series of 21 AMS dates from the Oxford Radiocarbon Laboratory, which represent the first dates for the Varna Eneolithic cemetery on the Bulgarian Black Sea coast. Representing the first phase of the AMS dating project for the Varna I cemetery, these dates have been selected to provide a range of different grave locations, ranges of grave goods, and age/gender associations. We conclude by addressing the question of the unexpectedly early start of the cemetery, as well as its apparently short duration and relatively rapid demise.

Dans cet article sont décrits quelques-uns des aspects les plus caractéristiques de la structure sociale durant l'apogée de l'âge du Bronze des Balkans orientaux, ainsi que le rôle qu'a joué le cimetière de Varna dans ces développements. Les implications des nouvelles séries de dates AMS 14 du Oxford Radiocarbon Laboratory, qui constituent les premières datations du cimetière énéolithique de Varna sur la côte bulgare de la Mer Noire, sont analysées par la suite. Ces dates représentant la première phase du projet de datation AMS du cimetière de Varna I ont été sélectionnées afin de couvrir un éventail de différents emplacements, de mobilier funéraire distinct et d'associations variées de sexe et d'âge. La question de la première phase du cimetière, nettement plus ancienne que présumée, sa durée apparemment relativement courte et sa fin relativement abrupte seront abordées pour clore ce chapitre.

Zusammenfassung

Zusammenfassung

In diesem Beitrag werden einige Schlüsselcharakteristika der Sozialstruktur während des Höhepunktes der Kupferzeit auf dem Ostbalkan und der Einfluss des Gräberfeldes von Varna auf diese Entwicklungen umrissen. Weiterhin werden die Ergebnisse einer neuen Serie von 14 AMS-Daten des Oxford Radiocarbon Laboratory untersucht, die die ersten Daten der äneolithischen Nekropole von Varna an der bulgarischen Schwarzmeerküste darstellen. Als erste Phase des AMS-Datierungsprojektes des Gräberfeldes Varna I wurden diese Daten ausgewählt, um eine Reihe von verschiedenen Grabplätzen und unterschiedlichen Grabbeigaben zu untersuchen sowie um Problemkreise von Alter bzw. Gender thematisieren zu können. Abschließend werden die Fragen des unerwartet frühen Beginns der Nekropole wie auch ihrer offensichtlich kurzen Laufzeit und relativ schnellen Aufgabe diskutiert.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2006 Sage Publications 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bailey, D., 2000. Balkan Prehistory. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bailey, D., 2005. Prehistoric Figurines. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Blake, E., 1999. Identity mapping in the Sardinian Bronze Age. European journal of Archaeology 2(1):3555.Google Scholar
Boyadzhiev, Y., 1995. Chronology of prehistoric cultures in Bulgaria. In Bailey, D. and Panayotov, I. (eds), Prehistoric Bulgaria: 149192. Madison, WI: Prehistory Press.Google Scholar
Bozhilova, E. and Filipova, M., 1975. Polenov analiz na kulturni plastove ot Varnenskoto ezero. lzvestiya na Narodniya Muzej Varna XI(XVII):1923.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C., 2001. Development of the radiocarbon calibration program OxCal. Radiocarbon 43:355363.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C., Higham, T.F.G., Bowles, A. and Hedges, R.E.M., 2004. Improvements to the pretreatment of bone at Oxford. Radiocarbon 46:155163.Google Scholar
Chapman, J., 1981. The Vinča Culture of South East Europe. Studies in Chronology, Economy and Society. Oxford: BAR (International Series 117).Google Scholar
Chapman, J., 1990. Social inequality on Bulgarian tells and the Varna problem. In Samson, R. (ed.), The Social Archaeology of Houses: 4992. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Chapman, J., 1991. The creation of social arenas in the Neolithic and Copper Age of South East Europe: the case of Varna. In Garwood, P., Jennings, P., Skeates, R. and Toms, J. (eds), Sacred and Profane: 152171. Oxford: Oxbow Books (Oxford Committee for Archaeology Monograph No. 32).Google Scholar
Chapman, J., 1996. Enchainment, commodification and gender in the Balkan Neolithic and Copper Age. journal of European Archaeology 4:203242.Google Scholar
Chapman, J., 2000a. Fragmentation in Archaeology. People, Places and Broken Objects in the Prehistory of South-Eastern Europe. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Chapman, J., 2000b. Tensions at Funerals. Mortuary Archaeology in Later Hungarian Prehistory. Budapest: Archaeolingua.Google Scholar
