- Basarabi culture
The Basarabi culture was an archeological culture in Romania, dated between 8th - 7th centuries BC. It was named after Basarabi, a village in
Dolj County , south-westernRomania , nowadays an administrative component of theCalafat municipality.The Basarabi culture is related to the
Hallstatt culture of theIron Age period that, when normalised, is uniformly spread apart from a reduced number of sites inMuntenia , the central Moldavian Carpathians andOltenia .The Hallstatt A (12-11th BC) and B (10-8th BC) corresponds to the late
Bronze Age , Hallstatt C (7th BC) to the earlyIron Age , and Hallstatt D (6th BC) to theIron Age . TheHallstatt culture probably consisted of many different peoples and language groups. The variant known as the Basarabi culture was present over much ofRomania ,Bulgaria ,Serbia ,Voivodina , and centralMoldavia up to theDnester River around 650 BC (Nistru in Romanian).During this period the Greeks founded cities along the
Black Sea coast and the first written records describe their encounters with the indigenous people.
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