Romanian prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation
With this text, the author intends to present a short history of the evolution of Romanian prehistoric archaeology, from the moment of its appearance in the 19th century to the present day. Thus, several distinct stages that mark this evolution have been detected, stages influenced by the chari...
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Enea, S.-С. 2015-12-09T16:15:15Z 2015-12-09T16:15:15Z 2012 Romanian prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation / S.-С. Enea // Археологія і давня історія України: Зб. наук. пр. — К.: ІА НАН України, 2012. — Вип. 9. — С. 93-102. — англ. 2227-4952 https://nasplib.isofts.kiev.ua/handle/123456789/89371 902(091)(498)”18/19” With this text, the author intends to present a short history of the evolution of Romanian prehistoric archaeology, from the moment of its appearance in the 19th century to the present day. Thus, several distinct stages that mark this evolution have been detected, stages influenced by the charisma and activity of certain personalities. It can be noticed that the scientific foundations of this discipline were laid after World War I by Vasile Pârvan, the founder of Romanian archaeology, whose followers have dominated the scientific discourse to this day. Romanian prehistoric archaeology, just like other areas of historical research, mirrored the political discourse, and, unfortunately, was under its sway during certain periods of time. Целью статьи было представить краткую историю эволюции румынской доисторической археологии, с момента своего становления в 19 веке и по сей день. Были вычленены несколько различных этапов этой эволюции зависящие как от общего уровня уровня развития археологии так и от харизмы и деятельности отдельных личностей. Очевидно, что научные основы дисциплины были заложены после Второй мировой войны Василием Парваном, основателем археологии Румынии, последователи которого доминируют в научном дискурсе по сей день. Румынская доисторическая археология, как и другие области исторического исследования, отражалась в политическом дискурсе, и, к сожалению, находилась под его влиянием в течение определенного периода времени. en Інститут археології НАН України Археологія і давня історія України Статті Romanian prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation Румынская до историческая археология между традициями и инновациями Article published earlier |
| institution |
Digital Library of Periodicals of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine |
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DSpace DC |
| title |
Romanian prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation |
| spellingShingle |
Romanian prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation Enea, S.-С. Статті |
| title_short |
Romanian prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation |
| title_full |
Romanian prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation |
| title_fullStr |
Romanian prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation |
| title_full_unstemmed |
Romanian prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation |
| title_sort |
romanian prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation |
| author |
Enea, S.-С. |
| author_facet |
Enea, S.-С. |
| topic |
Статті |
| topic_facet |
Статті |
| publishDate |
2012 |
| language |
English |
| container_title |
Археологія і давня історія України |
| publisher |
Інститут археології НАН України |
| format |
Article |
| title_alt |
Румынская до историческая археология между традициями и инновациями |
| description |
With this text, the author intends to present a short
history of the evolution of Romanian prehistoric archaeology,
from the moment of its appearance in the
19th century to the present day. Thus, several distinct
stages that mark this evolution have been detected,
stages influenced by the charisma and activity of certain
personalities. It can be noticed that the scientific
foundations of this discipline were laid after World
War I by Vasile Pârvan, the founder of Romanian archaeology,
whose followers have dominated the scientific
discourse to this day. Romanian prehistoric archaeology,
just like other areas of historical research,
mirrored the political discourse, and, unfortunately,
was under its sway during certain periods of time.
Целью статьи было представить краткую историю эволюции румынской доисторической археологии, с момента своего становления в 19 веке и по сей день. Были вычленены несколько различных этапов этой эволюции зависящие как от общего уровня уровня развития археологии так и от харизмы и деятельности отдельных личностей.
Очевидно, что научные основы дисциплины были
заложены после Второй мировой войны Василием Парваном, основателем археологии Румынии,
последователи которого доминируют в научном
дискурсе по сей день. Румынская доисторическая
археология, как и другие области исторического
исследования, отражалась в политическом дискурсе, и, к сожалению, находилась под его влиянием в
течение определенного периода времени.
|
| issn |
2227-4952 |
| url |
https://nasplib.isofts.kiev.ua/handle/123456789/89371 |
| citation_txt |
Romanian prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation / S.-С. Enea // Археологія і давня історія України: Зб. наук. пр. — К.: ІА НАН України, 2012. — Вип. 9. — С. 93-102. — англ. |
| work_keys_str_mv |
AT eneass romanianprehistoricarchaeologybetweentraditionandinnovation AT eneass rumynskaâdoistoričeskaâarheologiâmeždutradiciâmiiinnovaciâmi |
| first_indexed |
2025-11-26T23:32:39Z |
| last_indexed |
2025-11-26T23:32:39Z |
| _version_ |
1850781338495352832 |
| fulltext |
93
S.-c. E n e a
romAniAn prEhiStoric ArchAEology,
BEtwEEn trAdition And innovAtion *
with this text, the author intends to present a short
history of the evolution of romanian prehistoric ar-
chaeology, from the moment of its appearance in the
19th century to the present day. thus, several distinct
stages that mark this evolution have been detected,
stages influenced by the charisma and activity of cer-
tain personalities. it can be noticed that the scientific
foundations of this discipline were laid after world
war i by vasile pârvan, the founder of romanian ar-
chaeology, whose followers have dominated the scien-
tific discourse to this day. romanian prehistoric ar-
chaeology, just like other areas of historical research,
mirrored the political discourse, and, unfortunately,
was under its sway during certain periods of time.1
k e y w o r d s: prehistoric archaeology, Antiquari-
anism school of archaeology, positivism, marxism,
new Archaeology.
