fbpx
Wikipedia

Varna Necropolis

The Varna Necropolis (Bulgarian: Варненски некропол), or Varna Cemetery, is a burial site in the western industrial zone of Varna (approximately half a kilometre from Lake Varna and 4 km from the city centre), internationally considered one of the key archaeological sites in world prehistory. The oldest gold treasure and jewelry in the world, dating from 4,600 BC to 4,200 BC, was discovered at the site.[1] Several prehistoric Bulgarian finds are considered no less old – the golden treasures of Hotnitsa, Durankulak, artifacts from the Kurgan settlement of Yunatsite near Pazardzhik, the golden treasure Sakar, as well as beads and gold jewelry found in the Kurgan settlement of ProvadiaSolnitsata (“salt pit”). However, Varna gold is most often called the oldest since this treasure is the largest and most diverse.[2]

Reconstruction of elite male burial, with some of the world's oldest gold jewellery, c. 4,500 BC

Discovery and excavation

 
Varna necropolis, grave offerings on exhibit at the Varna Museum

The site was accidentally discovered in October 1972 by excavator operator Raycho Marinov. The first to value the significant historical meaning was Dimitar Zlatarski, the creator of the Dalgopol Historical Museum. He was called by the locals to examine what they had found earlier that day. He realized how important the finding was, so he contacted the Varna Historical Museum and, after signing government papers, he handed over the research to the direction of Mihail Lazarov (1972–1976) and Ivan Ivanov (1972–1991). About 30% of the estimated necropolis area is still not excavated.

A total of 294 graves have been found in the necropolis,[3] many containing sophisticated examples of metallurgy (gold and copper), pottery (about 600 pieces, including gold-painted ones), high-quality flint and obsidian blades, beads, and shells.

Chronology

The graves have been dated to 4569–4340 BCE by radiocarbon dating in 2006 [4][3] and belong to the Chalcolithic Varna culture, which is the local variant of the KGKVI.

Burial rites

 
Clay anthropomorphic head, Late Chalcolithic period, 4500–4000 BCE, Hamangia Culture, found submerged in Varna Lake, Varna Archeology Museum

There are crouched and straight inhumations. Some graves do not contain a skeleton, but grave gifts (cenotaphs). These symbolic (empty) graves are the richest in gold artifacts. Three thousand gold artifacts have been found, with a weight of approximately six kilograms. Grave 43 contained more gold than has been found in the entire rest of the world for that epoch. It was initially identified as the grave of a prince, but is now thought to be that of a smith.[5] Three symbolic graves contained masks of unbaked clay.

"Varna is the oldest cemetery yet found where humans were buried with abundant golden ornaments. … The weight and the number of gold finds in the Varna cemetery exceeds by several times the combined weight and number of all of the gold artifacts found in all excavated sites of the same millenium, 5000-4000 BC, from all over the world, including Mesopotamia and Egypt. … Three graves contained gold objects that together accounted for more than half of the total weight of all gold grave goods yielded by the cemetery. A scepter, symbol of a supreme secular or religious authority, was discovered in each of these three graves." (Slavchev 2010)[6]

The findings showed that the Varna culture had trade relations with distant lands (possibly including the lower Volga and the Cyclades), perhaps exporting metal goods and salt from the Provadiya rock salt mineSolnitsata. The copper ore used in the artifacts originated from a Sredna Gora mine near Stara Zagora, and Mediterranean Spondylus shells found in the graves may have served as primitive currency.

The culture had sophisticated religious beliefs about afterlife and had developed hierarchical status differences.[7] The site offers the oldest known burial evidence of an elite man (Marija Gimbutas claims that the end of the fifth millennium BC is the time that the development to male dominance began in Europe). The high status man buried with the most remarkable amount of gold held a war adze or mace and wore a gold penis sheath. Bull-shaped gold platelets might also have venerated virility, instinctual force, and warfare. Gimbutas holds that the artifacts were made largely by local craftsmen.

Historical impact

 
Golden objects found in the necropolis.

According to Gimbutas (1991), "The discontinuity of the Varna, Karanovo, Vinča and Lengyel cultures in their main territories and the large scale population shifts to the north and northwest are indirect evidence of a catastrophe of such proportions that cannot be explained by possible climatic change, land exhaustion, or epidemics (for which there is no evidence in the second half of the 5th millennium B.C.). Direct evidence of the incursion of horse-riding warriors is found, not only in single burials of males under barrows, but in the emergence of a whole complex of Kurgan cultural traits."

