Комуњарските „Словени“ го исмејуваа Иљов...да видиме сега што креативно ќе смислат за грчкиве Иљовци...
додека ние му се смееме за нашето
The cultural achievements of the Neolithic society are impressed on the material remains bequeathed to us and which have been revealed through excavations. Architecture, burials, tools, pottery, figurines and jewellery demonstrate, after a silence of thousands of years, with a unique eloquence and descriptiveness the natural environment and its economic exploitation, the ways of disposing farming products, the structure of society and codes of behaviour, the channels of artistic expression and, finally, the contacts and exchanges, that reveal new worlds, beyond the confines of the small settlements.
The above mentioned features were shaped on matter, since they were not expressed in written speech. The wooden tablet, with the incised linear symbols, from the lakeside settlement of Dispilio in Kastoria (5260 BC), is likely to be an early form of written speech as conjectured about similar symbols incised on clay, discovered in settlements of the southern Balkans (Vinca culture).
http://www.ime.gr/chronos/01/images/gallery/nl/dispilio/spitia.gif
The prehistoric settlement of Dispilio is situated at the site Nisi, on the southern shore of Kastoria lake. It was located in 1932, when the lake level fell, and at the point where Nisi was separated from the lakeshore, remains of wooden posts became visible. Systematic excavations (1992 onwards) unearthed the remains of a large lakeside settlement of the Late Neolithic; one of the most important and oldest of its kind in Europe. Excavations of lakeside settlements started in 1854 at Bodensee, South Germany, and were then taken up in central and western Europe enabling researchers to develop special methods of excavation and conservation techniques. Excavations at Dispilio constitute a landmark for archaeological investigations in Greece because of the special character of the site and because it permits the study of habitation structures during the Neolithic Period.
The houses of the settlement, circular and rectangular, were built of timber, reed and clay upon timber-post framed platforms. The modern reconstruction of the lakeside settlement which has been programmed and is expected to extend over a surface area of 150,000 square metres approximately, will provide a wonderful insight into the habitation norms of that period.
Among the fauna and flora remains as well as the mobiliary finds from the excavations (pottery, tools, etc.), the whole range of economic activities of the prehistoric inhabitants of Dispilio are represented: farming, animal husbandry, hunting and fishing. Numerous bone hooks and traces of a boat, identical to those used to this day by the fishermen of Kastoria, is clear evidence that fishing was practised. Finds such as leaf-shaped and triangular arrow heads of Melian obsidian, pottery similar to that of the neighbouring Balkan areas and a stone ring idol pendant, place the settlement of Dispilio within the exchange networks (
http://www.ime.gr/chronos/01/en/nl/culture/contactfr.html) developed in Greece in particular during the Late Neolithic.
Grey pottery of the Tsangli type, black burnished ware of the Larisa type and polychrome painted vessels date to the phases of the Late Neolithic I (
http://www.ime.gr/chronos/01/en/nl/nni/nn1_potfr.html). In the late phases of the settlement, black and blacktopped ware predominated, as well as red burnished and painted (
http://www.ime.gr/chronos/01/en/nl/nnii/nn2_potfr.html) designs (brown on a light background). Characteristic types of vases were bowls, fruit-stands, closed vases with a neck and clay tables.
http://www.ime.gr/chronos/01/images/gallery/nl/dispilio/grafia.gif
Three bone flutes along with a wooden tablet (
http://www.ime.gr/chronos/01/en/nl/culture/index.html) with incised linear symbols reflect the unique cultural aspects of the community at Dispilio. This tablet dates with certainty from 5260 BC. and is not unlikely to be an early form of written speech, as has been assumed about similar symbols incised on clay, discovered at settlements in the southern Balkans (Vinca culture).
Unfortunately even this archeologic find has been manipulated by our northern neighbors in their strife to denounce their true origins and connect themselves to the ancient inhabitants not only of the classical age, but now to those of the Neolithic !!!
One of many on the FYROMian propaganda machine's pay-role is Vasil Ilyov. Vasil Ilyov has claimed (http://www.unet.com.mk/ancient-macedonians-part2/spomenici8-e.htm)to have deciphered the markings (that according to him, represent the Bulgarian dialect spoken in FYROM..)on a wooden tablet that was found at the archeologic site of Dispilio at Kastoria and dated by the method of C14 at the 'Dimokritos' research center to 5260 BC.
Anyway.. I think we should present some of Vasil Ilyovs claims as presented in his highly questionable article before we present more info on the actual tablet..
http://web.auth.gr/dispilio/
http://web.auth.gr/dispilio/
еве што има на таблата
зголемено
на истиот локалитет најдени се шупелки