- Baden culture
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History of research
The Baden culture was named after
Baden near Vienna by the Austrian prehistorianOswald Menghin . It is also known as Ossarn-group and Pecel-culture. The first monographic treatment was produced by J. Banner in 1956. Other important scholars are E. Neustupny,Ida Bognar-Kutzian andVera Nemejcova-Pavukova . Baden has been interpreted as part of a much larger archaeological complex encompassing cultures at the mouth of theDanube (Ezero-Cernavoda III ) and theTroad . In 1963,Nándor Kalicz had proposed a connection between the Baden-culture andTroy , based on the anthropomorphic urns from Ózd-Centre (Hungary). This interpretation cannot be maintained in the face of Radiocarbon-dates. The author himself (2004) has called this interpretation a "cul-de-sac", based on a misguided historical methodology.Chronology
Baden developed out of the late
Lengyel culture in the western Carpathian Basin. Němejcová-Pavuková proposes a polygenetic origin, including southeastern elements transmitted by the Bulgarian Ezero-culture of the early Bronze Age (Ezero, layers XIII-VII) and Cernavoda III/Cotofeni. Ecsedy parallelises Baden with EH II in Thessaly, Parzinger withSitagroi IV. Baden was approximately contemporaneous with the lateFunnelbeaker culture , theGlobular Amphora culture and the earlyCorded Ware culture .The following phases are known: Balaton-Lasinya, Baden-Boleráz, Post-Boleráz (divided into early, Fonyod/Tekovský Hrádok and late, Červený Hrádok/Szeghalom-Dioér by Vera Němejcová-Pavuková) and classical Baden.Phase Subgroups Date sites Balaton-Lasinya - 3700 BC cal - Boleráz - 3500 BC Pilismarot Ia Štúrovo - Letkès Ib Nitriansky Hrádok - Lánycsok, Vysoki breh Ic Zlkovce - Balatonboglár Post-Boleraz - early Fonyod/Tekovský Hrádok - - late Červený Hrádok/Szeghalom-Dioér - - Classical Baden 3400 BC - II, III older - Nevidzany, Viss IV younger - Uny, Chlaba, Ózd ettlement
The settlements were often located on hilltops and were normally undefended.
Burial
Both inhumations and cremations are known. In Slovakia and Hungary, the burned remains were often placed in
anthropomorphic urns (Slána, Ózd-Center). InNitriansky Hrádok , a mass-grave was uncovered. There are also burials of cattle. Up to now, the only cemetery known from the early Boleráz-phase is Pilismárot (Hungary). It also contained a few examples of stroke-ornamented pottery.Economy
The economy was mixed. Full-scale agriculture was present, along with the keeping of domestic stock -- pigs, goats, etc. The Baden-culture has some of the earliest attestation of wheeled vehicles in central Europe (so-called waggon-models in pottery). Finds of actual waggons have not been made, but there are burials of pairs of cattle that have been interpreted as draught animals.
Interpretation
Within the
Kurgan hypothesis espoused byMarija Gimbutas , the Baden culture is seen as being Indo-Europeanized. For proponents of the older theory that seeks the Indo-European homeland in central Europe in the area occupied by the precedingFunnelbeaker culture , it is similarly considered Indo-Europeanized.The ethnic and linguistic identity of the people associated with this culture is impossible to ascertain. It may be tempting to put the Italic and
Celt ic stocks together here at some point, at least in that great European mixing bowl, the plains ofHungary , but this is a speculation lacking any archaeological foundation.Notes
ources
*J. Banner, Die Peceler Kultur. Arch. Hungarica 35, 1956.
*Vera Němejcová-Pavuková 1984. K problematike trvania a konca boleazkej skupiny na Slovensku. Slovenska Arch. 34, 1986, 133-176.
*J. P. Mallory , "Baden Culture", "Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture", Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997.
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