Prehistoric archaeology appears in Western
europe as the result of a long series of intellec-
tual acquisitions, specific to the environment of
Western european society, and which material-
izes in the second half of the 19th century through
the emergence of a research domain, a corpus of
methods, and a small cohort of specialists [Ang-
helinu, 2003, p. 72].
Archaeology has its first beginnings in Roma-
nia in the 17th and 18th centuries through the con-
cerns of collectors of coins, inscriptions and an-
tiquities, but a manifest interest is fostered only
with the beginning the 19th century.
In the evolution of Romanian archaeology we
can distinguish several phases, each with different
characteristics and points of contention.
* У статті збережено авторську редакцію.
thE AntiquAriAn phASE
The 19th century generally represented a peri-
od of theoretical refinements and crystallization
of the institutional framework.
This first stage is characterized by the activ-
ity of identification and investigation of sites con-
ducted by some enthusiast collectors. A notewor-
thy example is Al. Popovici, land surveyor, who
discovered the first Neolithic settlements from
the Romanian Plain in the 1830s; the National
museum, where the discoveries were collected,
was founded in 1834.
The treasure of Pietroasa is discovered by two
locals — who unfortunately destroyed a number
of pieces — in 1837, and in 1842 the hoard enters
into the patrimony of the National museum. A
notable collector of the 19th century was Nicolae
mavros, one of the founders of the National mu-
seum, its first and biggest donor, the same who,
in 1864, pleaded to Prince Al.I. Cuza in favour of
establishing the National museum of Antiquities.
During the first years of the museum, the collec-
tion consisted of donations from public figures
such as C. Bolliac, D. Sturdza, N. Kretzulescu
[Dumitrescu, 1993, p. 7—8].
The enthusiastic collecting of the antiquarians
compromised the archaeological contexts or led to
the estrangement of artefacts, but also contribut-
ed to saving the numerous heritage objects that,
via donation or purchase, entered the collections
of museums.
thE romAntic phASE
the first theoretical horizons (19th
century) was the stage of the intellectuals of
1848 Revolution. They collected particularly the
artefacts that were beautiful and not broken, © S.-C. eNeA, 2012
УДК 902(091)(498)”18/19”
Enea S.-C. Romanian Prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation
94
without attempting a cultural or chronological
classification.
With respect to the theoretical field, we bring
attention to m. Kogălniceanu and N. Bălcescu,
who stressed the importance of the archaeological,
epigraphic, and numismatic evidence for writing
the national history.
Cezar Bolliac (1813—1881) is the most
prominent figure of the Forty-eighters’ generation
in archaeology, also being an active collector; he
has the merit of having noted and even surveyed
some pre- and protohistoric sites. He was the
first to carry out excavations at the Neolithic
settlement of vădastra, between 1871 and 1873.
He created and supported the magazine răcnetul
carpaţilor («Howl of the Carpathians»), and
also joined the Archaeological Committee that
managed the National museum of Antiquities.
From 1865, Bolliac focused his excavations on the
Getae-Dacian sites of Tinosu, Piscul Crăsani, and
Zimnicea, while continuing the excavations of the
Neolithic settlement from vădastra.
Al. Odobescu (1834—1895) remained in
the memory of the archaeologists as a cabinet
archaeologist, mainly because of his conceptual
and theoretical assessments, being the one that
truly entrenched Romanian archaeology as a
scientific discipline; he is arguably the first great
Romanian archaeologist, and the founder of
Romanian scientific archaeology.
Odobescu introduced the critical spirit into
archaeology, calling into question any discovery;
he had a rich field activity that resulted in the
identification of several archaeological sites. In
1874 he taught the first course in Archaeology at
the University of Bucharest. He was constantly
concerned with the introduction of a rigorous
system for prehistoric research, being basically the
first one to introduce scientific methods into the
archaeological approach. Thus, he employed the
three-age system, divided into the Stone, Bronze,
and Iron ages, and insisted on both the need for a
chronological classification of the archaeological
findings (based on stratigraphic and typological
principles), and on their ethnic attribution.
He publishes in Paris le Trésor de Pétrossa.
Étude sur l’orfèvrerie antique (I—III, 1889, 1896,
1900) [László, 2006, p. 58], a seminal work to this day.
In the Department of Archaeology from the
University of Bucharest, and in Romanian
archaeology, he is followed by Grigore Tocilescu
(1850—1909); it is the age in which archaeology
becomes a separate field of study. Tocilescu
dug extensively, even if not always with an
adequate methodology, as his excavations were
conducted using approximated techniques.
