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Serbia Vina

By Gordon Duff, Senior Editor on April 27, 2013

Serbia Vina

The Goddess Serbon

By Sir Vojislav Milosevic


Director, Center for Counter-terrorism

(Belgrade, Serbia) Goddess Serbona, 550 B.C. Goddess Serbona has dress also
Vinan symols on it. Goddess Serbona depicted as Olympia on a Greek coin, on a
Minoan coin, in Assyria, on vase in Egypt.
Vina
Large, late Neolithic tell site in modern Serbia that gave its name to a culture of the
central Balkans (c.5500- 4500 BC). It is characterized by large, long-lived agricultural
villages and distinctive painted pottery, including figurines and models.
The Vina culture flourished from 5,500 to 3,500 BC on the territories of what is now
Serbia, Bosnia, Romania and Macedonia. It got its name from the present-day village
of Vina, 10 km east of Belgrade on the Danube river, where over 150 Vina
settlements have been determined.
There is no evidence of war or defences in the townships, and it appears that the
Vina were a peaceful society combining low-level agriculture with foraging and trade.
They produced the first known European examples of a proto-script and were the
first people in the world known to smelt copper. They existed in a similar state for
almost 2,000 years, following which they appear to have dispersed around the
Mediterranean and Aegean.
Vina settlements were considerably larger than any other contemporary European
culture, in some instances surpassing the cities of the Aegean and early Near
Eastern Bronze Age a millennium later. The largest sites, some more than 300,000
square metres may have been home to up to 2,500 people.
We are told that they lived in spacious housing and separated their dead in nearby
necropolis. They had workshops, which means skilled labour. They worked with
several styles of pottery and had their own particular artistic fingerprint which is seen
in both early Cretan and Sumerian cultures, which rose following the demise of the
Old Europe heartland.
Stajstvo: 5500-4000 B.C.E.
The Cradle of Human Civilization
Accoriding to Gordon Childe, Stajstvo is the oldest age from where we have
obtained reliable facts about human life, development, and movement.
Animal husbandy was already developed, but with the perfection of farming came the
first human settlements: smaller towns (Jacque Pirenne).

The lower Danube area is the most fertile and the most likely place for the earliest
forms of the agriculture: at theconfluence of the Danube, Tisa, Morava and Sava
rivers (Jacque Pirenne).
Jacque Pirenne claims that agriculture did not start in the Middle East: it was already
used 1000-2000 years earlier at the lower Danube area.
In the lower Danube area, modern day findings document that bronze was developed
2000 years earlier compared to the Middle East. Bronze in Mesopotamia was first
used around 3000 years B.C.E.(Gordon Childe).
During this period, the Egyptyans only knew how to craft stone axes (Gordon Childe).
At the end of period of Stajstvo, the people living at the lower Danube area crafted
the first pottery ever made from clay, and, consequently, the worlds first art which
which was an extremely big step in human development (Gordon Childe).
The worlds first and oldest pottery with Vincan symbols and letters.
The Vinan Script (5500 B.C.E.) is the worlds first fully developed alphabet,
containing only 30 letters. The writings can be seen in Serbia: Vina, Starevo,
Tartary, Tordo, Gradesnica, Banjica, Karanovo (Bulgaria). In Greece: Troy and
Crete, and in Israel (Palestine) in Fenicia (Jacque Pirenne).

The Vinan Script (5500 B.C.E.)

Helen and Paris from Troy. 4th Century B.C.


Serbian symbol, in the middle of the picture, during the long history, till today!

Coat of arms of the Principality of Serbia

Shield in the coat of arms

Vinan symbols on figurinas, found in Vina, Serbia. The symbol is still used today on
Serbias coat of arms.
The following figurines are excavated at Vina, dating from period of Stajstvo. The
last figurine is from is from Knossos which bears a crushing resemblance to the
Vincan figurines.

The Vinans developed the first classic mythology with the worlds first temples and
holy scripts. The Vinan Gods were first and foremost natural phenomena: the Sun,
the Heaven, the Earth and fertility; all had their respective pair (Gordon Childe).
The main cities with the temples of the Gods were Vina, Lepenski vir, Starevo in
Serbia, and Kere and Karanovo (Bulgaria). Accordingly, the Vinan mythology was
spread to all corners of Helm: the Balkans (Gordon Childe).
Here are some exemples of the most important God and Goddess from he Vinan
mythology: The God of Sun Serbon, and his wife the Goddess of the Moon
Serbona.
God Serbon and his dress: has Vinan symbols on it.

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