Janus Pannonius Múzeum Évkönyve 26 (1981) (Pécs, 1982)

Régészet - Ecsedy István: A kelet-magyarországi rézkor fejlődésének fontosabb tényezői

A KELET-MAGYARORSZÁGI RÉZKOR 93 les to the Bodrogkeresztur Culture possibly having led a stock-breeding, half nomadic way of life which must have been similar to the economy of the Cer­navoda III, Boleráz and Baden population. 02 The new ethnic factor of the Late Copper Age in Eastern Hungary was provided by the groups of the Pit-Grave Culture as shown by the kurgan burials of identical type all over the area. They can be equated with the similar burials of the steppe on the one hand and with the Baden and Cotofeni cul­tures on the other. 63 Only the earliest of them are synchronous with the very end of the Usatovo Cul­ture which as a whole can be dated earlier than the Pit-Grave burials in Eastern Hungary. Our study concerning the relative chronology of the Pit-Grave burials has been published and the significant featu­res of the ritual are well known too. 64 It is some re­marks concerning the Pit-Grave Culture and its sig­nificance which seems necessary before analysing their possible role in the transformation of the Cop­per Age in South-Eastern Europe. The distribution of the Pit-Grave burials West of the Dniester is the same as that of the Csongrád ­Marosdécse - Casimcea type. Judging from the cha­racteristic graves found under the barrows of dif­ferent kurgan - fields or - groups it seems likely that in the Late Copper Age massive groups of the steppic nomads invaded the areas suitable for them from the Lower Danube until the Tisza river. The identical features of the ritual found even in gra­ves relatively far from each other possibly indicate the ethnic and cultural unity. It is well known too, especially by the scholars studiing the prehistoric cultures of the steppe, that the Pit-Grave burials of the Lower Danube - Olt - Tisza area constitute a compact group. They may well represent a particu­lar tribe within the Pit-Grave Culture covering a huge territory during a considerable period and ob­viously containing the material of several nomadic tribes with only a few of them specifiable for the time being. 65 It must be stressed that we count only with the graves belonging beyond doubt to the Pit­Grave (Yamna) type judging from their rite since it is at least doubtful wether all of the tumulus bu­rials can be regarded as belonging to the „Kurgan Culture". It does not seem methodologically justi­fiable to choose widely distributed phenomenons like the tumulus itself, the fortified settlements and some techniques of vessel-decoration like the Win­kelschnur" and „Furchenstich" as distinguishing fea­tures and to postulate special connections judging from their occurence. 66-67 Differently from all the later migrations from the steppe area only the burials in question testify the westward movement of the Pit-Grave popula­tion. West of the Dniester there have not been ves­sels found which could be regarded as characteris­tic products of the Pit-Grave population i. e. so cal­led „Yamna" pottery. This fact implies that it is impossible to bring in connection the settlements with the graves possibly belonging together or to de­termine the settlements at all. The direct evidence proves nothing more than the appearance of the Pit-Grave population on the area. A seemingly logi­cal hypothesis has been formed concerning the re­lative chronology judging from the results of the evaluation of the kurgan-tratigraphies and some radiocarbon-measurings. According to this hypot­hesis the earliest pit-graves West of the Dniester are likely to be equated with the Late Usatovo - Early Cernavoda III period and the latest ones are presu­mably contemporaneaus with the Late Cotofeni, La­te Baden, Early Glina III - Schneckenberg В (Eze­rovo-Zimnicea) cultures - and there is not any piece of evidence for dating precisely the majority of the graves within this relatively long period of time. 68 It seems obvious that any assumption relating to the economy and/or cultural relations of the Pit­Grave Culture can be risked only cautiously and there is not any sound basis for suggesting the im­pact of the Pit-Grave population on the areas out­side the distribution of the pit-graves. We are possibly not far from right supposing that at least one part of the material culture of the Pit­Grave groups namely the pottery was altered after the steppeans had occupied the areas West of the Dniester. The shift must have been induced by the impact of the new neighbourhood resulting in the disappearance of the traditional „Yamna" pottery widely used on the steppe earlier and in the adop­tion of the types produced by the neighbouring (or subjugated?) groups. Consequently, it can be assumed that the settle­ments of the Pit-Grave population contain Cerna­voda III, Cernavoda II, Celei, Cotofeni, Baden pot­tery. 69 For the time being it seems impossible to decide wether the inhabitants of a certain settle­ment practised the pit grave ritual. We can take into account most likely the settlements of short occupation which were found near to kurgan-fields with a pottery belonging to the period in question and with indications of the appearance of the hor­se. The assumption based on these features can be supported by the special characteristics of the pot­tery in some particular cases. The settlements con­taining Cernavoda III pottery appeared in Eastern Hungary without any local tradition and synchro­nously with the earliest groups of the Pit-Grave Culture so it seems the direct connection in this case probable. Considering these special difficulties one cannot avoid calling in question the far-reaching hypothe­sis about the impact of the steppic population in South-East Europe, the dispersal of the Indo-Euro­pean languages, the „Indoeuropaisation of the terri­tory of Greece, the transformation of all the cultu-

Next

/
Oldalképek
Tartalom