Noua-Sabatinovka-Coslogeni complex

Noua-Sabatinovka-Coslogeni complex
Geographical rangeUkraine, Moldova, Romania
PeriodBronze Age
Dates16th century - 11th century BC
Preceded byMulti-cordoned ware culture, Srubnaya culture, Monteoru culture, Wietenberg culture, Tei culture
Followed byUrnfield culture, Gava culture, Belozerka culture

The Noua-Sabatinovka-Coslogeni complex was a late Bronze Age archaeological cultural complex located in Ukraine, Moldova and Romania, dating from the 16th to 11th centuries BC, consisting of the closely related Noua, Sabatinovka and Coslogeni cultures.[1][2][3][4]

  1. ^ "Bronze Age". The National Museum of History of Moldova. 2023.
  2. ^ Boroffka, Nikolaus (2013). "Chapter 47: Romania, Moldova, and Bulgaria". In Harding, Anthony; Fokkens, Harry (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of the European Bronze Age. OUP Oxford. pp. 888–890. ISBN 978-0-19-957286-1. The Late Bronze Age is marked by two cultural groupings, a south-eastern (Noua-Sabatinovka-Coslogeni) and a western (channelled pottery). ... in Moldova and Ukraine, a specific settlement type of the Noua-Sabatinovka-Coslogeni complex is the so-called ash-mound
  3. ^ Parzinger, Hermann (2013). "Chapter 48: Ukraine and South Russia in the Bronze Age". In Harding, Anthony; Fokkens, Harry (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of the European Bronze Age. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-957286-1. The absolute chronology of the Noua culture, based on radiocarbon dating and synchronisms with the Carpathian Basin, fits in the fourteenth to thirteenth/twelfth centuries BC. To a large extent this corresponds to the beginnings of the Sabatinovka culture and emphasizes the contemporaneity of the two cultures.
  4. ^ "Noua culture". Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine.