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Starcevo Körös





Encyclopedia results for Starcevo Körös

  1. Starcevo

    Starcevo can refer to Star evo , a town in Serbia Startsevo , a village in Bulgaria geodis Long comment to avoid being listed on short pages ...   more details



  1. Körös

    K r s is a Hungarian toponym with several meanings K r s River K r s or Cri , a river that flows into Tisza , was used for an archeological site of the Starcevo K r s culture Hungarian name for Kri evci, Croatia , was used for the historic Belov r K r s county disambig sv K r s ...   more details



  1. Star?evo

    Image Starcevo orthodox church.jpg Serbian Orthodox church Image Star evo, Catholic Church.jpg ... serbia and montenegro vojvodina starcevo Satellite map of Star evo South Banat District DEFAULTSORT Starcevo SouthBanatRS geo stub commonscat Star evo Category Pan evo Category Places in Serbian ...   more details



  1. Bug-Dniester culture

    Image European Middle Neolithic.gif thumb 500px Map of European Neolithic cultures. Bugo Dniester culture is right yellow color spot. Southern Bug Bug Dniester culture , Dniester Bug culture was the archaeological culture that developed in the chernozem region of Moldavia and Ukraine around the Dniester and Southern Bug rivers in the Neolithic . Over approximately 1500 years, 6500 5000 BC, the culture metamorphosed into quite different phases, but the population remained about the same. What is most noteworthy about the Neolithic in this region is that it developed autochthonously from the Mesolithic there. The earlier phases are pre pottery. The people in this region reinvented the wheel, so to speak. They relied predominantly on hunting aurochs , red deer , roe deer and boar , and fishing for Rutilus roach , eel s and pike fish pike . Claims of early farming are not supported by archaeological evidence. At about 5800 BC they began to make a native pottery, mainly jars, flat bottomed or pointed bottomed, decorated in patterns of wavy lines. Influence from the Starcevo struck the native culture changing it drastically. Pottery suddenly became like that of the Starcevo culture and the wild grass was abandoned in favor of einkorn , emmer and spelt , already popular in south Europe. At some time after 5500 BC, the Starcevo lost its influence in favor of one from the LBK Linear Pottery culture . LBK people probably did enter the region from the upper Dniester and overran it as far south as the lower Danube. The pottery became like the LBK. Native stone subterranean houses were replaced by long houses. The LBK that overran this region was a specific phase. At around 5270 BC calibrated, at the most populous peak of the LBK, judging from the number of dates obtained as a rough guideline, the pottery in eastern Austria acquired a new decorative style, termed Notenkopfkeramik by its German discoverers. In English it means Notehead Pottery. Notehead is a good English word als ...   more details



  1. Starchevo

    Infobox settlement official name Starchevo native name settlement type Village image skyline image flag image seal image map mapsize map caption Location of Starchevo pushpin map Bulgaria pushpin map size pushpin label position Location in Bulgaria subdivision type Countries of the world Country subdivision name flag Bulgaria subdivision type1 Provinces of Bulgaria Province subdivision name1 Blagoevgrad Province subdivision type2 Municipalities of Bulgaria Municipality subdivision name2 Petrich leader title Mayor leader name Georgi Kuzmanov area total km2 population as of 2010 population note population total 624 population footnotes population metro population density timezone Eastern European Time EET utc offset 2 timezone DST Eastern European Summer Time EEST utc offset DST 3 latd 41 latm 29 lats latNS N longd 23 longm 14 longs longEW E elevation m 131 website footnotes Starchevo or Starchovo lang bg or , lang el ref http www.angelfire.com pe2 petritsi startso.htm ref is a village in the municipality of Petrich , in Blagoevgrad Province , Bulgaria . ref http www.guide bulgaria.com SW Blagoevgrad Petrich Guide Bulgaria , Accessed May 5, 2010 ref References reflist Petrich coord 41 29 N 23 14 E display title region BG type city source GNS enwiki Category Villages in Blagoevgrad Province Blagoevgrad geo stub bg mk ro Starcevo, Bulgaria ru ...   more details