Unfortunately, there are very few reports left of
his excavations. He is the one who introduced in
Romanian archaeology the idea of co-joint work
with foreign archaeologists [Dumitrescu, 1993,
p. 10; László, 2006, p. 59). He is also the author of
a monumental work, dacia оnainte de romani
(«Dacia before the Romans», 1880), well-received
by his contemporaries.
In Romania, as almost everywhere in the world,
archaeology became a science only in the early
20th century, through the «union of typology with
stratigraphy», marking thus the separation from
the antiquarian approach.
Tocilescu was followed by vasile Pârvan both
in the management of the museum, and in the
research endeavour.
Prehistory research was inaugurated in
moldova by N. Beldiceanu and Gr. Buţureanu, the
first archaeologist to dig at Cucuteni [Ursulescu,
văleanu, 2006, p. 21]. The results achieved
attracted the interest of foreign archaeologists,
including Hubert Schmidt, who digs at Cucuteni
in 1909—1910, and publishes the monograph of
the excavation in 1932. He established the three
stages of the Cucuteni culture (A, A—B, B). For
the research methodology, the monograph of the
German archaeologist played an important role
in the development of the Romanian archaeology
[Ursulescu, văleanu, 2006, p. 26].
Archaeological research in southwest
Transylvania stood at the beginnings of the 20th
century under the sign of the powerful personality
of Fr. laszlo. Starting with 1904, he directed his
attention to the site of Ariuşd, after seeing the
private collection of J. Teutsch.
Between 1907 and 1913 he will carry
systematic excavations on the site of dealul
tyiszk. The excavation was restarted in 1925,
contributing substantially to defining the area
and characteristics of the painted pottery
civilization from Transylvania. The research in
Ariuşd was the first systematic excavation on
Romanian territory, preceding by three years
those of H. Schmidt at Cucuteni. In 1908, after two
excavation campaigns, and then again in 1909,
the site from Ariuşd was visited by H. Schmidt
himself, who took part in the digging activity for
two days, expressing his favourable opinion on
the excavation techniques used (the impressive
discoveries from Ariușd also piqued the interest
of G. Childe).
EArly twEntiEth cEntury,
until world wAr i
During this time span, the confusions and fables
of the antiquarians’ period were finally eliminated
through the use of more systematic methods; pre-
history detached itself from history and geology,
achieving full methodological autonomy [Anghe-
linu, 2003, p. 101].
The emergence of archaeology in Romania is
linked to the search, development and affirmation
of the national identity. As an auxiliary science,
archaeology followed history in its aim to estab-
lish the origins of the Romanian people; in the first
decades of the 20th century, Romanian prehistoric
archaeology tried to reduce the distance that still
95
Enea S.-C. Romanian Prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation
First romanian archaeologists
Enea S.-C. Romanian Prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation
96
separated it from the norms of european prehis-
toric research.
After the excavations from Cucuteni in 1909—
1910, there followed an interruption in the inves-
tigation of prehistoric civilizations on moldavian
territory; the period came to an end after the
conclusion of World War I, though the efforts of
the disciples of v. Pârvan (1882—1927). Using a
systematic approach, they will investigate new
prehistoric sites, at the same time developing and
diversifying the prehistoric field, by approaching
objectives other than Cucutenian ones.
In the field of Palaeolithic research, the person-
ality of N.N. moroşan stands apart. A prominent
archaeologist, palaeontologist, and geologist,
moroşan investigated the sites of Ripiceni — iz-
vor and Stвnca — ripiceni, arguing, on scientific
grounds, for the existence of the Palaeolithic in
moldavia. Through a laborious fieldwork which
lead to the identification of new Palaeolithic
sites, through the use of the stratigraphical-pa-
leontological method in the research of archaeo-
logical sites, through his studies and syntheses
(le pleistocene et le paleolithique de la roumanie
du nord—Est, 1938), moroşan is considered the
founder of the advanced, modern research of the
Romanian Palaeolithic, and the forerunner of in-
terdisciplinary studies in the field of Romanian
prehistory.
thE intErwAr pEriod:
thE profESSionAliZAtion
of prEhiStoric ArchAEology
in romAniA
After WWI, Romanian archaeology benefited
from a series of specialists trained in French
and German universities, who laid the founda-
tions of archaeology as a science by adopting the
principles of stratigraphy. The excavation cam-
paigns coordinated by Ion Nestor (especially in
the field of prehistory) and by vasile Pârvan
(Greek and Roman archaeology) became true
«archaeological schools» for the new generations
of archaeologists [Anghelinu, 2007, p. 4].
Prehistoric archaeology will not detach itself
from antiquarianism gradually, but suddenly,
through the decisive initiatives coming from the
new critical historiography.
