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Lepenski Vir
Lepenski
vir, a unique prehistoric discovery, was brought to
light about twenty years ago.
The most important finds in the well
laid-out settlement are a number of monumental stone
sculptures made some six to seven thousand years ago.
Nothing comparable has ever been unearthed
in relation to such early prehistoric periods in the
Balkans and the Danube basin.
Particulary valuable to the study of
the history of culture and art in the prehistoric Europe
are the worked round boulders and marked slabs also
found there.
Burying and burial rites in the culture of Lepenski
Vir
Source: "Poceci ranih zemljoradnickih kultura u
Vojvodini i Srpskom Podunavlju", Materijali X,
Srpsko arheološko društvo • Gradski muzej, Subotica,
Beograd, 1974.
In last few years in the Iron Gate area a separate prehistoric
culture was discovered and researched — the culture
of Lepenski Vir — which chronologically and culturally
links the culture of the Late Paleolithic of this area
with the oldest Neolithic culture of the type Starcevo—Körös—Kris.
Beside varied and rich archeological finds — the remains
of dwelling places, stone sculptures, stone receptacles
and altars, as well as of stone and bone industry —
in the find-spots of the culture of Lepenski Vir were
also discovered the graves which, by their numerousness
and stratigraphical position, enable the insight into
the way of burying and burial rites practiced through
a long time span from about 8000 B. C. till about 5.500
B. C.
For the present, nine settlements of
the Lepenski Vir culture are known, four of them on
the right bank of the Danube (Lepenski Vir, Vlasac,
Hajducka Vodenica, Padina) and five on the left bank
(Veterani, Terrasse, Icoana, Razvrata, Ostrovul Banului,
Schela Cladovei). While some of these settlements have
been investigated as a whole or for the most part (Lepenski
Vir, Vlasac, Padina, Schela Cladovei), in the others
were carried out only smaller sounding excavations.
However, without regard to the degree of investigation
of some settlements, it is of importance to note that
the data concerning the graves found in them tune into
each other, i.e. that they point to the same ways of
burying and the same burial rites. The most abundant
data in respect of the way of burying and burial rites
give the graves from Vlasac, Lepenski Vir and Schela
Cladovei. At Vlasac were found 84 graves (110 dead),
at Lepenski Vir 82 and at Schela Cladovei about 20.
On the basis of vertical stratigraphy
and archeological material, the culture of Lepenski
Vir has been divided into two phases: the earlier, represented
by the levels Vlasac Ia, b, Proto-Lepenski Vir and Lepenski
Vir Ia, b, and the later phase, which includes the settlements
Icoana, Schela Cladovei, Vlasac II—III, Lepenski Vir
Ic-e, Lepenski Vir II, Padina and Hajducka Vodenica.
In both phases the dead were buried within the settlements.
However, by time, the way of burying and of burial rites
changed. The graves, deriving from the level which represents
the earliest phase of the culture of Lepenski Vir show
that from the very beginning of this culture the dead
were buried in various ways, i.e. that complicated burial
rites were practiced...
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