Eastern Southeast Europe (2,637 – 910 …

Years: 2637BCE - 910BCE

Eastern Southeast Europe (2,637 – 910 BCE) Bronze and Early Iron — Thracian Polities, Steppe Kurgans, and Aegean Links

Geographic and Environmental Context

Eastern Southeast Europe includes Turkey-in-Europe (Thrace); Greece’s Thrace; Bulgaria (except its southwest); Romania & Moldova; northeastern Serbia; northeastern Croatia; extreme northeastern Bosnia & Herzegovina.

  • Anchors: Thracian Plain (Ezero, later Odrysian heartland), Moesia oases, Geto-Dacian forelands north of the Danube, Dobruja steppe, Black Sea emporia.

Climate & Environmental Shifts

  • Increasing continentality; steppe aridity episodes; river regulation by levees/sandbars changed channel access.

Subsistence & Settlement

  • Bronze Age tells gave way to fortified hilltops and open villages; vineyard/orchard beginnings.

  • Steppe kurgan groups (e.g., Yamnaya → Catacomb → Srubnaya) intruded; Mycenaean and Aegean trade reached the coast.

  • By Early Iron Age, Thracian tribes consolidated; north of the Danube, Getae/Dacians formed hillfort polities.

Technology & Material Culture

  • Bronze weapons, socketed tools; later iron in weapons/tools; chariots, horse gear; Thracian metalwork (phialae, rhyta).

Movement & Interaction Corridors

  • Black Sea routes tied Thrace–Moesia to Aegean and Pontic worlds; Danube highways moved salt, metals, grain; steppe corridors funneled riders.

Cultural & Symbolic Expressions

  • Thracian tumuli with rich grave goods; rock sanctuaries; horse sacrifices; incipient royal iconography.

Environmental Adaptation & Resilience

  • Mixed agro-pastoralism and river transport hedged against steppe droughts and coastal storms.

Related Events

Filter results