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HistoryHow To Classify Bulgaria’s Prehistoric Cultures

How To Classify Bulgaria’s Prehistoric Cultures

A practical GuideBG guide to Ages, phases, complexes, and cross‑border labels — without treating them like tribes

Prehistoric Bulgaria is often described through names such as Karanovo, Vinča, Hamangia, Boian, KGK VI, Varna, BSK, Cernavodă, Coțofeni, Ezero, and Yamnaya.

These are not “nations.” They are archaeological labels: modern scholarly tools used to group sites that share recurring material patterns (pottery traditions, settlement types, burials, tools, symbolic objects) and to place them in time.

We explain how those labels work, why the same horizon can have several names, and how to keep the system readable and internally consistent.

The two rules that prevent 90% of confusion

1) Ages are containers

They are broad time frameworks (Mesolithic, Neolithic, Chalcolithic/Copper Age, transition, Early Bronze Age).

2) Cultures/complexes are labels

They are scholarly groupings that can overlap, merge, fade gradually, or be renamed as new evidence improves chronologies.

If you remember only one thing: overlap is normal. A culture label is not a hard border on a map.

Scope and dating convention

What this page covers

We treat prehistory here as roughly c. 10,000–2000 BCE: from the late hunter‑gatherer world through Bulgaria’s first fully Bronze Age societies.

Later periods (Late Bronze Age, Iron Age, Thracian, Classical, Roman, Medieval) are handled in separate articles because they use different types of evidence (especially written sources).

How dates are presented

Dates are given as approximate best‑fit bands in BCE.

You will sometimes see calBC on technical pages. That means calibrated radiocarbon calendar ranges (a more explicitly scientific form of “calendar BCE”). The important practical point is that different studies can yield slightly different boundaries, particularly during transition periods.

For the “why do dates differ?” explanation, see: Discrepancies in Archaeological Cultures’ Timelines.

What kind of “thing” is this label?

A major source of confusion is that archaeology employs different terms for different scales.

Here is the translation:

  • Site/context: one specific place (e.g., a cemetery, a tell, a cave layer).
  • Phase: a numbered layer/episode inside a long stratified site (e.g., Karanovo VI).
  • Culture: a regional pattern in material remains (e.g., Hamangia, Ezero).
  • Complex / horizon: a broader cross‑regional system that may include multiple “cultures” in older national traditions (e.g., KGK VI, BSK).
  • Interface/overlap label: a term used to describe contact zones and mixed assemblages (e.g., Vinča–Karanovo interface).
  • Phenomenon/horizon label: a term that emphasizes a distinctive regional expression inside a wider system (e.g., Varna phenomenon).
  • Transition band: a deliberately “messy” label zone where older schemes multiply and boundaries blur (e.g., c. 4250–3300 BCE).

A concrete example: Varna (why we separate “cemetery” from “phenomenon”)

We distinguish:

Both lead you to the same Varna article — but they are not the same analytical object.

Why does the same horizon have different names?

Prehistoric labels vary because archaeology is international and tradition‑driven:

1) Type‑sites and first discoveries
Many cultures are named after the place they were first identified (Starčevo, Vinča, Hamangia, Karanovo, Ezero).

2) National research traditions
Neighboring countries often name the same horizon differently. Later scholarship either adopts a single name or uses composite, hyphenated labels to indicate unity across borders.

3) Phase labels that expand into wider usage
Numbered phases at key tells can be used narrowly (a layer at one site) or broadly (a regional horizon), depending on the author.

4) Translation and transliteration
Some names are translated into English (e.g., “Pit Grave”), whereas others are transliterated (e.g., Yamnaya/Yamna).

For the full synonym “map,” see: Discrepancies in Archaeological Names.

These are not exclusive rules — but they help you recognize what you’re reading:

  • Starčevo / Körös / Criș
    Often appear in Serbian / Hungarian / Romanian traditions; cross‑border syntheses use Starčevo–Körös–Criș (SKC) as a combined label.
  • Gumelnița / Kodžadermen / Karanovo VI
    Romanian works often write Gumelnița; Bulgarian works historically used Kodžadermen (NE Bulgaria) and Karanovo VI (Thrace). Modern syntheses often use the composite KGK VI.
  • Boian vs Marița / Maritsa
    Lower Danube frameworks commonly use Boian; Bulgarian-facing traditions sometimes use Marița/Maritsa terminology for correlated horizons (and you may see composites like “Giulești–Marița”).
  • Yamnaya / Yamna / Pit Grave
    Transliteration variants vs English translation — usually the same broad steppe horizon label.

The editorial point: these differences usually signal tradition + scale, not separate “peoples.”