After WWI, vasile Pârvan, assisted by
I. Andrieşescu (1888—1944) —appointed by
him in 1915 as responsible for organizing the
department of Prehistory from the National
museum of Antiquities — and later by the dis-
ciples from the University of Bucharest, started
the systematic organization of archaeological
activity throughout Romania. 1
1. The archaeology of the Paleolithic is, during this
period, the domain of a small number of enthusiasts,
particularly with geological tranining.
v. Pârvan founded modern Romanian archae-
ology. He continued his research in Classical An-
tiquity, but he did not neglect the study of prehis-
tory, and allotted a significant portion of his work
to the pre- and protohistory of the Carpathian-
Danubian area. The fruit of this research direc-
tion was his monumental getica (1927), in which,
on archaeological grounds, he reconstructs the
Dacian world from the late Bronze Age until the
Roman conquest [László, 2006, p. 62].
On his initiative, his colleagues investigated
a large number of sites throughout Romania,
such as the Neolithic settlements from Sultana,
Gumelniţa, Boian, and vădastra, concurrently
with the Bronze Age sites of Sărata monteoru
and lechinţa de mureş.
Through the large number of archaeologists
trained by him, we can now speak of the «Pâr-
van School», whose members include vl. Dumi-
trescu, I. Nestor, R. vulpe, D. Popescu, v. Chris-
tescu, Hortensia Dumitrescu, ecaterina vulpe,
Gh. Ştefan, m. Petrescu-Dîmboviţa, D. Berciu;
nonetheless, Andrieșescu also brought a decisive
contribution to the formation of this generation of
prehistorians. She dominated the education and
the research in the interwar period, and consti-
tuted the scientific nucleus which kept the Ro-
manian school of archaeology free of total decay
during the communist era. Pârvan transformed
the National museum of Antiquities into a train-
ing centre for young researchers, but also for the
development of a modern scientific conceptual
framework, as well as a centre of activity that at-
tempted to polarize the whole archaeological re-
search in Romania after 1918.
Through the activity of Pârvan and Andrieşescu,
the first decades of the 20th century brought a
detachment of Romanian archaeology from ro-
mantic and antiquarian ideals, and ensured the
conditions for the crystallization of the Romanian
school of prehistory.
After 1918, they mounted a sustained effort to
help local museums and to establish new units
of this kind all over Romania, and even indented
to transform the National museum of Antiquities
into the general coordinator of these units in Ro-
mania. This concept formed the basis of the de-
velopment, on a various grounds, of the museums
after World War II.
Simultaneously, the institutional foundations
of prehistoric archaeology as a distinct discipline
taught in the institutes of higher education were
laid down.
During this period, excavations were conducted
at Sultana (I. Andrieşescu), Boian and vădastra
(v. Christescu), Gumelniţa (vl. Dumitrescu),
Căscioarele (Gh. Ştefan), Glina (I. Nestor),
Sărata monteoru (I. Andrieşescu and I. Nestor),
vidra and Jilava (Dinu v. Rosetti), and lechinţa
de mureş (D. Popescu).
Through the excavations at Izvoarele (Neamţ
county), R. vulpe discovered and delimited
97
Enea S.-C. Romanian Prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation
a layer belonging to the Precucuteni culture,
while vl. Dumitrescu, through the excavations
at Traian — dealul fântânilor, collected many
materials that allowed him to define the painting
styles of the Cucuteni A—B stage.
In 1932—1933 appeared the first synthesis
work on Romanian prehistory, under the pen of
I. Nestor (der Stand der vorgeschichtsforschung
in rumänien), published in Berlin, only one year
after the publication of another famous synthesis,
the Cucuteni monograph of H. Schmidt (1932).
We should mention here that the excavation tech-
nique employed by the German archaeologist at
Cucuteni, despite its serious shortcomings, be-
came the authoritative methodology for prehis-
toric research in Romania, explained by the fact
that the German school of prehistory was held in
high-regard at that moment.
During the war some museums continued their
work despite the material and financial difficul-
ties. Thus, the museum in Alba Iulia made a se-
ries of excavations at limba — vărar, Petreşti —
groapa galbenă, and Alba Iulia — lumea nouă.
In 1945 a new synthesis on the Neolithic of munte-
nia appeared, signed by m. Petrescu-Dîmboviţa.
During this period the myths of Romanian
historiography were born and developed, which
entered into the collective mind through history
textbooks since the 19th century. At the Univer-
sal exhibition in Paris (1867, 1889, 1900, 1937)
or vienna (1873), the Romanian pavilions af-
firmed the national identity also through the
exhibition of archaeological artefacts. The buzz-
words of the national discourse were the terms
«Romanization», «ethnogenesis», «continuity»,
«unity», the dichotomies «native — allogeneic»,
«sedentary — nomad», «farmers — shepherds»,
or the phrase «of national importance» [Drago-
man, Oanţă-marghitu, 2003].
romAniAn ArchAEology during
communiSm: nAtionAl idEology,
diAlEcticAl And hiStoricAl
mAtEriAliSm, poSitiviSm
The communist regime inherited a coagulated
structure: Romanian archaeology already had a
capital city (Bucharest), a research activity with
scientific standards imposed by the National mu-
seum of Antiquities (the future Institute of Ar-
chaeology), and the former students of Pârvan
were now specialists who possessed a significant
symbolic capital that they will transfer to the new
ideological context [Anghelinu, 200p. 153].
