- The
Gumelniţa culture was a
Chalcolithic culture of the 5th
millennium BC (c. 4700–4000 BC),
named after the
Gumelniţa site on the left (Romanian) bank...
- The
Gumelniţa–Kodžadermen-Karanovo VI
complex was a
Chalcolithic cultural complex of the
fifth millennium BC
located in the
eastern Balkans, comprising...
- Bulgaria,
dated c. 4500 BC,
contemporary and
closely related with the
Gumelnița culture. The
oldest golden artifacts in the
world (4600 BC - 4200 BC)...
-
Karanovo III (Veselinovo);
Karanovo IV;
Karanovo V (Marica);
Karanovo VI (
Gumelniţa); and,
Karanovo VII,
which emerged during the
Early Bronze Age. The Karanovo...
- Scandinavia)
Boian culture,
Phase IV or Spanţov
Phase (also
known as the Boian-
Gumelniţa culture) (lower
Danube river) Ch****éen
culture (present-day France) Pfyn...
-
richest single grave from Old Europe,
dated about 4600–4500 BC. "The
Gumelnita Culture".
Government of France.
Archived from the
original on 13 October...
- (also
known as the Boian-
Gumelnița culture), 4000–3500 BC. The
Boian culture ended through a
smooth transition into the
Gumelnița culture,
which also borrowed...
-
Vadastra culture ceramic bowl
Tisza culture ceramic altar Gumelnița culture ceramic vessel Gumelnița culture copper axe
Hamangia culture figurine Hamangia...
- to and
occupies much the same area as the
earlier Karanovo culture and
Gumelnița culture, for
which a
destruction horizon seems to be evident. It is part...
-
absorbed by the
expanding Boian culture in its
transition towards the
Gumelnița culture. Its
cultural links with
Anatolia suggest that it was the result...