Chapman, J., 2003. Domesticating the exotic: the context of Cucuteni-Tripolye exchange with steppe and forest-steppe communities. In Boyle, K., Renfrew, C. and Levine, M. (eds), Ancient Interactions: East and West in Eurasia: 7592. Cambridge: McDonald Institute Monographs.Google Scholar
Chapman, J., 2004. Spondylus bracelets - fragmentation and enchainment in the East Balkan Neolithic and Copper Age. In Slavchev, V. (ed.), Festschrift für Prof. Dr. Habil. Henrieta Todorova. Dobrudzha 21:6387.Google Scholar
Chapman, J., in press. Engaging with the exotic: the production of early farming communities in South East and Central Europe. In Biagi, P., Spataro, M. and Shennan, S. (eds), A Short Walk Through the Balkans. Venice.Google Scholar
Chapman, J. and Gaydarska, B., 2003. The provision of salt to Tripolye mega-sites. In Korvin-Piotrovsky, A. and Kruts, V. (eds), ‘Tripolian settlement-giants’: the International Symposium Materials: 203211. Kiev: Institute of Archaeology.Google Scholar
Chapman, J. and Gaydarska, B., 2006. Parts and Wholes. Fragmentation in Prehistoric Context. Oxford: Oxbow Books.Google Scholar
Chernykh, E.N., 1978. Gornoe delo i metalurgiya v drevneishei Bolgarii. Moskva: Nauka.Google Scholar
Childe, V.G., 1945. Directional changes in funerary practices during 50,000 years. Man 4:1319.Google Scholar
Dimitrov, K., 2002. Die Metalfunde aus den Gräberfeldern von Durankulak. In Todorova, H. (ed.), Durankulak, Bd. II. Die prähistorischen Gräberfelder: 127158. Sofia: Anubis.Google Scholar
Eluère, C. and Raub, D., 1991. Investigations on the gold coating technology of the great dish from Varna. In Mohen, J.-P. (ed.), Découverte du métal: 1330. Paris: Picard.Google Scholar
Forenbaher, S., 1993. Radiocarbon dates and absolute chronology of the central European Early Bronze Age. Antiquity 67:218220 and 235–256.Google Scholar
Gale, N., Stos-Gale, S., Radountcheva, A., Ivanov, I., Lilov, P., Todorov, T. and Panayotov, I., 2000. Early metallurgy in Bulgaria. Godishnik Nov Bulgarski Universitet, IV-V:102168.Google Scholar
Gaydarska, B., Chapman, J., Angelova, I., Gurova, M. and Yanev, S., 2004. Breaking, making and trading: the Omurtag Eneolithic Spondylus hoard. Archaeologia Bulgarica 2:1134.Google Scholar
Georgiev, G.I., 1955. Mramorna statuetka from Blagoevo, Razgradsko. Izvestia na arheologicheskia muzei XIX:113.Google Scholar
Godelier, M. and Strathern, M., eds, 1991. Big Men and Great Men: Personifications of Power in Melanesia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Higham, T., Chapman, J., Slavchev, V., Gaydarska, B., Honch, N., Yordanov, Y. and Dimitrova, B., 2007. New perspectives on the Varna cemetery (Bulgaria) - AMS dates and social implications. Antiquity 81:640654.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honch, N., Higham, T., Chapman, J., Gaydarska, B. and Hedges, R.E.M., 2006. A palaeodietary investigation of carbon (13C/12C) and nitrogen (15N/14N) in human and faunal bones from the Copper Age cemeteries of Varna I and Durankulak, Bulgaria. journal of Archaeological Science 33:14931504.Google Scholar
Honch, N.V, Higham, T., Chapman, J., Gaydarska, B., Todorova, H., Slavchev, V., Yordanov, Y., and Dimitrova, B., in press. Pontic chronologies, and diets: a scientific framework for understanding the Durankulak and Varna I cemeteries. , L., In Nikolova, L. (ed.), Circumpontica. Oxford: Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Ivanov, I., 1975. Razkopki na Varnenskiya eneoliten nekropol prez 1972 g. Izvestia na Narodniya Muzej Varna 11:116.Google Scholar
Ivanov, I., 1988. Die Ausgrabungen des Gräberfeldes von Varna. In Fol, A. and Lichardus, J. (eds), Macht, Herrschaft und Gold: 4966. Saarbrücken: Moderne-Galerie des Saarlands-Museum.Google Scholar
Ivanov, I., 1991. Der Bestattungsritus in der chalkolitischen Nekropole von Varna (mit einem Katalog des wichstigsten Gräber). In Lichardus, J. (ed.), Die Kupferzeit als historische Epoche: 125150. Saarbrücker Beiträge zum Altertumskunde 55. Saarbrücken: Saarland Museum.Google Scholar
Ivanov, I. and Avramova, M., 2000. Varna Necropolis. The Dawn of European Civilization. Sofia: Agató.Google Scholar
Kostov, R., Dimov, T. and Pelevina, O., 2004. Gemmological characteristics of carnelian and agate beads from the Chalcolithic necropolis at Durankulak and Varna (in Bulgarian). Geologia i mineralni resursi 10:1524.Google Scholar
