Intimate Connections Between Anatolia and Thrace had been suspected ever since Kazarov published his finds from Kyrillovo. Despite the peculiarities in their handles, the vases and bronzes look so distinctively Anatolian that Thrace seemed just a provincial extension of the Early Troadic Bronze Age culture as known in 1914. Since 1945 new finds from Mikhalits, taken in conjunction with Mikov's discoveries at Karanovo and those of Hamit Zubeyr Koşay, at Büyük Güllücek have put these relations in an entirely new light. Mikhalits, near Svilingrad where a depas amphikypellon had been found in 1941, lies so close to the present frontier that fuller excavation since 1945 has been impracticable. But the observations made in that year alone are sufficiently illuminating. The site is not a tell, but occupies the crest of a natural ridge, and was defended by a stone wall enclosing an area of 80–90 m. in diameter.
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2 Bittel, , Prähistorische Forschungen in Kleinasien, Istanbul, 1934Google Scholar.
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7 Lamb, , Thermi, p. 159Google Scholar; Pl. XXIV, 31, 78; Schliemann Sammlung, 8831–5.
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10 Ibid., p. 65.
11 Ibid., Fig. 235, 3; 244, 1–10; Thermi, Pl. XVI, 1.
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14 Hausler, in Wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift der Martin-Luther Universität, Halle–Wittenburg, V, 1955, 102Google Scholar.
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17 e.g., by Gaul, , “The Neolithic Period in Bulgaria” (American Sch. Preh. Research, Bull., XVI), 1948, pp. 229–234Google Scholar.
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23 Material in museum of Nova Zagora unpublished; some vases bear cord impressions and one vase, in black ware with red blotches, is paralleled at Maltepe near Sivas, Belleten, 44, 1937, p. 670Google Scholar, no. 11.
24 Personal communication to the writer.
25 Mikov, , “Selisča mogila otu bronzovata epokha do s. Veselinovo,” Izvestiya Bulgar. Arkheol. Institut, XIII, 1939Google Scholar.