- Varna culture
The Varna culture belongs to the late
Eneolithic of northernBulgaria . It is conventionally dated between 4400-4100 BC cal, that is, contemporary withKaranovo VI in the South. It is characterised by polychrome pottery and rich cemeteries, the most famous of which areVarna Necropolis , the eponymous site, and theDurankulak complex, which comprises the largest prehistoric cemetery in southeastern Europe (1,200 graves: published), with an adjoining coeval Neolithic settlement (published) and an unpublished and incompletely excavated Chalcolithic settlement. Burial is normally flat on the back, sometimes covered with stones. Grave gifts include bracelets ofSpondylus ,carnelian beads, gold beads and pendants, and blades of blond balcanic flint. The culture seems to come to a sudden end around 4100 BC, whichHenrietta Todorova explains with a dramatic climatic change.Notes
References
*Khenrieta Todorova, The eneolithic period in Bulgaria in the fifth millennium B.C. Oxford : British Archaeological Reports , 1978. BAR supplementary series 49.
* Henrieta Todorova, Kupferzeitliche Siedlungen in Nordostbulgarien. München: Beck 1982. Materialien zur allgemeinen und vergleichenden Archäologie 13.
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