According to J. Chapman, "Once upon a time, not so very long ago, it was widely accepted that steppe nomads from the North Pontic zone invaded the Balkans, putting an end to the Climax Copper Age society that produced the apogee of tell living, autonomous copper metallurgy and, as the grandest climax, the Varna cemetery with its stunning early goldwork. Now the boot is very much on the other foot and it is the Varna complex and its associated communities that are held responsible for stimulating the onset of prestige goods-dominated steppe mortuary practice following the expansion of farming."[8]

Among the metallic (gold and copper) and non-metallic (minerals, rocks, pottery, pigments, biofacts) artifacts in the graves from the Varna Chalcolithic site are numerous beads of a chalcedony (carnelian) and agate composition. Three main morphological types of beads are described: type 1 – elongated barrel-shaped; type 2 – elongated with trapezohedral facets; type 3 – short cylindrical (Kostov, 2007; Kostov, Pelevina, 2008). The carnelian and related beads of type 2 have a "constant" number of 32 facets – 16+16 on both sides on the elongation of the bead, which is considered probably the earliest in Chalcolithic complex faceting on such a hard mineral (hardness of chalcedony is 6.5–7 on the Mohs scale). In the hole of a single carnelian bead was found a gold mini-cylinder (~2x2 mm). The gold artifacts from the Varna Chalcolithic necropolis are assumed to be the "oldest gold of mankind" according to their total volume and quantity. Analysis of the measured weight of the different types of gold artеfacts (beads, appliqués, rings, bracelets, pectorals and diadems) revealed a weight system with at least two minimal weight units of ~0.14 and ~0.40 g among both mineral and gold beads (Kostov, 2004; 2007). The second one (=2 carats) was suggested as a basic "Chalcolithic unit" with the name van (from the first letters of Varna necropolis).

Museum exhibitions

The artifacts can be seen at the Varna Archaeological Museum and at the National Historical Museum in Sofia. In 2006, some gold objects were included in a major and broadly advertised national exhibition of antique gold treasures in both Sofia and Varna.

The Varna gold started touring the world in 1973; it was included in "The Gold of the Thracian Horseman" national exhibition, shown at many of the world's leading museums and exhibition venues in the 1970s.[9][10][11] In 1982, it was exhibited for 7 months in Japan as "The Oldest Gold in the World – The First European Civilization" with massive publicity, including two full length TV documentaries. In the 1980s and 1990s it was also shown in Canada, Germany, France, Italy, and Israel, among others, and featured in a cover story by the National Geographic Magazine.

The Varna necropolis artifacts were shown for the first time in the United States in 1998 and 1999 as part of a major Bulgarian archaeological exhibition, Thracians' Riches: Treasures from Bulgaria.[12] In 2009–2010, several artifacts were shown at the New York University Institute for the Study of the Ancient World in a joint Bulgarian-Romanian-Moldovan exhibition entitled The Lost World of Old Europe: The Danube Valley, 5000–3500 BC.[13][14][15]

See also

References

  1. ^ [1] Gems and Gemstones: Timeless Natural Beauty of the Mineral World, By Lance Grande
  2. ^ "Archaeologists have discovered the oldest treasure in the world - Afrinik".
  3. ^ a b New perspectives on the Varna cemetery (Bulgaria) 2012-05-12 at the Wayback Machine, By: Higham, Tom; Chapman, John; Slavchev, Vladimir; Gaydarska, Bisserka; Honch, Noah; Yordanov, Yordan; Dimitrova, Branimira; 1 September 2007
  4. ^ Krauß, Raiko; Schmid, Clemens; Kirschenheuter, David; Abele, Jonas; Slavchev, Vladimir; Weninger, Bernhard (2018). "Chronology and development of the Chalcolithic necropolis of Varna I". Documenta Praehistorica. 44: 282. doi:10.4312/dp.44.17.
  5. ^ Miljana Radivojević; Benjamin W. Roberts (2021): 'Balkan metallurgy in a Eurasian context' in Miljana Radivojević; Benjamin W. Roberts; Miroslav Marić; Julka Kuzmanović Cvetković; Thilo Rehren The Rise of Metallurgy in Eurasia. Evolution, Organisation and Consumption of Early Metal in the Balkans, Archaeopress Archaeology, p. 613
  6. ^ Slavchev, Vladimir (2010). "The Varna Eneolithic Cemetery in the Context of the Late Copper Age in the East Balkans". In Anthony, David; Chi, Jennifer (eds.). The Lost World of Old Europe: The Danube Valley, 5000-3500 BC. New York University, Institute for the Study of the Ancient World. pp. 192–211. ISBN 9780691143880.
  7. ^ Shaw, Ian; Jameson, Robert, eds. (1999). "Varna". A Dictionary of Archaeology. Oxford and Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing. p. 603. ISBN 9780631174233.
  8. ^ "The Prehistoric Society – Book Review". www.ucl.ac.uk.
  9. ^ "The Varna Treasures; Archaeological Museum, Varna". Thracian Treasures from Bulgaria: Checklist of The Special Exhibition, June 11 – September 4, 1977, coordinated by Dietrich von Bothmer, items 20–74. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1977. Retrieved 6 July 2018 – via Digital Collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  10. ^ Venedikov, Ivan (1977). "The Archaeological Wealth of Ancient Thrace". The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin. 35 (1): 7–71. doi:10.2307/3258668. JSTOR 3258668. via- Met Publications
  11. ^ Thracian Treasures from Bulgaria; 12 May – 1 July, 1979, Nagoya City Museum; items 20–74. Tokyo: The Chunichi Shimbun, The Tokyo Shimbun. 1979.
  12. ^ Eisenberg, Jerome M. (January 1998). "The Wealth of the Thracians: A Spectacular Exhibitions of Thracian Treasures Travelling America" (PDF). Minerva. Vol. 9, no. 1. p. 9. Retrieved 6 July 2018.
  13. ^ The Lost World of Old Europe: The Danube Valley, 5000–3500 BC. Retrieved on 2009-10-31
  14. ^ The Lost World of Old Europe: The Danube Valley, 5000–3500 BC (Publication). Retrieved on 2009-10-31
  15. ^ A Lost European Culture, Pulled From Obscurity. Retrieved on 2009-12-03

