Entering 7,000 years of history
What We Stand For

Our Mission

Preserving and sharing 7,000 years of Trypillian heritage with the world — freely, independently, from Ukraine.

About Us

Bridging Past & Present

Trypillia.com is a digital knowledge platform dedicated to the Cucuteni-Trypillia civilization — one of Europe's earliest and most advanced prehistoric cultures, flourishing across modern-day Ukraine, Moldova, and Romania from approximately 5400 to 2700 BCE.

We believe that understanding who we were is essential to understanding who we are. Our mission is to make the remarkable legacy of Trypillian culture — its proto-urban settlements, symbolic art, and pioneering agricultural society — accessible to researchers, students, and curious minds around the globe, free of charge and free of barriers.

What We Do

01

Open Knowledge

We maintain a comprehensive, freely accessible archive of articles, research findings, and visual materials on Trypillian civilization — with no paywalls, no ads, and no gatekeeping.

02

Translation

We translate Ukrainian and Eastern European academic papers into English, bridging a language gap that has long kept important discoveries inaccessible to the global scholarly community.

03

Digital Preservation

We digitize and safeguard irreplaceable cultural heritage materials — photographs, drawings, and documentation — ensuring their survival for future generations.

Independent & Ukrainian

Built and maintained from Ukraine

Trypillia.com is a fully independent initiative — not affiliated with any government, institution, or commercial organization.

In these historic and challenging times, preserving our deep cultural heritage and sharing it with the English-speaking world is more important to us than ever. We work to ensure that knowledge about one of Europe's first great civilizations remains alive, visible, and respected.

Everything on this platform is curated with care — from translated academic papers to visual archives of archaeological discoveries — all offered freely as a public resource.

We believe that access to historical knowledge should remain free and open. The story of Trypillia belongs to the world.

Join Our Journey

Explore our archive of research and discoveries, or help us keep this knowledge free and accessible.