Overall, the post-war decades brought major
innovations (radiocarbon dating), which affected
all theoretical and methodological framework
of european prehistoric archaeology. If, from a
theoretical point of view, the bibliographic siege
of new Archaeology represented the major event
of the era, with important consequences on the
research of prehistory, purely instrumental in-
novations were also considerable. Along with the
invention of absolute dating methods (physical,
chemical, biological), the widespread integration
of auxiliary naturist subjects played a fundamen-
tal role in shaping the current profile of prehis-
toric research (archaeozoology, palynology, sedi-
mentology, etc.).
marxism did not arouse much sympathy from
the intellectual environment of the interwar pe-
riod, but after 1945 the new ideology launched
an aggressive cultural offensive that was propor-
tional to the demands of its historical theoretical
schema.
History and archaeology were considered by
the new political system as «political-ideologi-
cal sciences», being subjected to strict control by
the state and the Communist Party, few being
those who dared to disobey the arbitrary author-
ity. During the ’50s, many historical personali-
ties who had not fled Romania experienced the
communist prison hell. On the other hand, we
must acknowledge the fact that the official policy
of the Communist Party emphasized, especially
in the ’60s, the nationalist component, which fa-
voured — in terms of the research resources al-
lotted to it — Romanian archaeology. By the ear-
ly ’70s there was a sustained period of extensive
field research, but the situation gradually began
to change and socialist ideology began to be re-
flected in archaeological writing. In was especial-
ly during the years that proceeded 1989 when the
situation deteriorated to a great extent.
The national discourse was apparently sus-
pended in the period between 1945 and 1964,
when archaeology based on the «marxist-
leninist concept based on the principles of
dialectical and historical materialism» was
being promoted. The echoes of this peculiar epi-
sode were felt increasingly weaker until the early
’70s, and extremely sporadically thereafter; histo-
ry, as part of the «new culture», should have been
«national in form, socialist in content». The main
achievements of archaeology in the «years of pop-
ular democracy» are considered to be, together
with the new archaeological finds (the research
also having been galvanised by the founding of
the Bucharest Institute of Archaeology in 1956
and the Commission of Historical monuments in
1959), the development of the archaeology of the
migrations period and of the medieval age, the
organization of a national network of museums,
and the documentation of the favourite topics of
the national discourse: the continuity of the Da-
cians in the Roman age, their Romanization, the
relationships of the «natives» with «allogenous»
populations, the «free Dacians». The Romanian
school of archaeology withstand the vicissitudes
of the Stalinist and then of the national commu-
nism periods, becoming one of the most acclaimed
schools of european archaeology [Anghelinu,
2007, p. 1—36].
Enea S.-C. Romanian Prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation
98
exhibitions held annually during 1949—1952
sought to illustrate the achievements of Roma-
nian archaeology by exposing the materials found
in chronological order, from the «wilderness pe-
riod» and «barbarism» to the «formation of feudal
relations of production» (e.g., the 1949 exhibition)
[Dragoman, Oanţă-marghitu, 2003].
The post-war period did not bring an immedi-
ate and general replacement of the archaeology
specialists, although the academic restructuring
was important and there have been several waves
of political persecution. As such, despite their po-
litical past, the Communist system was forced to
inherit fully-professionalised practitioners before
preparing its own; however, throughout the com-
munist period, post-war archaeology profession-
als still held important academic and administra-
tive positions [Anghelinu, 2003, p. 177].
The increase in research promoted by the state
was accompanied by its centralization; the orga-
nizational initiative, especially beneficial in terms
of funding, will have the disadvantage of a radical
homogenisation of the archaeological discourse.
The theses of July 1971 put an end to this pe-
riod of ideological laxity. The theses stated that
history is «not a specialized profession», but a
pure ideological activity practiced «only by people
recruited by the Party, only by people who will be-
come party activists». «No other mindset can exist
in history teaching» [Georgescu, 1991, p. 69—70].
Archaeology, as an «auxiliary science» of history,
is also affected. The 1974 Romanian Communist
Party’s programme of building the multilaterally
developed socialist society and Romania’s advanc-
ing toward communism opens with a history of
the Romanians starting from the Thracians, con-
tinues with references to the old national themes
of romanization, continuity, unity, with a lot of
xenophobic accents (migratory peoples, the Otto-
mans, foreign empires responsible for the histori-
cal lag of the Romanian nation). Controversial
issues related to past events are solved through
official decrees: the Central Committee of the
Communist Party sets Burebista’s enthronement
year, adjusting it so that they can celebrate 2050
years from the event in 1980, at the International
Congress of Historical Sciences held in Bucha-
rest [Georgescu, 1991, p. 99]; history becomes the
main element of official propaganda, « it invades
the press, radio and Tv programs, theatres, stu-
dios, libraries, popular music, art galleries […].
every moment of the present relates to the past,
it is rooted deep in the ages, each achievement is
presented as the conclusion of a long historical
development» [Georgescu, 1991, p. 117].