Bibliography

  • Anthony, D. W., J. Y. Chi (Eds.) 2010. The Lost World of Old Europe: The Danube Valley, 5000–3500 BC. Princeton, U.P.
  • Avramova, M. 2000. Myth, ritual and gold of a "civilization that did not take place". – In: Varna Necropolis. Varna, Agató, 15–24.
  • Bahn, P. G. (ed.). 1995. 100 Great Archaeological Discoveries. New York, Barnes & Noble, No. 34.
  • Bailey, D. W. 2004. Varna. – In: Bogucki, P., P. J. Crabtree (Eds.). Ancient Europe 8000 B.C. – A.D. 1000. Vol. 1. The Mesolithic to Copper Age (c. 8000–2000 B.C.). New York, Scribner's, 341–344.
  • Chapman, J. 1990. Social inequality on Bulgarian tells and the Varna problem. – In: R. Samson (ed.). The Social Archaeology of Houses, Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 49–98.
  • Chapman, J. 1991. The creation of social arenas in Varna. – In: P. Garwood (Ed.). Sacred and Profane. Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, Monograph 32, 152–171.
  • Chapman, J., T. Higham, B. Gaydarska, V. Slavchev, N. Honch. 2006. The social context of the emergence, development and abandonment of the Varna Cemetery, Bulgaria. – European Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 9, No. 2–3, 159–183.
  • Chapman, J., B. Gaydarska, V. Slavchev. 2008. The life histories of Spondylus shell rings from the Varna I Eneolithic cemetery (Northeast Bulgaria): transformation, revelation, fragmentation and deposition. – Acta Musei Varnaensis, 6, 139–162.
  • Éluére, Ch., D. Raub. 1991. Investigations on the gold coating technology of the great dish from Varna. – In: J.-P. Mohen (Ed.). Découverte du métal. Picard, Paris, 13–30.
  • Fol, A., J. Lichardus (eds.). 1988. Macht, Herrschaft und Gold: das Graberfeld von Varna (Bulgarien) und die Anfänge einer neuen europäischen Zivilisation. Saarbrücken, Moderne Galerie des Saarland–Museums.
  • Gimbutas, M. 1977. Varna: a sensationally rich cemetery at the Karanovo civilization: about 4500 B.C. – Expedition, Summer, 39–47.
  • Hayden, B. 1998. An archaeological evaluation of the Gimbutas paradigm. – In: The Virtual Pomegranate, 6.
  • Higham, T., J. Chapman, V. Slavchev, B. Gaydarska, N. Honch, Y. Yordanov, B. Dimitrova. 2007. New perspectives on the Varna cemetery (Bulgaria) – AMS dates and social implications. – Antiquity, 81, 313, 640–651.
  • Ivanov, I. 1977. La nécropole chalcolithique de Varna. – Obzor, 38, 87–96.
  • Ivanov, I. 1978. Les fouilles archéologiques de la nécropole chalcolithique а Varna (1972–1976). – Studia Praehistorica, 1–2, 13–26.
  • Ivanov, I. 1982. The Varna Chalcolithic necropolis. – In: The First Civilization in Europe and the Oldest Gold in the World – Varna, Bulgaria. Nippon Television Network Cultural Society, 21–24.
  • Ivanov, I. 1986. Der kupferzeitlishe Friedhof in Varna. – In: G. Biegel (Hrsg.). Das erste Gold der Menschheit. Die älteste Zivilisation in Europa. Freiburg, 30–42.
  • Ivanov, I. 1988. Die Ausgrabungen des Gräberfeldes von Varna. – In: Fol, A., J. Lichardus (Hrsg.). Macht, Herrschaft und Gold. Moderne–Galerie des Saarlands–Museum, Saarbrüken, Krüger, 49–66, 67–78.
  • Ivanov, I. 1991. Les objets metalliques de la necropole chalcolithique de Varna. – In: Découverte du metal. Paris, 9–12.
  • Ivanov, I. S., M. Avramova. 1997. Varna i razhdaneto na evropeiskata tsivilizatsiia. Sofia (in Bulgarian).
  • Ivanov, I., M. Avramova. 2000. Varna Necropolis. The Dawn of European Civilization. Sofia, Agató, 55 p.
  • Kănchev, K. 1978. Microwear studies of the weapons and tools from the chalcolithic necropolis at the city of Varna. – Studia Praehistorica, 1–2, 46–49.
  • Kostov, R. I. 2004. Prehistoric weight system among the gold objects of the Varna Chalcolithic necropolis. – Geology and Mineral Resources, 11, 3, 25–28 (in Bulgarian with an English abstract).
