Trypillia Mega-Sites and European Prehistory

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38th Century BCE
3rd Millennium BCE
4th Millennium BCE
AMS Date
archaeological geophysics
Assembly Houses
bila
Bila Tserkva
C3 Grass
Category=NK
Circular Anomalies
Combustion Chamber
Copper Age Settlement
Copper Age societies
data
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
geomagnetic
Geomagnetic Data
Geomagnetic Survey
Great Zimbabwe
kilns
Long Houses
Low Density Urban
Neolithic demography
Oak Hornbeam Forest
Perimeter Ditch
Population Agglomerations
pottery
Pottery Kiln
Pr Ep
prehistoric
prehistoric large-scale settlements
region
Ru Bl Ev
settlement pattern analysis
social organisation archaeology
subsistence strategies
survey
Trypillia Mega-Sites
tserkva
UFG
uman

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367889517
  • Weight: 610g
  • Dimensions: 210 x 297mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In European prehistory population agglomerations of more than 10,000 inhabitants per site are a seldom phenomenon. A big surprise to the archaeological community was the discovery of Trypillia mega-sites of more than 250 hectares and with remains of more than 2000 houses by a multidisciplinary approach of Soviet and Ukrainian archaeology, including aerial photography, geophysical prospection and excavations nearly 50 years ago. The extraordinary development took place at the border of the North Pontic Forest Steppe and Steppe zone ca. 4100–3400 BCE.

Since then many questions arose which are of main relevance: Why, how and under which environmental conditions did Trypillia mega-sites develop? How long did they last? Were social and/or ecological reasons responsible for this social experiment? Are Trypillia and the similar sized settlement of Uruk two different concepts of social behaviour?

Paradigm change in fieldwork and excavation strategies enabled research teams during the last decade to analyse the mega-sites in their spatial and social complexity. High precision geophysics, target excavations and a new design of systematic field strategies deliver empirical data representative for the large sites. Archaeological research contributed immensely to aspects of anthropogenic induced steppe development and subsistence concepts that did not reach the carrying capacities. Probabilistic models based on 14C-dates made the contemporaneity of the mega-site house structures most probable.

In consequence, Trypillia mega-sites are an independent European phenomenon that contrasts both concepts of urbanism and social stratification that is seen with similar demographic figures in Mesopotamia. The new Trypillia research can be read as the methodological progress in European archaeology.

Johannes

Muller is Professor and Director at the Institute of Pre-and Protohistoric Archaeology of Christian-Albrechts-University Kiel.