
H 290 x W 205 mm
178 pages
101 figures, 13 tables (colour throughout)
Published Oct 2025
ISBN
Hardback: 9781803278896
Digital: 9781803278902
Related titles




This study examines ceramic production at Belovode and Pločnik, tracing how knowledge of pottery recipes was developed, transmitted, and transformed during the Vinča culture. By integrating archaeometry with archaeology, it reveals technological choices, cultural transmission, and links between pottery and early metallurgy.
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
Ceramic studies in the Balkans
Structure of the book
Chapter 2: Archaeological background
The Late Neolithic and Chalcolithic in the Balkans
The origin of the Vinča phenomenon and its chronology
The Gradac phase and the appearance of metallurgy
Vinča settlement and subsistence
Burial practice and the afterlife
Material culture
The end of the Vinča culture
Summary
Chapter 3: Environment and archaeology of the studied sites
Belovode
Pločnik
Relative and absolute chronology of Belovode and Pločnick
Chapter 4: Theoretical background
Technology and society: a theoretical overview
Chaîne opératoire and technological choices
Technological change
Cultural transmission theories and social learning
Mechanisms of cultural transmission in dual inheritance theory
Units of cultural transmission
Recipes as units of transmission
The role of material science in reconstructing recipes
Application to the present study
Chapter 5: Materials and methods
Interdisciplinary approaches to Vinča ceramics
Pyrotechnological connections: pottery and metallurgy
Macroscopic classification and sampling strategy
Compositional characterisation
Statistical treatments of the WD-XRF data
Estimation of firing temperatures and pyrotechnology
Geological prospection and raw material analysis
Chapter 6: Results of pottery macroscopic analysis – Belovode and Pločnik
Belovode - pottery types by horizon
Belovode - macroscopic technological characterisation of pottery
Pločnik - pottery types by horizon
Pločnik - macroscopic technological characterisati-on of pottery
Chapter 7: Results of the archaeometric analysis - Belovode
Results of the XRPD and SEM analyses
Characterisation of the raw materials
Discussion
Summary
Chapter 8: Results of the archaeometric analysis - Pločnik
Results of the compositional analyses
Results of the XRPD and SEM analyses
Characterisation of the raw materials
Discussion
Summary
Chapter 9: Discussion of the Results
Ceramic production technology
Organisation of production
Pottery circulation
Summary
Chapter 10: Conclusions
Cultural Transmission in Vinča material culture
Pottery-making recipes: continuity in change
Connecting pyrotechnologies: new perspectives
Similarities and diversity within Vinča material culture
Final remarks
Bibliography
Silvia Amicone is a lecturer and researcher at the University of Tübingen, where she focuses on the study of archaeomaterials through an interdisciplinary approach. She earned her PhD in archaeological science at University College London, where she is also an Honorary Research Associate at the UCL Institute of Archaeology. Her research combines material analysis with scientific and archaeological methods to understand the techniques and knowledge of ancient materials. She is also deeply engaged in experimental archaeology, reconstructing ceramic production processes to gain deeper insights into past technologies and craftsmanship. She directs and co-directs several international projects and has published in academic journals worldwide. In addition to her research, she contributes to the training of young scholars and the development of interdisciplinary collaborative initiatives. She currently serves as President of the Ceramic Petrology Group, further supporting the advancement of ceramic research and professional exchange in the field.