  • Kostov, R. I. 2007. Archaeomineralogy of Neolithic and Chalcolithic Artifacts from Bulgaria and their Significance to Gemmology. Sofia, Publishing House "St. Ivan Rilski", 126 p., I–VIII (in Bulgarian with an English summary).
  • Kostov, R. I. 2016. Symmetry of form and weight: standardization of gold and mineral artifacts from the Varna Chalcolithic necropolis (5th millennium BC). – In: Symmetry Festival 2016 (Ed. by G. Darvas). Vienna, 18–23 July 2016, 176–179.
  • Kostov, R. I., O. Pelevina. 2008. Complex faceted and other carnelian beads from the Varna Chalcolithic necropolis: gemmological analysis. – In: Proceedings of the International Conference "Geology and Archaeomineralogy". Sofia, 29–30 October 2008. Sofia, Publishing House "St. Ivan Rilski", 67–72.
  • Kostov, R. I., T. Dimov, O. Pelevina. 2004. Gemmological characteristics of carnelian and agate beads from the Chalcolithic necropolis at Durankulak and Varna. – Geology and Mineral Resources, 11, 10, 15–24 (in Bulgarian with an English abstract).
  • R. Krauß/C. Schmid/D. Kirschenheuter/J. Abele/V. Slavchev/B. Weninger, Chronology and development of the Chalcolithic necropolis of Varna I. Documenta Praehistorica 44, 2017, 282–305 [online
  • R. Krauß/S. Zäuner/E. Pernicka. 2014. Statistical and Anthropological Analysis of the Varna Necropolis. In: H. Meller/R. Risch/E. Pernicka (Hrsg.), Metalle der Macht – Frühes Gold und Silber. 6. Mitteldeutscher Archäologentag vom 17. bis 19. Oktober 2013 in Halle (Saale). Tagungen des Landesmuseums für Vorgeschichte Halle 11/II. Halle, 371–387.
  • Kuleff, I. 2009. Archeometric investigation of gold in the Chalcolithic necropolis of Varna (5th millennium BC) – Advances in Bulgarian Science, 2, 16–22.
  • Manolakakis, L. 2008. Le mobilier en silex taille des tombes de Varna I. – Acta Musei Varnaensis, 6, 115–138.
  • Manolakakis L. 2005. Les industries lithiques énéolithiques de Bulgarie: Die kupferzeitliche Steinbearbeitung in Bulgarien (Internationale Archäologie), Marie Leidorf, 2005.
  • Marazov, I. 1997. The blacksmith as 'King' in the necropolis of Varna. – In: J. Marler (Ed.). From the Realm.
  • Marler, J. 1999. A response to Brian Hayden's article "An archaeological evaluation of the Gimbutas paradigm". – In: The Virtual Pomegranate, 10.
  • Nikolov, V. 1994. Der soziale und religious-mythologische Kontext des Goldes in der Nekropole bei Varna. – Ann. Department of Archaeology, New Bulgarian University, I, 4–7.
  • Renfrew, Colin (November 1978). "Varna and the social context of early metallurgy". Antiquity. 52 (206): 199–203. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00072197. S2CID 162450895.
  • Renfrew, C. 1986. Varna and the emergence of wealth in prehistoric Europe. – In: The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective (A. Appadurai, Ed.). Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 141–168.
  • Renfrew, C., P. Bahn. 1996. Archaeology: theories, methods, and practice. New York, Thames and Hudson.
  • Slavchev, V. 2004. Fragmentation research and the Varna Eneolithic cemetery Spondylus rings. – Proceedings of the Varna Round Table.
  • Smolenov, H., H. Mihailov et V. Bozhilov. 2009. Archeo-Logique: La méthode heuristique des symboles et des conniassances sacrés. Sofia, Magoart.
  • Todorova, H. 1982. Kupferzeitliche Siedlungen in Nordostbulgarien. München, Beck, Materialien zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Archäologie, Band 13.
  • Todorova, H. 1978. The Eneolithic Period in Bulgaria in the Fifth Millennium B.C. Oxford, British Archaeological Reports, BAR supplementary series 49.

