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Starčevo ceramic technology : the first potters of the Middle Danube Basin / von Michela Spataro
Ouvrage
Appartient à la collection: Universitätsforschungen zur prähistorischen Archäologie, 2627-8898, 341 • Neolithikum und Chalkolithikum in Südosteuropa, 2568-132X, 4, Bonn, [201.]-
Publication: Bonn : Verlag Dr. Rudolf Habelt GmbH, 2019 Description: 1 vol. (459 p.) : ill. ; 31 cmCollection : Universitätsforschungen zur prähistorischen Archäologie; 341, ISSN 2627-8898Neolithikum und Chalkolithikum in Südosteuropa; 4, ISSN 2568-132XISBN: 9783774942349 ; 377494234X.Langue: AnglaisPays: Allemagne Auteur principal: Spataro, Michela Résumé: Early Neolithic Starcevo groups made the first ceramics and fired clay cult objects in the Middle Danube basin during the 6th millennium BC. These groups were also the first farmers in the region. This study of Starcevo everyday pottery, ceramic figurines and four-legged vessels from Slavonia, Serbia and Romania shows that the same pottery chaîne opératoire was used throughout this region, at sites located in different geological settings, where potters could have used a wider range of raw materials. Starcevo potters were not specialists, but some later Starcevo ceramics were more sophisticated, particularly in decoration techniques. The similarity of pottery technology throughout the Middle Danube basin shows the ongoing connectedness and intermixing of Starcevo communities, while the use of one chaîne opératoire for almost a millennium, and the lack of technological exchange with contemporaneous Adriatic Impressed Ware pottery, reveals a con-servative society, in which intergenerational transmission of technical skills and a strong network may have helped to maintain social stability over time. (Source : éditeur). Note de contenu: Table des matières Item type: Ouvrage
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Bibliogr. p. 443-459

Table des matières http://d-nb.info/1202860303/04

Early Neolithic Starcevo groups made the first ceramics and fired clay cult objects in the Middle Danube basin during the 6th millennium BC. These groups were also the first farmers in the region. This study of Starcevo everyday pottery, ceramic figurines and four-legged vessels from Slavonia, Serbia and Romania shows that the same pottery chaîne opératoire was used throughout this region, at sites located in different geological settings, where potters could have used a wider range of raw materials. Starcevo potters were not specialists, but some later Starcevo ceramics were more sophisticated, particularly in decoration techniques. The similarity of pottery technology throughout the Middle Danube basin shows the ongoing connectedness and intermixing of Starcevo communities, while the use of one chaîne opératoire for almost a millennium, and the lack of technological exchange with contemporaneous Adriatic Impressed Ware pottery, reveals a con-servative society, in which intergenerational transmission of technical skills and a strong network may have helped to maintain social stability over time.
(Source : éditeur)

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