Leshtakov, P., 2006. The sources and distribution of graphite as a means of decoration in the Bulgarian Chalcolithic. In Monah, D., Dumitroaia, Gh., Chapman, J. and Weller, O. (eds), Cucuteni. 120 ani de cercetări: 293297. Piatra Neamţ, Centrul de Cercetarea culturii Cucuteni.Google Scholar
Lichardus, J., 1988. Der Westpontische Raum und die Anfänge der kupferzeitlichen Zivilisation. In Fol, A. and Lichardus, J. (eds), Macht, Herrschaft und Gold: 79130. Saarbrücken: Moderne-Galerie des Saarlands-Museum.Google Scholar
Manolakakis, L., 1996. Production lithique et émergence de la hierarchie sociale: l'industrie lithique de l'énéolithique en Bulgarie (première moitié du IVe millénaire). Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Fran çaise 93(1):119123.Google Scholar
Manolakakis, L., n.d. Open-cast flint mining, very long blade production and long-distance exchange: an example from Bulgaria. Paper presented at the 12th Annual Meeting of the EAA, Kraków, September 2006.Google Scholar
Marazov, I., 1988. Tod und Mythos. Uberlegungen zu Varna. In Fol, A. and Lichardus, J. (eds), Macht, Herrschaft und Gold: 6777. Saarbrücken: Moderne-Galerie des Saarlands-Museum.Google Scholar
Nandris, J., 1975. A re-consideration of the south-east European sources of archaeological obsidian. Bulletin of the University of London Institute of Archaeology 12:7194.Google Scholar
Pernicka, E., Begemann, F., Schnmitt-Strecker, S. and Wagner, A., 1993. Eneolithic and Early Bronge Age copper artefacts from the Balkans and their relation to Serbian copper ores. Praehistorische Zeitschrift 68(1):154.Google Scholar
Pernicka, E., Begemann, F., Schmitt-Strecker, S., Todorova, H. and Kuleff, I., 1997. Prehistoric copper in Bulgaria. Eurasia Antigua 3:41180.Google Scholar
Raduntcheva, A., 2003. Kusnoeneolitnoto obstestvo v bulgarskite zemi. Razkopki i prouchvania XXXII. Sofia: AIM BAN.Google Scholar
Rega, E., 1997. Age, gender and biological reality in the Early Bronze Age cemetery at Mokrin. In Moore, J. and Scott, E. (eds), Invisible People and Processes. Writing Gender and Childhood into European Archaeology: 229247. Leicester: Leicester University Press.Google Scholar
Reimer, P., Baillie, M.G.L., Bard, E., Bayliss, A., Beck, J.W., Bertrand, C., Blackwell, P.G., Buck, C.E., Burr, G., Cutler, K.B., Damon, P.E., Edwards, R.L., Fairbanks, R.G., Friedrich, M., Guilderson, T.P., Hughen, K.A., Kromer, B., Mccormac, F.G., Manning, S., Bronk Ramsey, C., Reimer, R.W., Remmele, S., Southon, J.R., Stuiver, M., Talamo, S., Taylor, F.W., Van Der Plicht, J. and Weyhenmeyer, C.E., 2004. INTCAL04 terrestrial radiocarbon age calibration, 0–26 kyr BP. Radiocarbon 46(3):10291058.Google Scholar
Reimer, P.J. and Reimer, R.W., 2001. A marine reservoir correction database and on-line interface. Radiocarbon 43:461–3.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C., 1978. Varna and the social context of early metallurgy. Antiquity 52:199203.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C., 1986. Varna and the emergence of wealth. In Appadurai, A. (ed.), The Social Life of Things: 141168. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M., 1974. Stone Age Economics. Chicago, IL: Aldine.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A., 1972. Socio-economic and demographic models for the Neolithic and Bronze Age of Europe. In Clarke, D.L. (ed.), Models in Archaeology: 477542. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Todorova, H., 1976. Eneolit Bolgarii. Moskow: Nauka.Google Scholar
Todorova, H., 1981. Die kupferzeitlichen Äxte und Beile in Bulgarien. Prähistorische Bronzefunde, 9/14. München.Google Scholar
Todorova, H., ed., 2002. Durankulak, Bd. II. Die prähistorischen Gräberfelder. Sofia: Anubis.Google Scholar
Todorova, H. and Toncheva, G., 1975. Die äneolitische Pfahlbausiedlung bei Ezerovo im Varnasee. Germania 53:3046.Google Scholar
Todorova, H., Ivanov, S., Vasilev, V., Hopf, M., Kohl, G. and Quitta, H., 1975. Selishnata mogila pri Goljamo Delchevo. Razkopki i Prouchvaniya 5. Sofia: BAN.Google Scholar
Todorova, H., Vasilev, V., Janushevich, Z., Kovacjeva, M. and Valev, P., 1983. Ovcharovo. Razkopki i Prouchvaniya 9. Sofia: BAN.Google Scholar
Todorova-Simeonova, H., 1971. Kasnoeneolitnijat nekropol kraj grad Devnya - Varnensko. Izvestia na Narodniya Muzej Varna 7:340.Google Scholar
Vladár, J., 1973 Pohrebiská zo staršej doby bronzovej v Branči. Bratislava.Google Scholar