External links

  • Varna Archaeological Museum website (in Bulgarian and English).
  • Specialized Varna Necropolis website (in Bulgarian)
  • Varna Necropolis Cultural Tourism page on the Golden Sands Resort web site.
  • Another photo by Ivo Hadjimishev
  • New perspectives on the Varna cemetery (Bulgaria) The Free Library

Coordinates: 43°12′47″N 27°51′52″E / 43.21306°N 27.86444°E / 43.21306; 27.86444

varna, necropolis, bulgarian, Варненски, некропол, varna, cemetery, burial, site, western, industrial, zone, varna, approximately, half, kilometre, from, lake, varna, from, city, centre, internationally, considered, archaeological, sites, world, prehistory, ol. The Varna Necropolis Bulgarian Varnenski nekropol or Varna Cemetery is a burial site in the western industrial zone of Varna approximately half a kilometre from Lake Varna and 4 km from the city centre internationally considered one of the key archaeological sites in world prehistory The oldest gold treasure and jewelry in the world dating from 4 600 BC to 4 200 BC was discovered at the site 1 Several prehistoric Bulgarian finds are considered no less old the golden treasures of Hotnitsa Durankulak artifacts from the Kurgan settlement of Yunatsite near Pazardzhik the golden treasure Sakar as well as beads and gold jewelry found in the Kurgan settlement of Provadia Solnitsata salt pit However Varna gold is most often called the oldest since this treasure is the largest and most diverse 2 Reconstruction of elite male burial with some of the world s oldest gold jewellery c 4 500 BC Further information Varna culture Old Europe archaeology and Danube civilisation Contents 1 Discovery and excavation 2 Chronology 3 Burial rites 4 Historical impact 5 Museum exhibitions 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksDiscovery and excavation Edit Varna necropolis grave offerings on exhibit at the Varna Museum The site was accidentally discovered in October 1972 by excavator operator Raycho Marinov The first to value the significant historical meaning was Dimitar Zlatarski the creator of the Dalgopol Historical Museum He was called by the locals to examine what they had found earlier that day He realized how important the finding was so he contacted the Varna Historical Museum and after signing government papers he handed over the research to the direction of Mihail Lazarov 1972 1976 and Ivan Ivanov 1972 1991 About 30 of the estimated necropolis area is still not excavated A total of 294 graves have been found in the necropolis 3 many containing sophisticated examples of metallurgy gold and copper pottery about 600 pieces including gold painted ones high quality flint and obsidian blades beads and shells Chronology EditThe graves have been dated to 4569 4340 BCE by radiocarbon dating in 2006 4 3 and belong to the Chalcolithic Varna culture which is the local variant of the KGKVI Burial rites Edit Clay anthropomorphic head Late Chalcolithic period 4500 4000 BCE Hamangia Culture found submerged in Varna Lake Varna Archeology Museum There are crouched and straight inhumations Some graves do not contain a skeleton but grave gifts cenotaphs These symbolic empty graves are the richest in gold artifacts Three thousand gold artifacts have been found with a weight of approximately six kilograms Grave 43 contained more gold than has been found in the entire rest of the world for that epoch It was initially identified as the grave of a prince but is now thought to be that of a smith 5 Three symbolic graves contained masks of unbaked clay Varna is the oldest cemetery yet found where humans were buried with abundant golden ornaments The weight and the number of gold finds in the Varna cemetery exceeds by several times the combined weight and number of all of the gold artifacts found in all excavated sites of the same millenium 5000 4000 BC from all over the world including Mesopotamia and Egypt Three graves contained gold objects that together accounted for more than half of the total weight of all gold grave goods yielded by the cemetery A scepter symbol of a supreme secular or religious authority was discovered in each of these three graves Slavchev 2010 6 The findings showed that the Varna culture had trade relations with distant lands possibly including the lower Volga and the Cyclades perhaps exporting metal goods and salt from the Provadiya rock salt mine Solnitsata The copper ore used in the artifacts originated from a Sredna Gora mine near Stara Zagora and Mediterranean Spondylus shells found in the graves may have served as primitive currency The culture had sophisticated religious beliefs about afterlife and had developed hierarchical status differences 7 The site offers the oldest known