  1. Prehistoric Serbia

    com content&do pdf 1&id 60 ref Bresnica Ani te Neolithic Starcevo culture Gornja Gorevnica Trsine Early Copper Age Vin a Klenak Ad ine , Njive Early Neolithic Early Bronze Age Starcevo Vinca Mala Vrbica Ajmana Neolithic onwards Proto Starcevo Vr ac Upper Palaeolithic, Late Neolithic Vin a , Bronze ...   more details



  1. Star?evo culture

    Property of Great Importance Holocene epoch DEFAULTSORT Starcevo Culture Category Archaeological ...   more details



  1. Bükk culture

    unreferenced date January 2010 Image European Middle Neolithic.gif right 400px Light green B kk Culture Eastern Linear Pottery culture B kk culture lang hu B kki kult ra , lang sk Bukovohorsk kult ra , Ukrainian belonged to a dense pocket of Cro magnon type people inhabiting the B kk mountains of Hungary inner western Carpathians and the upper Tisza and its tributaries. The surrounding Neolithic was mainly of a more gracile Mediterranean type, with a Cro magnon admixture as another possibility. As to whether the Cro magnons were a remnant squeezed into this pocket, there is no sign of conflict there and the Cro magnons were doing rather well in the obsidian trade. They were, so to speak, the wealthy men of the European Neolithic. The Cro magnons did acquire the Neolithic from the Star evo culture to the south. In the Szatm r culture prior to 5500 BC, the Cro magnons modified their Mesolithic ways and took on Starcevan artifact types and pottery styles, and the same can be said of the succeeding Tiszadob culture of roughly 5200 5000. By 5000 the LBK had replaced the Starcevo in the surrounding region and it influenced the Cro magnons in the B kk culture. B kk pottery is the finest ware of the LBK. It has a larger variety of forms tall stands, jars with feet, globular bowls, and so on. Their fabric is tempered with sand, as opposed to the chaff of the western LBK. The walls of the pots are thin and delicate. Decoration consists of LBK patterns composed of bands that are both painted and engraved with fine lines. Colors are white, red and yellow, just the ones to brighten and make warm a successful household. The patterns are more complex, more regular and evidence more care in their execution. Some of the patterns are probably symbols. The Cro magnons also owned abstract human figurines, in which geometric forms represent people. These are covered with symbols. The source of B kk culture wealth is the fine obsidian of which the mountains are an ...   more details



  1. Neolithic architecture

    Unreferenced date December 2009 Image Orkney Skara Brae.jpg thumb left 200px Excavated dwellings at Skara Brae Neolithic architecture is the architecture of the Neolithic period. In Southwest Asia , Neolithic culture s appear soon after 10000 BC, initially in the Levant Pre Pottery Neolithic A and Pre Pottery Neolithic B and from there spread eastwards and westwards. There are early Neolithic cultures in Southeast Anatolia, Syria and Iraq by 8000 BC, and food producing societies first appear in southeast Europe by 7000 BC, and Central Europe by c. 5500 BC of which the earliest cultural complexes include the Starcevo K r s Star& 269 evo Koros Cris , Linearbandkeramic , and Vinca culture Vin& 269 a . With very small exceptions a few copper hatchet s and spear heads in the Great Lakes North America Great Lakes region , the people of the Americas and the Pacific remained at the Neolithic level of technology up until the time of European contact. File Anta Cerqueira em Couto Esteves.JPG thumb 300px A dolmen at Couto Esteves , Portugal . The Neolithic peoples in the Levant , Anatolia , Syria , northern Mesopotamia and Central Asia were great builders, utilising mud brick to construct houses and villages. At atalh y k , houses were plastered and painted with elaborate scenes of humans and animals. In Europe , Neolithic long house long houses built from wattle and daub were constructed. Elaborate tombs for the dead were also built. These tombs are particularly numerous in Ireland , where there are many thousand still in existence. Neolithic people in the British Isles built long barrow s and chamber tomb s for their dead and causewayed camp s, henge s flint mines and cursus monuments. Image Dscn5212 mane braz 800x600.jpg thumb 200px left Megalithic tomb, Mane Braz , Brittany Most of the megalith s found in Western Europe and the Mediterranean were also erected in the Neolithic period. Perhaps the most famous megalithic structure is Stonehenge in England , although many oth ...   more details



