This article will be permanently flagged as inappropriate and made unaccessible to everyone. Are you certain this article is inappropriate? Excessive Violence Sexual Content Political / Social
Email Address:
Article Id: WHEBN0001653629 Reproduction Date:
The Hamangia culture is a Late Neolithic archaeological culture of Dobruja (Romania and Bulgaria) between the Danube and the Black Sea and Muntenia in the south. It is named after the site of Baia-Hamangia, discovered in 1952 along Golovița Lake.[1]
The Hamangia culture began around 5250/5200 BC and lasted until around 4550/4500 BC. It was absorbed by the expanding Boian culture in its transition towards the Gumelnitsa.[2]
Its cultural links with Anatolia suggest that it was the result of a settlement by people from Anatolia, unlike the neighbouring cultures, which appear descended from earlier Neolithic settlement.[3]
Painted vessels with complex geometrical patterns based on spiral-motifs are typical. The shapes include pots and wide bowls.
Pottery figurines are normally extremely stylized and show standing naked faceless women with emphasized breasts and buttocks. Two figurines known as “The Thinker” and “The Sitting woman” (see photos) are considered masterpieces of Neolithic art.
Settlements consist of rectangular houses with one or two rooms, built of wattle and daub, sometimes with stone foundations (Durankulak). They are normally arranged on a rectangular grid and may form small tells. Settlements are located along the coast, at the coast of lakes, on the lower and middle river-terraces, sometimes in caves.
Crouched or extended inhumation in cemeteries. Grave-gifts tend to be without pottery in Hamangia I. Grave-gifts include flint, worked shells, bone tools and shell-ornaments.
Media related to at Wikimedia Commons
Cucuteni-Trypillian culture, Neolithic Europe, Bronze Age, China, Turkey
France, Portugal, Neolithic, Pottery, Rock art
Neolithic, Tin, Stone Age, Copper, Serbia
Stone Age, Technology, Language, Neolithic, Acheulean
Science, Computer science, Transhumanism, Engineering, Internet
World War I, Transylvania, Moldavia, Ottoman Empire, Dacia
Mesolithic, Balkans, Romania, Serbia, Bulgaria
Romania, Dacia, Cucuteni-Trypillian culture, Socialist Republic of Romania, History of Romania since 1989
Holocene, Chalcolithic, Prehistoric technology, Technology, 6th millennium BC
Romania, Dacia, Copper, Neolithic, Bronze Age