Srečko Brodar | |
Birth Name: | Felix Brodar |
Birth Date: | May 29, 1920 |
Birth Place: | Ljubljana, Austria-Hungary |
Death Place: | Ljubljana, Slovenia, Yugoslavia |
Nationality: | Slovene |
Occupation: | Archaeologist |
Srečko Brodar (May 6, 1893 – April 27, 1987) was a Slovene archaeologist, internationally best known for excavation of Potok Cave (Slovenian: Potočka zijalka), an Upper Palaeolithic cave site in northern Slovenia.
Broidar was born in Ljubljana, the illegitimate son of Franciska Brodar, and baptized Felix Brodar[1] (Srečko is a Slovenized equivalent of Felix).[2] Brodar studied at the University of Vienna and University of Zagreb, graduating in 1920. Beginning in 1921, he taught at Celje Grammar School, and after the First World War, during which he received a serious elbow injury, he in 1939 received his PhD from the University of Ljubljana, and became a professor there in 1946, serving as the chair of Archaeological Department until retirement. Brodar was the director of the Institute of Archaeology at the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, and a member of the International Union for Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences.[3] His son Mitja Brodar (1921–2012) was also a noted archaeologist.
In 1928, he became famous with the excavation of Potok Cave (Slovenian: Potočka zijalka) and five other Palaeolithic sites in Slovenia, demonstrating the link between the Palaeolithic cultures of the eastern Alps and those of the Pannonian Plain and northern Italy.
After World War II, Brodar's research focused on Betal Rock Shelter (Slovenian: Betalov spodmol), a multiperiod prehistoric site near Postojna in southwest Slovenia. He also discovered the first Mesolithic sites in Slovenia, such as Špehovka Cave.