  1. Prehistoric Croatia

    History of Croatia The area known as Croatia today has been inhabited throughout the prehistoric period, ever since the Stone Age . Prehistory Main Prehistoric Balkans In the middle Paleolithic period, Neandertals lived in modern Zagorje , northern Croatia. Dragutin Gorjanovic Kramberger Dragutin Gorjanovi Kramberger discovered bones and other remnants of a Neandertal, subsequently named Homo krapiniensis , on a hill near the town of Krapina . Other notable paleolithic sites in Croatia are Vindija Cave in the vicinity of Vara din , and Mujina pe ina on the Dalmatian coast. Vindija sediments are 12 m thick, divided in 13 layers designated from unit A youngest to unit M. ref Cite journal doi 10.1016 j.quaint.2007.03.023 title Dated Paleontological cave sites of Central Europe from Late Middle Pleistocene to early Upper Pleistocene OIS 5 to OIS 8 year 2008 author Doppes, D journal Quaternary International volume 187 issue 1 pages 97 last2 Kempe first2 S last3 Rosendahl first3 W ref In the early Neolithic period, the Starcevo K r s Star evo , Vinca culture Vin a and Sopot culture Sopot cultures were scattered between and around the Sava , the Drava and the Danube . Notable are the excavation sites of itarjevo near Zagreb , Sopot near Vinkovci , Vu edol culture Vu edol near Vukovar , Nakovanj on Peljesac Pelje ac . Traces of a somewhat isolated Hvar culture were found on the Adriatic island of Hvar . The Iron Age left traces of the Hallstatt culture proto Illyrians and the La T ne culture proto Celts . Illyria Main Illyria In recorded history , the area was inhabited by Illyrians Illyrian tribes such as the Delmetae , who spoke an Illyrian language , an ancient branch of Indo European languages Indo European . Other tribes such as the Liburni and Iapodes , whose ethnicity is less clear, inhabited various parts of the Adriatic coastline and interior between modern Istria and Herzegovina. In the 4th century BC the northern parts of modern day Croatia were also colonized ...   more details



  1. List of settlements in Serbia inhabited by Vlachs

    Deleted image removed Image Romanian settlements in Central Serbia.jpg thumb right 400px Settlements inhabited by Romanians Vlachs before WW1 Historical data In the past, Vlachs of Serbia Romanians Vlachs accounted for a majority in eastern Serbia . Before World War I, many localities were populated by Romanians. Here is the list with the number of Romanians in each locality ref http www.observatorul.com articles main.asp?action articleviewdetail&ID 2967 Observatorul, 27 December 2005 ref Localities populated only by Romanians I. Kra na district Cioconear 205, Varbitza Mare 1170, Manastiritza 380 , Barloga 1180, Tabacovatz 405, Recitza 1280, Velesnitza 535, Tarnaica 1280, Vratza 540, Glogovitza 1365, Costel Costolatz 540, Podvarshca 1385, Coroglash Miloshevo 580, Dzedzeratz 1430, Mosnarnei 690, Ratcov 1480, Cupusisnte 620, Corbova 1490, Sip 645, Varbitza Mic 1530, Cladushnitza 670, Milanovatz 1565, Sarmovatz Samarinovatz 680, Grabovitza 1585, Iasicova Mica 695, Plavna 1695, Tanda 745, Iasicova Mare 1770, Sarbovlash Sarbovo 750, Rudna Glava 1795, Vaiuga 825, Prahova 1880, Toponitza 865, Bliuvanovatz 1900, Slatina 930, Coprivnitza 1980, Bordei 985, Mocrane 2120, Camenitza 1015, Cobishnitza 2210, Malamitza 1035, Gorniane 2280, Dubociani 1080, Bucovcea 2475, Camenitza Mare 1090, Dzanova Dushanovatz 2520, Clococevatz 1090, Radaivatz Raduievatz 2560, Techia 1130, Urovitza 2925, Dupliana 1155, Iacubovatz 4075, II. Pojarevatz district Magusitza 75, Mirievo 1120, Maidan Cuceaina 140, Iitcovitza 1120, Shlivovatz 305, Caona 1150, S rbce 320, Cladurovo 1200, Tzerovitza 325, Varbnitza 1200, Sviniarevo 360, Geuracovo 1220, Breznitza 370, Cesleva Bara 1250, Barnitza 385, Orlevo 1250, Lesnitza 460, Busur 1340, Lescovo 460, Dubocica 1340, Siga 530, Starcevo 1347, Crivacea 545, Iasicovo 1460, Cicevatz 565, Sena 1490, Zagreba 570, Mustapiche 1550, Vitovnitza 615, Inegotin 1597, Lescovatz 620, Idrelo 1640, Cocetin 670, Manastiritza 1695, Alindova 675, Colibe 1770, Vucoviche 730, Stamn ...   more details



