
These settlements contain the remains of 67 apparently planned dwellings, fireplaces, tools, instruments, and jewellery. During the archaeological excavations of the 1960s, seven prehistoric settlements were unearthed, one after the other. Today, the site is in a natural reserve in an extremely picturesque landscape. Today, it is even possible to say that people in those ancient times were even more instructed in the issues of nature and her whimsicality than we are today. The methods and complexity of the architecture of these buildings, their sustainability and energy efficiency, as well as the treatment of the associated monumental sculptures, clearly define the stages of settlement over a period of at least two thousand years.


Lepenski Vir is an archaeological site of extraordinary international significance an area where exceptional culture and specific art, which took place within organized social and religious life, emerged as unique in Central and South-Eastern Europe (6800-5400 BC, according to the date C14).
