Croatia and the Pile-Dwelling Fever: Rediscovered 19th-Century Narratives from Budinščina

Palabras clave: Croacia, Europa, Construcciones sobre pilotes, Prehistoria, Arqueología de humedales

Resumen

One of the earliest documented accounts of pile-dwellings in present-day Croatian territory dates to 1885, when Šime Ljubić, the director of the Archaeological Department of the National Museum in Zagreb, discovered sharpened wooden piles embedded in an artificial island of a fishpond on the property of Mr. Petar Horvat in the village of Budinščina in north-western Croatia. Ljubić observed that the piles were arranged in regular patterns and identified them as remnants of a prehistoric pile-dwelling, drawing comparisons to the Terramara pile-dwellings in Italy. He conducted preliminary archaeological excavations at the site and subsequently presented his findings at a conference in Klagenfurt, Austria. These results were later published in two brief reports in 1885 and 1887. In late 1885, Luigi Pigorini, an Italian archaeologist engaged in research on the Terramara sites and a key figure in the 19th-century "pile-dwelling fever," read Ljubić's first report and initiated correspondence. This paper aims to present Ljubić’s discoveries by utilizing archival materials and archaeological artifacts housed at the Archaeological Museum in Zagreb. A significant portion of the article includes transcripts of the original letters exchanged between Ljubić and Horvat, as well as between Ljubić and Pigorini, thereby contributing historical context and highlighting the renewed scholarly interest in prehistoric pile-dwellings in the region.

Biografía del autor/a

Katarina Jerbić, Institute of Archaeological Sciences, University of Bern
Dr. Katarina Jerbić holds an MA in Archaeology and Ethnology (2009) from the University of Zagreb, after which she worked extensively as a field archaeologist and archaeological illustrator on numerous excavations across Croatia, and as a curator at the Archaeological Museum of Istria in Pula. In 2016, she was awarded the Honor Frost Foundation–Flinders University doctoral scholarship to pursue a PhD in underwater archaeology at Flinders University in Adelaide (Australia), focusing on the submerged prehistoric pile-dwelling in Zambratija Bay, Croatia. She is currently a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Bern, leading the SNSF-funded project Between the Alps and the Balkans: Prehistoric Pile-Dwellings across Croatia.
Ana Solter, Archaeological Museum in Zagreb
Museum Advisor at the Archaeological Museum in Zagreb. She holds a degree in archaeology and ethnology (2005) and a PhD (2023) from the University of Zagreb, focusing on the development of archaeology in Croatia. Since 2007, she has worked in the Museum’s Documentation Department, leading it since 2011. She has curated numerous exhibitions and led key digitization projects. Her main research interests include the history of archaeology and institutional memory.
Asja Tonc, Institute of Archaeology (Zagreb)
Senior Research Associate at the Institute of Archaeology in Zagreb, Croatia, where she has been employed since 2008. She obtained her PhD in 2015 on the topic of Late Iron Age in the northern part of the East Adriatic. She continues to work on topics related to Late Iron Age and Early Roman periods of the Eastern Adriatic as well as southern Pannonia, especially dealing with various issues on identity, trade and exchange, ceramics and small metal finds.
Albert Hafner, Institute of Archaeological Sciences, University of Bern
Prof. Dr. Albert Hafner studied prehistoric archaeology, ethnology, and botany at the Universities of Tübingen and Freiburg from 1983–1989. He received his doctorate at Freiburg in 1994 and obtained habilitation at the University of Zurich in 2012. He worked at the State Monuments Office of Baden-Württemberg and the Archaeological Service of the Canton of Bern from 1988–2012, specializing in underwater and wetland archaeology. He directed Neolithic and Bronze Age projects in lakes, bogs, and Alpine ice sites and contributed to the successful 2011 UNESCO nomination Prehistoric Pile Dwellings around the Alps. Since August 2012, he is a full Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology and Co-Director of the Institute of Archaeological Sciences at the University of Bern.

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Publicado
2025-06-09