  1. Loznica

    otherplaces Infobox Serbia municipality image skyline Vuk Karadzic Square.JPG image caption Panoramic view of Loznica native name official name Loznica image shield Loznica coa.svg settlement type City district Ma va mayor Vidoje Petrovi G17 area km2 612 population total 19863 mpop 86413 latd 44 latm 32 longd 019 longm 13 code 15 settlements 54 plates LO postal code 15300 website www.loznica.rs Loznica Serbian Cyrillic is a list of cities in Serbia city and municipalities of Serbia municipality located in western Serbia , in the Ma va District . It lies on the right bank of the Drina river. In 2002 the town had total population of 19,863, while the municipality had a population of 86,413. During Roman period, the place was called Ad Drinum . In January 2008, according to Serbian law, Loznica received status of a city. Name Its name stems from the word loza the Serbian language Serbian word for vine . Originally, its name was Lozica Serbian language Serbian for small vine , but it later became Loznica . ref http www.locafe.com ref History Wikify section date September 2009 File Probus Musei Capitolini MC493.jpg thumb 150px left Marcus Aurelius Probus The oldest settlements on the territory of Jadar and Loznica is traced to the prehistoric period of late Neolith the Starcevo culture that flourished 4500 3000 BC. Illyrian and Celtic tribes inhabited the region prior to the Roman conquest 75 BC. Roman conquest of the Balkan peninsula brought huge changes the territory became a Roman province. According to recent classification, Jadar formed a part of Dalmatia . The first settlement located on the place of present Loznica was named in Antique times, while the most important settlement in Jadar was the name Genzis , located approximately on the territory of today s Le nica . Legend states that Loznica was named after the vinegrape that was grown in this region, starting from the 3rd century B.C. in the time of Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius Probus Probus . ...   more details



  1. Neolithic Europe

    . Star evo K r s Starcevo Cri culture Star evo I, K r s, Cri , Central Balkans, 7th to 5th millennia ...   more details



  1. Tourism in Serbia

    File NTOS logo.jpg thumb 250px Logo of the National Tourism Organization of Serbia. File Nss.jpg thumb right Petrovaradin fortress , the most visited citadel in Serbia File Romuliana.jpg thumb right Felix Romuliana , late Roman palace, UNESCO File Medijana mozaik.jpg thumb right Mediana , birthplace of Constantine the Great Serbia stretches across two geographic and cultural regions of Europe Central Europe the Pannonian plain , and Southeastern Europe the Balkan peninsula . This boundary splits Serbia roughly in a ratio of 1 2 alongside the Danube and Sava rivers. The northern parts of the republic are Central European lowlands while the southern and central parts are mostly mountainous. There are more than 15 mountain peaks rising to over 2,000 metres above sea level. The navigable rivers are the Danube , Sava and Tisa . A moderate continental climate predominates, with a more Mediterranean climate in the south. The variety of scenery and cultural and historical monuments, curative spas, hunting grounds and fishing areas give the basis for Serbia s tourism. International roads and railway lines link Western Europe Western Central Europe with Greece , Turkey , the Near East , Asia and Africa . The main air transport routes between West and East and North and South cross this country, too. Geography of Serbia File Danube near Iron Gate 2006.JPG thumb right 250px The Iron Gates of the Danube The Serbian lands were the crossroads of various civilizations in the past, with different spiritual, architectural, artistic and cultural influences. Serbian culture and its historical heritage is diverse because of mixture of various influences. Numerous prehistoric and classical monuments represent some unique examples of the changing times Vinca culture , Starcevo culture , Lepenski Vir , etc. Serbia is a land of natural, historic, cultural and ethnic contrasts. The northern lowlands the province of Vojvodina form the Central European part of the country. The Fru ka Gora hill ...   more details