burial evidence of an elite man Marija Gimbutas claims that the end of the fifth millennium BC is the time that the development to male dominance began in Europe The high status man buried with the most remarkable amount of gold held a war adze or mace and wore a gold penis sheath Bull shaped gold platelets might also have venerated virility instinctual force and warfare Gimbutas holds that the artifacts were made largely by local craftsmen Historical impact Edit Golden objects found in the necropolis According to Gimbutas 1991 The discontinuity of the Varna Karanovo Vinca and Lengyel cultures in their main territories and the large scale population shifts to the north and northwest are indirect evidence of a catastrophe of such proportions that cannot be explained by possible climatic change land exhaustion or epidemics for which there is no evidence in the second half of the 5th millennium B C Direct evidence of the incursion of horse riding warriors is found not only in single burials of males under barrows but in the emergence of a whole complex of Kurgan cultural traits According to J Chapman Once upon a time not so very long ago it was widely accepted that steppe nomads from the North Pontic zone invaded the Balkans putting an end to the Climax Copper Age society that produced the apogee of tell living autonomous copper metallurgy and as the grandest climax the Varna cemetery with its stunning early goldwork Now the boot is very much on the other foot and it is the Varna complex and its associated communities that are held responsible for stimulating the onset of prestige goods dominated steppe mortuary practice following the expansion of farming 8 Among the metallic gold and copper and non metallic minerals rocks pottery pigments biofacts artifacts in the graves from the Varna Chalcolithic site are numerous beads of a chalcedony carnelian and agate composition Three main morphological types of beads are described type 1 elongated barrel shaped type 2 elongated with trapezohedral facets type 3 short cylindrical Kostov 2007 Kostov Pelevina 2008 The carnelian and related beads of type 2 have a constant number of 32 facets 16 16 on both sides on the elongation of the bead which is considered probably the earliest in Chalcolithic complex faceting on such a hard mineral hardness of chalcedony is 6 5 7 on the Mohs scale In the hole of a single carnelian bead was found a gold mini cylinder 2x2 mm The gold artifacts from the Varna Chalcolithic necropolis are assumed to be the oldest gold of mankind according to their total volume and quantity Analysis of the measured weight of the different types of gold artefacts beads appliques rings bracelets pectorals and diadems revealed a weight system with at least two minimal weight units of 0 14 and 0 40 g among both mineral and gold beads Kostov 2004 2007 The second one 2 carats was suggested as a basic Chalcolithic unit with the name van from the first letters of Varna necropolis Museum exhibitions EditThe artifacts can be seen at the Varna Archaeological Museum and at the National Historical Museum in Sofia In 2006 some gold objects were included in a major and broadly advertised national exhibition of antique gold treasures in both Sofia and Varna The Varna gold started touring the world in 1973 it was included in The Gold of the Thracian Horseman national exhibition shown at many of the world s leading museums and exhibition venues in the 1970s 9 10 11 In 1982 it was exhibited for 7 months in Japan as The Oldest Gold in the World The First European Civilization with massive publicity including two full length TV documentaries In the 1980s and 1990s it was also shown in Canada Germany France Italy and Israel among others and featured in a cover story by the National Geographic Magazine The Varna necropolis artifacts were shown for the first time in the United States in 1998 and 1999 as part of a major Bulgarian archaeological exhibition Thracians Riches Treasures from Bulgaria 12 In 2009 2010 several artifacts were shown at the New York University Institute for the Study of the Ancient World in a joint Bulgarian Romanian Moldovan exhibition entitled The Lost World of Old Europe The Danube Valley 5000 3500 BC 13 14 15 See also EditOld Europe Prehistoric Balkans Varna culture Hamangia culture directly related Gumelnița Karanovo culture Karanovo culture Lengyel culture distantly related References Edit 1 Gems and Gemstones Timeless Natural Beauty of the Mineral World By Lance Grande Archaeologists have discovered the oldest treasure in the world Afrinik a b New perspectives on the Varna cemetery Bulgaria Archived 2012 05 12 at the Wayback Machine By Higham Tom Chapman John Slavchev Vladimir