Kale-Krševica is an archaeological site in Serbia, dating back mainly to the late classical and early Hellenistic periods.
[2][3] The site is located in the hills of Krševica overlooking Bujanovac and Vranje, to the south of Ristovac in southern Serbia.
[4][5] The town had an exceptionally strategic position on a plateau that descends from the Rujan mountain towards the South Morava and Vranje valley.
[3] Finds of coins of Philip II, Alexander III, Cassander, Demetrios Poliorketes and Pelagia correspond in general to the chronological span of the archaeological material discovered so far in the course of excavations,[8] which allows to considered the site as the northernmost[2] Ancient Macedonian city.
[12] A large textile industry could be documented, based on over a thousand loom weights, spindle whorls and spools from the fourth and early third centuries BC found at the site.