  1. Historical migration

    ware , Yamna , Kurgan , the early Neolithic Colin Renfrew Starcevo K r s Star evo K r s , Linearbandkeramic ...   more details



  1. Migration period of ancient Burma

    , Yamna , Kurgan , the early Neolithic Colin Renfrew Starcevo K r s Star evo K r s , Linearbandkeramic ...   more details



  1. Neolithic

    site 20th to 3rd millennium BC Sesclo Sesclo village culture Star evo K r s Starcevo Cri culture also ...   more details



  1. History of architecture

    Dablink This article describes the history of building types and styles what things were built. See History of construction for the history of construction tools and techniques how things were built. File Cole Thomas The dream of the architect 210 Sun Unedited.jpg thumb 300px The Architect s Dream , 1840, by Thomas Cole The history of architecture traces the changes in the history of architecture through various countries and dates. Neolithic architecture Image Orkney Skara Brae.jpg thumb right Excavated dwellings at Skara Brae main Neolithic architecture Neolithic architecture is the architecture of the Neolithic period. In Southwest Asia, Neolithic Archaeological culture cultures appear soon after 10000 BC, initially in the Levant Pre Pottery Neolithic A and Pre Pottery Neolithic B and from there spread eastwards and westwards There are early Neolithic cultures in Southeast Anatolia, Syria and Iraq by 8000 BC, and food producing societies first appear in southeast Europe by 7000 BC, and Central Europe by c. 5500 BC of which the earliest cultural complexes include the Starcevo K r s Star evo Koros Cris , Linearbandkeramic , and Vinca culture Vin a . With very small exceptions a few copper hatchet s and spear heads in the Great Lakes North America Great Lakes region , the people of the Americas and the Pacific remained at the Neolithic level of technology up until the time of European contact. The neolithic peoples in the Levant , Anatolia , Syria , northern Mesopotamia and Central Asia were great builders, utilizing mud brick to construct houses and villages. At atalh y k , houses were plastered and painted with elaborate scenes of humans and animals. The Mediterranean neolithic cultures of Malta worshiped in Megalithic Temples of Malta megalithic temples . In Europe, Neolithic long house long houses built from wattle and daub were constructed. Elaborate tombs for the dead were also built. These tombs are particularly numerous in Ireland, where there are many thou ...   more details



  1. History of the Balkans

    Unbalanced date September 2009 File AntikeGriechen1.jpg thumb 250px Greek and Phoenician colonies at about 550 BCE. File Dacia 82  BC.png thumb 250px Dacian Kingdom 82 BC File Map Byzantine Empire 1045.svg thumb 250px The Byzantine Empire during the 11th century. File Figura12.jpg thumb 250px Map of the Middle East c.1350. Byzantium has lost its cities in Asia Minor and Epirus has been reduced significantly by Serbia. Ottoman lands are in purple, and Red Byzantium. File Balkanpeninsula.png thumb 250px Balkan peninsula as defined geographically, by the Danube Sava Kupa line The Balkans is an area of southeastern Europe situated at a major crossroads between mainland Europe and the Near East . The distinct identity and fragmentation of the Balkans owes much to its common and often violent history and to its very mountainous geography. Prehistory Main Prehistoric Balkans Neolithic Archaeology Archaeologists have identified several early culture complexes, including the Cucuteni culture 4500 to 3500  BC , Starcevo culture 6500 to 4000  BC , Vin a culture 5000 to 3000  BC , Linear pottery culture 5500 to 4500  BC , and Ezero culture 3300 2700  BC . The Eneolithic Varna Necropolis Varna culture 4600 4200  BC radiocarbon dating produced the world s earliest known gold treasure, communicated with the Mediterranean and had sophisticated beliefs about afterlife. A notable set of artifacts is the Tartaria tablets T rt ria tablets , which appear to be inscribed with Vin a signs proto writing . The Butmir Culture 2600 to 2400  BC , found on the outskirts of present day Sarajevo , developed unique ceramics, and was likely overrun by the proto Illyrians Citation needed date September 2009 in the Bronze Age . The Kurgan hypothesis of Proto Indo European language Proto Indo European PIE origins assumes gradual expansion of the Kurgan culture , around 5000  BC, until it encompassed the entire pontic steppe . Kurgan IV was identified with the Yamna ...   more details




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