The Karanovo sequence: Bulgaria’s strongest chronological backbone

If you want one “spine” for Bulgarian prehistory, it is the Karanovo tell sequence (Karanovo I–VII). It provides a stratified reference framework that helps synchronize other sites and labels.

A simple way to read it:

  • Karanovo I–II: Early Neolithic backbone (c. 6200–5500 BCE)
  • Karanovo III–IV: Middle/Late Neolithic backbone (c. 5500–5300 BCE, with wider overlaps into the 5th millennium)
  • Karanovo V: Early Chalcolithic/transition into the Copper Age (c. 5000–4600 BCE; often discussed with Marița/Maritsa correlations)
  • Karanovo VI: Late Chalcolithic (within c. 4600–4250 BCE; part of the wider KGK VI world)
  • Karanovo VII: Early Bronze Age occupation at the tell (useful as a correlation point, not a single “culture” that replaces everything)

Important: Karanovo is a timeline tool, not a claim that all Bulgaria follows one uniform cultural identity.

Working containers and the main labels inside them

This is the site-wide “reading grid” used across the Chronology hub and the culture pages.

Age containerBest-fit bandWhat you’re really classifyingCommon labels you’ll meet (examples)
Mesolithicc. 10,000–6000 BCEHunter‑gatherer lifeways; fewer stable “culture maps”Iron Gates / Danube Gorges (contextual reference for regional comparison)
Neolithic (Early → Middle/Late)c. 6200–5300 BCE (with overlaps beyond)Farming arrival + consolidation; the “first village world”Karanovo I–IV (core backbone); SKC (regional correlate); Vinča (interaction sphere); Hamangia (NE/West Pontic label)
Chalcolithic / Copper Age (Early)c. 5000–4600 BCETransition into metallurgy + changing exchange networksKaranovo V / Marița; Lower Danube synchronisms (late Boian phases in some schemes)
Chalcolithic / Copper Age (Late)c. 4600–4250 BCEHigh-connectivity Copper Age “climax”Karanovo VI (core); KGK VI (supra‑regional complex); Varna I cemetery (anchor context); Varna phenomenon (regional expression)
Final Copper Age transitionc. 4250–3300 BCEReorganization: settlement visibility changes; labels multiplyBSK (Bubanj–Sălcuța–Krivodol); Cernavodă I; Coțofeni; steppe‑related influences (regionally variable)
Early Bronze Agec. 3300–2000 BCEClearer Bronze Age systems emergeEzero (core Bulgarian EBA label in Thrace); Glina (regional correlate in some frameworks); Yamnaya (steppe horizon relevant to parts of Bulgaria/Lower Danube)

A key editorial distinction used (and flags on the Chronology page):

  • Core Bulgaria labels: essential to Bulgaria’s internal sequence (especially Karanovo phases; Ezero in the EBA story).
  • Regional correlates: labels used to synchronize across borders (Boian, SKC, Cucuteni–Trypillia, etc.).
  • Supra-regional complexes: “big system” labels built to unify multiple traditions (KGK VI, BSK).
  • Anchor contexts: unusually well-dated sites that stabilize the timeline (Varna I cemetery is the flagship example).

How to read the “messy” part: 4250–3300 BCE

If you feel lost in the Chalcolithic–Bronze transition, that’s not a failure — it’s the nature of the evidence.

After roughly 4250/4200 BCE, many long-standing patterns weaken or reorganize:

  • tell landscapes become less dominant in some areas,
  • material traditions fragment into regional variants,
  • and cross-border labels multiply.

That is why this window is treated as a transition band, not a neat single-file parade of cultures.

For the full map of that period and its key labels (Cernavodă I, BSK, Coțofeni, steppe-linked horizons), see: Final Copper Age and the Chalcolithic–Early Bronze Age Transition.

Archaeological cultures vs historical peoples (the boundary that matters)

A final classification rule:

  • Archaeological cultures are defined by material patterns and chronology. They usually have no known autonyms, and archaeology alone cannot assign language or ethnic identity with certainty.
  • Historical peoples (Thracians, Greeks, Romans, etc.) are known from written sources and are classified within later methodological frameworks.

Practical checklist: how to classify a label you meet in a book

When you encounter an unfamiliar term, ask:

1) Is it an Age container or a culture label?
2) Is it a site, a phase, or a supra‑regional complex?
3) Is it core to Bulgaria’s internal sequence, or a correlation label imported for synchronism?
4) Is the author talking about a precise, datable context (anchor) or a broad interpretive horizon?
5) Does the term imply overlap? (interface, horizon, complex, transition)

If you apply those five questions, “discrepancies” stop looking like contradictions and start looking like classification choices.

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