Archaeological finds taken out of context are
also manipulated (sometimes even by archaeolo-
gists) for developing this type of discourse. Ar-
chaeology continues to discuss, but on an exalted
tone, the themes of the national ideology.
History plays an important role for the devel-
opment «of the revolutionary consciousness» and
the «affirmation of the new man, builder of so-
cialism», the latter having to realize, for instance,
that «the defining feature, the righteousness, in-
herited from the Getae-Dacian ancestors and kept
as such, is found profusely in the Romanian Com-
munist Party’s policy, in the domestic and foreign
policy of our country» [Crişan, 1977, p. 81].
In fact, at least in the formal intention, the ar-
chaeologist merges two statutes: the scholar and
the ideologist. «Along with its research work, the
archaeology collective (of the Institute of Archae-
ology in Bucharest, subordinated to the Academy
of Social and Political Sciences, then to the min-
istry of education) is fully committed to its propa-
ganda, the spreading of scientific knowledge and
education in the patriotic spirit of the young gen-
eration [...]. Thus, archaeology answers a second
major goal of scientific inquiry, that of contribut-
ing on multiple levels to the building of the social-
ist society in our country» [Preda, 1984, p. 233].
museums take part and faithfully comply with
the official doctrine, as reflected by some maga-
zine articles in revista muzeelor («the Journal of
the museums») across the ’70s and the ’80s. The
museum, considered to be a political institution,
was required to contribute to the «transformation
of the consciousness of the masses», the «form-
ing of socialist consciousness», and «the shaping
of the new man», through «museum propaganda»
(action taken on directives from the party): or-
ganization of symposiums, presentations of pro-
paganda films, patriotic poetry and music, com-
petitions [Dragoman, Oanţă-marghitu, 2003;
Anghelinu, 2003, p. 179].
Prehistoric archaeology departments are es-
tablished at the Universities of Bucharest, Cluj,
and Iaşi. The method of full (exhaustive) inves-
tigation of sites (the first one was Hăbăşeşti) is
implemented.
After 1950, at the National museum of Antiq-
uities there are issued a number of publications:
Studii şi cercetări de istorie veche şi arheologie
(SCIvA), materiale şi cercetări arheologice, dacia
(1957), Studii şi cercetări de numismatică (1957),
the Biblioteca de arheologie series (40 volumes —
excavation monographs of different sites).
In Iaşi, archaeology developed tremendously
under the leadership of academician m. Petres-
cu-Dîmboviţa. In Cluj, the Institute of Archaeol-
ogy and Art History was founded. In Sibiu and
Tg. mureş, institutes of socio-human sciences
were established under the auspices of the Ro-
manian Academy. In Bucharest, the National
military museum was likewise founded during
this period.
County-level museums of history, based on the
concept of Pârvan, managed to convert themselves
into institutions of scientific research and preser-
vation of heritage. The research of the museum in
Cluj-Napoca follows the same line, becoming the
museum of History of Transylvania.
99
Enea S.-C. Romanian Prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation
Romanian archaeologists
Enea S.-C. Romanian Prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation
100
Archaeological research is placed under the
aegis of the National Commission of Archaeology
of the Romanian Academy, and a very intense
research activity is performed, which contracts
with the intention of the political fora to subordi-
nate archaeological research.
Several new cultures were identified and de-
fined: Starčevo-Criş, linear pottery culture, Ha-
mangia, Dudeşti, Cîrcea, Gura Baciului — Ocna
Sibiului. In Banat and Crişana, settlements of the
Tisa, Ciumeşti, Tiszapolgar, and Bodrogkeresz-
tur cultures were discovered. The periodization of
most of the Neolithic cultures was achieved, to-
gether with the indication of the specific elements
for each stage. Co-joint work with experts from
related fields of study (geology, anthropology, pe-
dology, paleo-fauna) was commenced.
Substantial monographs of the settlements
of Stoiceni, Hăbăşeşti, Izvoare, Cârna, Sălcuţa,
Tangiru, Petru Rareş, Gornea, Rast, and Tîrpeşti
are published.
The dacia (new series) and Sciv (Studii şi
comunicări de istorie veche — which became
SCIvA in the ’70s) magazines focused largely on
publishing materials and studies of prehistoric ar-
chaeology. At the same time, the magazines and
journals edited by the Institutes of Archaeology
and the museums from other parts of the country
include works that largely deal with problems of
prehistory.
Two significant synthesis works are pub-
lished: istoria româniei (vol. I, 1960) in which
the prehistoric cultures are presented briefly by
D. Berciu and vl. Dumitrescu, and contribuţii
la problemele neoliticului în românia în lumina
noilor cercetări (1961) by D. Berciu. likewise,
monographs of the cultures and extensive studies
appeared: Hamangia (D. Berciu — 1966), Boian
(e. Comşa — 1974), Precucuteni (Silvia marines-
cu-Bоlcu — 1974), Dudeşti (e. Comşa — 1971),
Petreşti (I. Paul — 1970—1992), as well as syn-
thesis papers focused on certain geographical re-
gions: N. vlassa, neoliticul transilvaniei (1976)
and Gh. lazarovici neoliticul Banatului (1979).
vl. Dumitrescu published Arta neolitică în româ-
nia (1968), Arta preistorică în românia (1974),
Arta culturii cucuteni (1979). harta arheologică
a româniei («the Archaeological map of Roma-
nia») appears in 1972, edited by emil Condura-
chi, vl. Dumitrescu and m. Petrescu-Dîmboviţa.
