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Pits and Pit-dwellings in Southeast Europe*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2015
Extract
In connexion with the publication of the report on the neolithic settlement at Koln-Lindenthal I undertook, in the autumn of 1933, with the support of the Notgemeinschaft der deutschen Wissenschaft, two months’ exploration in Hungary, Rumania and Jugoslavia. Apart from museum researches in prehistory the chief object of this journey was to study the building methods of the primitive peasant cultures in these countries. In compiling the report on the ‘band keramik’ settlement at Koln-Lindenthal it was found necessary, in order to elucidate many of the finds, to compare them with ethnographic material from settlements peopled by primitive peasants in modern Europe. This method proved no less helpful than when employed earlier by Oelmann, Menghinl and others in dealing with other prehistoric studies. Prehistoric cultures invariably comprise objects the use of which can only be ascertained by comparison with cognate ethnographic or cultural material. For, owing to the conservative character of the peasant, modern primitive peasant cultures have retained certain structures and institutions which are derived, without a doubt, from archaic, even neolithic prototypes. Comparison of modern material with our prehistoric finds by no means postulates a direct historic connexion between the two, especially when the objects compared are widely separated in place, culture, nationality and race. Rather is ethnography called in to furnish a sound basis for assumptions about our finds by relating them to similar phenomena of modern times.
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- Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1936
Footnotes
From the Bonner Jahrbücher, CXXXIX, 134–44, Darmstadt, 1934, by permission of the Editor.
References
1 Oelmann, F. ‘Hausurnen oder Speicherurnen?’ Bonn. Jahrb, 134 p.iff.; Google Scholar ‘Das Speichermodell von Melos’ Athen. MittlL, p.19 ff.;Google Scholar Menghin, Weltgeschichte der Steinzeit Vienna 1930.Google Scholar
2 Personal communication from Dr Nestor of Bucharest.
3 Miete, stack : the word originally denoted a heap of beet or the like stacked in a pit ; later it was used for the pit.
4 Photos in the Ethnographic Museum, Budapest.
5 Personal communication from Professor Vuia of Klausenburg (Kluj).
6 Cf. Söregi, J. Das Problem der in die Erde gegrabenen bienenkorbf&rmigen Gruben Debreczin,1932 Google ScholarSöregi’s identification of the conical pits as clay-pits connected with pot-making cannot be accepted as of universal validity. His main arguments against the theory that they were storage-pits-that the walls of modern storage-pits are always fired and that conical- or hive-shaped pits are found only in clay soil-are by no means always applicable.
7 Cf. Buttler, and Haberey,Die bandkeramische Ansiedlung von Köln-Lindenthal, p.21 (5)Google Scholar
8 Anz.f. eis. Alt., 1910, 5, p. 217 ff
9 Germania, 1923, vm, 82, fig. 1 (Kb).
10 Anz.f. Schweiz. Alt.1913 xv, p. 1 ff, fig. 3, pit 32;Bonn. Jahrb., 139, p. 211.
11 Op. cit., pi. 21 (7).
12 Bonn. Jahrb., 122, plan, pi. xxiv, pits 67, 77.
13 Schriften des Hist. Mus. d. Stadt Frankfurt/M, u, p. 55, fig. 1, pit 7.
14 Personal communication from Dr Petrovic, Ethnographic Museum, Belgrade.
15 Cf. Cf. Oelmann, Haus und Hof im Altertum 1927 1, 11.Google Scholar
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20 Schachtzabel, Suppl. to vol. 11 of Internat. Arch. f. Ethn., p. 58 (Temben). At Horns in Tripolis I measured in 1932 a rectangular Arab pit-dwelling sunk £ m. into the ground. It resembled the pit-stable in fig. 10 described pp. 34-35.
21 Ebner, op. dt., 1929, xxi, 4, fig. 5.
22 Plopsor, ‘Bordeiul in Oltenia ’, Bull. Soc. Reg. Romàne de Geogr. in Bucaresti, 1922, XLi, 124 if.
23 Photos in the picture collection of the Ethnographic Museum, Budapest.
24 Personal communication from Dr Ebner of the Ethnographic Museum, Budapest.
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