The National Museum Arandjelovac
5.0
Sight
The National Museum in Arandjelovac preserves and exhibits numerous exhibits in the field of paleontology, archeology, ethnology, history and art history. From March 2, 2011, visitors can see a new permanent setting, called Millenniums. The setting takes you through the millennia in which the area of the municipalities of Arandjelovac and Topola is continually settled. The earliest exposed items speak of the life of a Neanderthal man. It is a tool found in the cave Risovaca. On the big plotter you can see the steppe with the species of mammals that lived in the older stone age in these parts, as well as the pictures depicting the life of a Neanderthal man.
The central place of the paleontological part of the setting occupies the skeleton of the cave bear. The archaeological part of the setting leads us through the young Stone Age (6th and 5th millennium BC), with objects of Starčevci and Vinca culture. You can see eight millennia old ceramic pot, anthropomorphic figurine, ceramic pot of the 32nd century and more. The setting also leads us through the copper, bronze and iron age. Items exposed in the Celtic necropolises are exhibited, proving the permanent settlement of Celts and the interior of today Serbia. Part of the setting is a lapidarium, in which medieval tombstones and fragments of medieval churches and monasteries are exhibited. Among the exhibited monuments there is also a monument from the 14th / 15th centuries, which points to the existence of the so far unknown Serbian ruling family of Zivcic (brothers Mildrug, Dobruj and Plnoš).