In 1982, eugen Comşa publishes a populariza-
tion work on the Neolithic, neoliticul din româ-
nia, and in 1987 neoliticul pe teritoriul româniei.
consideraţii [Niculescu, 2002].
To conclude, the communist decades, although
responsible for a tremendous advance of prehis-
toric archaeology through the direct financial
investment made and the extensive research
performed, are also characterized by limita-
tions, internal and external, in the assimilation
of these advances into the theoretical corpus of
the discipline, which keeps the mission, concepts,
and methods of research of the interwar period;
marxism, as well as all the innovations that af-
fect the theoretical, methodological and cultural-
historical essence, failed to impose themselves in
the minds of the prehistorians [Anghelinu, 2003,
p. 245].
romAniAn ArchAEology in
thE poSt-totAlitAriAn AgE
The collapse of the eastern political bloc re-
leased from the tutelage of ideological marxism
several national archaeologies, each with its own
ambitions and limited resources, willing to align,
but uncertain about the direction of this align-
ment, while the competition did not stimulate an
uniformity [Anghelinu, 2003, p. 11].
Prehistoric archaeology witnessed after 1990 a
relatively large administrative and academic re-
structuring, ranging from the establishment of a
specialized service in the ministry of Culture and
the establishment of a national register of Ar-
chaeologistsi to the onset of regional universities,
including some with degrees of specialization in
archaeology; however, Romanian prehistoric ar-
chaeology of Romania does not seem very keen
on re-evaluating its past or present theoretical
canon.
Following 1989, the «marxist-leninist» dis-
course, adopted in its entirety by the Romanian
archaeology only during the Stalinist period, is
now present only vaguely, as an emphasis on eco-
nomic determinism. Furthermore, the discourse
of the political power structures, which gradu-
ally shifts towards a full european integration,
marginalizes the nationalist facet, at least in its
dialogue with the rest of europe. The reliance
of national ideology on archaeology is minimal;
this state of facts is reflected by the financial is-
sues facing archaeological research, by the pub-
lishing difficulties encountered even by «pres-
tigious» journals (e.g., ScivA, dacia, materiale
şi cercetări Arheologice) [Babeş, 1999, p. 9], by
the isolation felt by researched unable to consult
foreign literature, and last but not least, by the
wages received by the archaeologists and muse-
um curators.
The national discourse, which prevailed in
the last decades of the old regime, episodically
used in certain contexts after 1989, is now em-
ployed by those who now promote a far-right na-
tionalism but before 1989 were closely linked to
the communist structures, namely by those who
promote an exaggerated and embellished histo-
riography of the Romanians’ Thracian heritage
(e.g., I.C. Dragan and N. Săvescu). Similarly,
the national discourse is sometimes used when
organizing exhibitions «at order», during signifi-
cant political events, when Romania must dis-
play its «glorious past». even after 1989, some
works, particularly those concerning the period
101
Enea S.-C. Romanian Prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation
of migrations, promote the national discourse
with its favourite trope: the «uninterrupted
continuity of the local population, its rela-
tionships with various migrating peoples that
only temporarily penetrated the carpathian-
danubian-pontic area» [Teodor, 1996, p. 5].
Romania’s history begins in some «specialized»
works [Ursulescu, 1992] with the appearance of
the Australopithecus at Bugiuleşti.
In 2001 a great number of experts participated
actively in the implementation of an older project
of the Romanian Academy, namely the publica-
tion of a new treaty on the history of the roma-
nians. These experts were presented as «the best
specialists of the eras approached» in the study
[Berindei, 2001, p. XvIII]. Contrary to the highly
professional image of those involved, as the Ro-
manian Academy wants us to believe, a recent
critical study concerning the archaeology of the
nation’s origin in the treaty on the history of the
Romanians reveals the sordid underlining of this
project: political order, nationalist discourse, and,
last but not least, intellectual theft (plagiarism)
[Babeş, 2002].
After 1989, the most important feature of Ro-
manian archaeology is the entrenching of the
positivist discourse, whose keywords are «funda-
mental research», «research stage», «scientific»,
«objective», «empirical». Despite some critical at-
tempts and the emergence of new styles of inter-
pretation [Bolomey,1973; Niculescu, 1997; 2000;
Anghelinu, 2001—2002, 2003], this is still the
dominant discourse.
