A team of archaeologists led by Professor Florin Drasovean made an impressive
archaeological discovery in the the highway section Lugoj - Deva in Romania. The
50 tombs discovered in the village of Păru represent the largest Bronze Age
necropolis ever found in Romania. Pottery and stone grinders used in funerary
rituals, hundreds of homes dating back the 13th century BCE were also discovered
by archaeologists.
Research conducted during last summer led to the
discovery of more than six sites on the highway's segment Belint-Traian Vuia.
Specialists from Banat Museum have already started studying the finds. The site
found in Păru village is one of the most important sites discovered so far. This
site dates back to the Bronze Age (12th-13th Century BCE) as it was dated by
conventional methods.
"Particularly important are the graves that shed
new light on the funerary ritual at the end of the Bronze Age in north-eastern
Banat. It was found that the dead were deposited on a pyre where items from the
grave goods were also burned." This included "a table-altar of clay on which
they brought funerary offerings, stone grinders and various pots that were used
for the funeral banquet. Modern methods of radioactive carbon dating method
shows that the necropolis at Păru dates between 1300 and 1200 BCE," Ph.D. Florin
Drasovean said.
So far, it is not decided whether the site at Păru will
be opened for tourists in the near future, but most probably the findings will
be displayed on archaeological museums in the area.
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