Gaydarska Bisserka Honch Noah Yordanov Yordan Dimitrova Branimira 1 September 2007 Krauss Raiko Schmid Clemens Kirschenheuter David Abele Jonas Slavchev Vladimir Weninger Bernhard 2018 Chronology and development of the Chalcolithic necropolis of Varna I Documenta Praehistorica 44 282 doi 10 4312 dp 44 17 Miljana Radivojevic Benjamin W Roberts 2021 Balkan metallurgy in a Eurasian context in Miljana Radivojevic Benjamin W Roberts Miroslav Maric Julka Kuzmanovic Cvetkovic Thilo Rehren The Rise of Metallurgy in Eurasia Evolution Organisation and Consumption of Early Metal in the Balkans Archaeopress Archaeology p 613 Slavchev Vladimir 2010 The Varna Eneolithic Cemetery in the Context of the Late Copper Age in the East Balkans In Anthony David Chi Jennifer eds The Lost World of Old Europe The Danube Valley 5000 3500 BC New York University Institute for the Study of the Ancient World pp 192 211 ISBN 9780691143880 Shaw Ian Jameson Robert eds 1999 Varna A Dictionary of Archaeology Oxford and Malden MA Blackwell Publishing p 603 ISBN 9780631174233 The Prehistoric Society Book Review www ucl ac uk The Varna Treasures Archaeological Museum Varna Thracian Treasures from Bulgaria Checklist of The Special Exhibition June 11 September 4 1977 coordinated by Dietrich von Bothmer items 20 74 New York Metropolitan Museum of Art 1977 Retrieved 6 July 2018 via Digital Collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art Venedikov Ivan 1977 The Archaeological Wealth of Ancient Thrace The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 35 1 7 71 doi 10 2307 3258668 JSTOR 3258668 via Met Publications Thracian Treasures from Bulgaria 12 May 1 July 1979 Nagoya City Museum items 20 74 Tokyo The Chunichi Shimbun The Tokyo Shimbun 1979 Eisenberg Jerome M January 1998 The Wealth of the Thracians A Spectacular Exhibitions of Thracian Treasures Travelling America PDF Minerva Vol 9 no 1 p 9 Retrieved 6 July 2018 The Lost World of Old Europe The Danube Valley 5000 3500 BC Retrieved on 2009 10 31 The Lost World of Old Europe The Danube Valley 5000 3500 BC Publication Retrieved on 2009 10 31 A Lost European Culture Pulled From Obscurity Retrieved on 2009 12 03Bibliography EditAnthony D W J Y Chi Eds 2010 The Lost World of Old Europe The Danube Valley 5000 3500 BC Princeton U P Avramova M 2000 Myth ritual and gold of a civilization that did not take place In Varna Necropolis Varna Agato 15 24 Bahn P G ed 1995 100 Great Archaeological Discoveries New York Barnes amp Noble No 34 Bailey D W 2004 Varna In Bogucki P P J Crabtree Eds Ancient Europe 8000 B C A D 1000 Vol 1 The Mesolithic to Copper Age c 8000 2000 B C New York Scribner s 341 344 Chapman J 1990 Social inequality on Bulgarian tells and the Varna problem In R Samson ed The Social Archaeology of Houses Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 49 98 Chapman J 1991 The creation of social arenas in Varna In P Garwood Ed Sacred and Profane Oxford University Committee for Archaeology Monograph 32 152 171 Chapman J T Higham B Gaydarska V Slavchev N Honch 2006 The social context of the emergence development and abandonment of the Varna Cemetery Bulgaria European Journal of Archaeology Vol 9 No 2 3 159 183 Chapman J B Gaydarska V Slavchev 2008 The life histories of Spondylus shell rings from the Varna I Eneolithic cemetery Northeast Bulgaria transformation revelation fragmentation and deposition Acta Musei Varnaensis 6 139 162 Eluere Ch D Raub 1991 Investigations on the gold coating technology of the great dish from Varna In J P Mohen Ed Decouverte du metal Picard Paris 13 30 Fol A J Lichardus eds 1988 Macht Herrschaft und Gold das Graberfeld von Varna Bulgarien und die Anfange einer neuen europaischen Zivilisation Saarbrucken Moderne Galerie des Saarland Museums Gimbutas M 1977 Varna a sensationally rich cemetery at the Karanovo civilization about 4500 B C Expedition Summer 39 47 Hayden B 1998 An archaeological evaluation of the Gimbutas paradigm In The Virtual Pomegranate 6 Higham T J Chapman V Slavchev B Gaydarska N Honch Y Yordanov B Dimitrova 2007 New perspectives on the Varna cemetery Bulgaria AMS dates and social implications Antiquity 81 313 640 651 Ivanov I 1977 La necropole chalcolithique de Varna Obzor 38 87 96 Ivanov I 1978 Les fouilles archeologiques de la necropole chalcolithique a Varna 1972 1976 Studia Praehistorica 1 2 13 26 Ivanov I 1982 The Varna Chalcolithic necropolis In The First Civilization in Europe and the Oldest Gold in the World Varna Bulgaria Nippon Television Network Cultural Society 21 24 Ivanov I 1986 Der kupferzeitlishe Friedhof in Varna In G Biegel Hrsg Das erste Gold der Menschheit Die alteste Zivilisation in Europa Freiburg 30 42 Ivanov I 1988 Die Ausgrabungen des Graberfeldes