The spectacular entry in the foreground of
this type of discourse is reflected by the plan of
measures of the Committee of the Institute of Ar-
chaeology in Bucharest of the National Salvation
Front, published in SCIvA 41.1, 1990, pages 3—
6. In the preamble of this document, the authors
deplore the deficiencies of the old regime caused
by «ideological interference and pressures», the
promotion of «a primitive and anti-scientific
nationalism», and by isolation. «In these condi-
tions, which worsened from year to year, most of
our specialists managed to maintain their profes-
sional dignity, which should be underlined now,
at this beginning of a new era». «The staff of
the Institute of Archaeology in Bucharest, the
country’s leading professional institution»
affirms «enthusiastically, its total adherence to
the principles of the program of the Council of the
National Salvation Front». The plan, in addition
to measures that targeted the reorganization of
the institution, proposed measures that on the
one hand perpetuated the centralization typical
to the totalitarian period, and, on the other hand,
established the monopoly of this type of discourse
in the «scientific» interpretation of the past. The
Institute of Archaeology wants to be subordi-
nated to a «central forum» (Romanian Academy),
but also to subordinate tertiary education and
the Archaeological Commission, an institution
which «will be in charge of drafting the national
plan of research, excavation control, tracking its
capitalisation, and granting scientific degrees»
(paragraph 14). In short, the plan proposed the
reform of the archaeological field of Romania only
through administrative measures which do not
affect the centralized academic system, but which
ensure the dominance of the «scientific» speech
over other speeches.
As a consequence, archaeologists who before
1989 predominantly emitted along the lines of
another types of discourses, now took refuge in
this category, in other words they now become
exclusively «professional», forgetting their ideo-
logical activity. These professionals were among
the main suppliers of useful symbolic goods to the
communist regime and we can call them ideolo-
gist archaeologists. After 1989, in front of the de-
centralization policy (whether formal or assumed
by the political power), necessary for the integra-
tion into the european Union, some of them still
feel a strong sense of nostalgia over the age dur-
ing which they controlled the central institutions
to which they were affiliated (e.g., the Academy of
Social and Political Sciences). This is one of the ex-
cuses most often invoked when asked about their
Communist past: «I had no choice. Such were the
times». Such statements, however, imply that any
change must be done administratively, through
an act of will of those who govern. To think that
things can change merely under the conditions of
freedom «is to justify inaction, passivity, coward-
ice and compromise» [Barbu, 1999, p. 95].
Others have reacted in a different manner to
the changes following 1989, becoming what we
might call archaeologists-cultural managers. The
main feature of the cultural managers is that they
look to the past from a so-called capitalist per-
spective, based on the idea of efficiency and profit.
Archaeological practice is given importance only
to the extent that it is financially profitable, but
the generated profits are not used to reform the
archaeological field, but for the survival of the or-
ganization and operation scheme of the old insti-
tutions.
In another category we include the archaeolo-
gists whose reaction to the present context is the
refuge into «their own profession». This attitude is
nothing but the refuge in what Barbu calls «state
of moral exile», without realizing that the invoked
resistance «through culture» or resistance within
«one’s own mind» is equivalent, ultimately, to a
near-pathological form of ethical autism [Barbu,
1999, p. 55; Dragoman, Oanţă-marghitu, 2003].
In recent years there has been an intense activ-
ity in the field of pluridisciplinary research, and
in the correlation of the conclusions of these stud-
ies with those of traditional archaeology. New
syntheses integrate the results of related disci-
plines into a complex archaeological approach; it
is the case of the carpological, palynological, and
archaeozoological investigations.
Enea S.-C. Romanian Prehistoric archaeology, between tradition and innovation
102
It is also the era of international projects, in which
there are recruited foreign researchers, prehistoric
sites are investigated by methods and models al-
ready tested abroad, scholarships are granted in
the West to young Romanian archaeologists, more
and more acquisitions of the new Archaeology are
introduced; the echoes of marxism and positivism,
however, are still being heard.
Anghelinu mircea. De ce nu există teorie în arheologia
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Scaun. — Tвrgovişte, 2003.
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Babeş mircea. Arheologia şi societatea. O privire
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Barbu d. Republica absentă. Politică şi societate în
România postcomunistă / D. Barbu. — Bucureşti,
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Berindei d. Prefaţă / D. Berindei // Petrescu-Dîmboviţa
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crişan i.h. Origini / Crişan I.H. — Bucureşti, 1977.
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с.-К. Е н я
РуМыНсКАЯ ДОисТОРичЕсКАЯ
АРхЕОЛОГиЯ МЕжДу
ТРАДиЦиЯМи и иННОвАЦиЯМи
Целью статьи было представить краткую исто-
рию эволюции румынской доисторической архео-
логии, с момента своего становления в 19 веке и
по сей день. Были вычленены несколько различ-
ных этапов этой эволюции зависящие как от об-
щего уровня уровня развития археологии так и
от харизмы и деятельности отдельных личностей.
Очевидно, что научные основы дисциплины были
заложены после Второй мировой войны Васили-
ем Парваном, основателем археологии Румынии,
последователи которого доминируют в научном
дискурсе по сей день. Румынская доисторическая
археология, как и другие области исторического
исследования, отражалась в политическом дискур-
се, и, к сожалению, находилась под его влиянием в
течение определенного периода времени.
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