settlement, reconstruction Prominent Butmir culture sites include Butmir (
Sarajevo), Kraljevine (
Novi Šeher), Obre II (
Kakanj), Nebo (
Travnik), Crkvina (
Turbe),
Okolište (
Visoko), and Brdo (
Kiseljak). According to radiocarbon analysis, occupation of these settlements spanned from 5100 to 4500 BCE: • Butmir I, 5100 – 4900 BCE • Butmir II, 4850 – 4750 BCE (settlement in Butmir, results from 1979), • Butmir III, to 4500. BCE (Gimbutas, 1974, 16) (results from 2002). The Butmir culture was the home for several large settlements, among them the site of
Okolište in
Bosnia dating to 5200–4500 BCE, with population estimates between 1,000 and 3,000 people. The settlement was largest in the early phase (5200 BC) with an area of 7.5 hectare, gradually declining to 1.2 hectare by 4500 BC. The site likely consisted of parallel rows of houses ranging from four to ten meters in length. The site also likely had a series of ditches surrounding it with a single entrance. The site of Okolište would likely have been an egalitarian society with no evidence of social stratification. Most animal remains found in Okolište belong to cattle, while a fair amount belonged to sheep, goats, and pigs. The diet of the Okoliste people consisted mainly of cattle, emmer, einkorn, and lentils. Although there was an importance of agriculture and animal husbandry, wild game was still hunted as a source of food.
Butmir is the oldest
Neolithic site in
Bosnia and Herzegovina. It was discovered by Austro-Hungarian authorities during the construction of a school in district of
Ilidža. The first field work was conducted between 1893 and 1896 by Vjenceslav Radimski and Franjo Fiala. This discovery was monumental, and sparked an international meeting of archaeologists and anthropologists in Sarajevo in August 1894. Houses that were unearthed took the forms of dugouts (or semi-dugouts) and some above ground buildings. The largest number of dugouts was discovered in Butmir itself (90). The site of Kraljevine in
Novi Šeher was explored in 1906–1908, but the results have not been fully published. Excavations unveiled a large number of carved stone axes, which indicates a large workshop center, but there is almost no Neolithic architecture. Obre near
Kakanj was researched from 1963 to 1965, 1967 to 1968, and in 1970 when large, systematic excavations were done in two close locations: Obre I (Raskršće) and Obre II (Gornje polje). Obre I belonged to the
Starcevo culture and
Kakanj culture groups, while Obre II completely belonged to the Butmir culture. The main supplement of this neolithic economy was agriculture and
animal husbandry. Hunting was of less importance, but also part of daily life. Pottery produced by these people shows they possessed fine workmanship. Decorations are unique to Butmir culture and have many geometric motifs. == Pottery ==