von Varna In Fol A J Lichardus Hrsg Macht Herrschaft und Gold Moderne Galerie des Saarlands Museum Saarbruken Kruger 49 66 67 78 Ivanov I 1991 Les objets metalliques de la necropole chalcolithique de Varna In Decouverte du metal Paris 9 12 Ivanov I S M Avramova 1997 Varna i razhdaneto na evropeiskata tsivilizatsiia Sofia in Bulgarian Ivanov I M Avramova 2000 Varna Necropolis The Dawn of European Civilization Sofia Agato 55 p Kănchev K 1978 Microwear studies of the weapons and tools from the chalcolithic necropolis at the city of Varna Studia Praehistorica 1 2 46 49 Kostov R I 2004 Prehistoric weight system among the gold objects of the Varna Chalcolithic necropolis Geology and Mineral Resources 11 3 25 28 in Bulgarian with an English abstract Kostov R I 2007 Archaeomineralogy of Neolithic and Chalcolithic Artifacts from Bulgaria and their Significance to Gemmology Sofia Publishing House St Ivan Rilski 126 p I VIII in Bulgarian with an English summary Kostov R I 2016 Symmetry of form and weight standardization of gold and mineral artifacts from the Varna Chalcolithic necropolis 5th millennium BC In Symmetry Festival 2016 Ed by G Darvas Vienna 18 23 July 2016 176 179 Kostov R I O Pelevina 2008 Complex faceted and other carnelian beads from the Varna Chalcolithic necropolis gemmological analysis In Proceedings of the International Conference Geology and Archaeomineralogy Sofia 29 30 October 2008 Sofia Publishing House St Ivan Rilski 67 72 Kostov R I T Dimov O Pelevina 2004 Gemmological characteristics of carnelian and agate beads from the Chalcolithic necropolis at Durankulak and Varna Geology and Mineral Resources 11 10 15 24 in Bulgarian with an English abstract R Krauss C Schmid D Kirschenheuter J Abele V Slavchev B Weninger Chronology and development of the Chalcolithic necropolis of Varna I Documenta Praehistorica 44 2017 282 305 online R Krauss S Zauner E Pernicka 2014 Statistical and Anthropological Analysis of the Varna Necropolis In H Meller R Risch E Pernicka Hrsg Metalle der Macht Fruhes Gold und Silber 6 Mitteldeutscher Archaologentag vom 17 bis 19 Oktober 2013 in Halle Saale Tagungen des Landesmuseums fur Vorgeschichte Halle 11 II Halle 371 387 Kuleff I 2009 Archeometric investigation of gold in the Chalcolithic necropolis of Varna 5th millennium BC Advances in Bulgarian Science 2 16 22 Manolakakis L 2008 Le mobilier en silex taille des tombes de Varna I Acta Musei Varnaensis 6 115 138 Manolakakis L 2005 Les industries lithiques eneolithiques de Bulgarie Die kupferzeitliche Steinbearbeitung in Bulgarien Internationale Archaologie Marie Leidorf 2005 Marazov I 1997 The blacksmith as King in the necropolis of Varna In J Marler Ed From the Realm Marler J 1999 A response to Brian Hayden s article An archaeological evaluation of the Gimbutas paradigm In The Virtual Pomegranate 10 Nikolov V 1994 Der soziale und religious mythologische Kontext des Goldes in der Nekropole bei Varna Ann Department of Archaeology New Bulgarian University I 4 7 Renfrew Colin November 1978 Varna and the social context of early metallurgy Antiquity 52 206 199 203 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00072197 S2CID 162450895 Renfrew C 1986 Varna and the emergence of wealth in prehistoric Europe In The Social Life of Things Commodities in Cultural Perspective A Appadurai Ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press 141 168 Renfrew C P Bahn 1996 Archaeology theories methods and practice New York Thames and Hudson Slavchev V 2004 Fragmentation research and the Varna Eneolithic cemetery Spondylus rings Proceedings of the Varna Round Table Smolenov H H Mihailov et V Bozhilov 2009 Archeo Logique La methode heuristique des symboles et des conniassances sacres Sofia Magoart Todorova H 1982 Kupferzeitliche Siedlungen in Nordostbulgarien Munchen Beck Materialien zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Archaologie Band 13 Todorova H 1978 The Eneolithic Period in Bulgaria in the Fifth Millennium B C Oxford British Archaeological Reports BAR supplementary series 49 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Varna Necropolis Varna Archaeological Museum website in Bulgarian and English Specialized Varna Necropolis website in Bulgarian Varna Necropolis Cultural Tourism page on the Golden Sands Resort web site Another photo by Ivo Hadjimishev The Durankulak Lake Town Kibela s Temple Drevnoto selishe pri Durankulashkoto ezero Ezerniyat grad New perspectives on the Varna cemetery Bulgaria The Free LibraryCoordinates 43 12 47 N 27 51 52 E 43 21306 N 27 86444 E 43 21306 27 86444 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Varna Necropolis amp oldid 1143096645, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.