Jump to content

Lusatian culture: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
gords
No edit summary
 
(278 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Archaeological culture}}
The '''Lusatian culture''' existed in the later [[Bronze Age]] and early [[Iron Age]] (1300-500 BC) in eastern [[Germany]], most of [[Poland]], parts of [[Czech Republic]] and [[Slovakia]] (in older articles described also as [[Czechoslovakia]]) and parts of [[Ukraine]]. It covers the Periods Montelius III (early Lusatian culture) to V of the Northern-European chronological scheme.
{{About|prehistoric culture of the Lusatian region|the modern culture of the region|Lusatia}}
{{Infobox archaeological culture
| name = Lusatian culture
| map = File:KulturaLuzycka 1.png
| mapcaption = Lusatian culture's furthest extent (green)
| mapalt =
| altnames = Lausitz culture
| horizon =
| region = [[Central Europe]]
| period = Late [[Bronze Age Europe|Bronze Age]] to early [[Iron Age Europe|Iron Age]]
| dates = {{circa|1200–500 {{sc|BC}} }}
| typesite =
| majorsites =
| extra =
| precededby = [[Trzciniec culture]], [[Tumulus culture]], [[Nordic Bronze Age]], [[Urnfield culture]]
| followedby = [[Pomeranian culture]], [[Thraco-Cimmerian|Cimmerians]]
| definedby =
| antiquatedby =
| module =
}}


The '''Lusatian culture''' existed in the later [[Bronze Age Europe|Bronze Age]] and early [[Iron Age Europe|Iron Age]] (1300–500&nbsp;{{sc|BC}}) in most of what is now [[History of Poland|Poland]] and parts of the [[Czech Republic]], [[Slovakia]], eastern [[Germany]] and western [[Ukraine]]. It covers the Periods [[Montelius]]&nbsp;III (early Lusatian culture) to V of the Northern European chronological scheme.<ref>{{cite report |last=Ljungström |first=Rasmus |year=2001 |title=OPIA&nbsp;26 |series=Occasional Papers in Archaeology |volume=26 |department=Institutionen för arkeologi och antik historia |publisher=[[Uppsala University|Uppsala universitet]] |place=Uppsala, SV |via=arkeologi.uu.se |url=https://www.arkeologi.uu.se/Forskning/Publikationer/OPIA/Opia26/ |access-date=2023-05-16 |lang=sv }}</ref> It has been associated or closely linked with the [[Nordic Bronze Age]].<ref>{{cite report |author-link=Anders Kaliff |last=Kaliff |first=Anders |year=2001 |section=Gothic connections: Contacts between eastern Scandinavia and the southern Baltic coast 1000 BC – 500 AD |series=Occasional Papers in Archaeology |volume=26 |place=Uppsala, SV |title=OPIA&nbsp;26 |publisher=[[Uppsala University]] |via=arkeologi.uu.se |url=http://www.arkeologi.uu.se/Forskning/Publikationer/OPIA/Opia26/}}</ref> [[Hallstatt culture|Hallstatt]] influences can also be seen particularly in ornaments (fibulae, pins) and weapons.
[[Image: Buckelurne.jpg|thumb|300px|Lusatian vessel (Buckelurne), British Museum, London]]


==Origins==
The Lusatian culture developed from the Proto-Lusatian culture and the Trciniec-culture under some influence of the middle bronze Age Tumulus bronze Age (Hügelgräberkultur). It is contemporaneous with the [[Urnfield]] culture that is found from eastern [[France]] via southern Germany and Austria to [[Hungary]] and the [[Nordic Bronze Age]] in northwestern [[Germany]] and [[Scandinavia]]. It is followed by the early [[Iron Age]] [[Billendorf]] culture in the West. In Poland, the Lusatian culture is taken to span part of the Iron Age as well (the is only a terminological difference) and is succeeded by the [[Pommeranian culture]].
[[File:Biskupin - gate and wall.jpg|thumb|235x235px|Reconstructed [[Biskupin]] (Poland)]]
[[File:Biskupin - grodzisko łużyckie.jpg|thumb|235x235px|Reconstructed fortifications and longhouses at Biskupin]]
The Lusatian culture developed as the preceding [[Trzciniec culture]] experienced influences from the [[Tumulus culture]] of the [[Middle Bronze Age]], essentially incorporating the local communities into the socio-political network of Iron Age Europe.<ref>{{Citation | last =Dolukhanov |first=Pavel M.| year =1996 |title=The Early Slavs: Eastern Europe from the Initial Settlement to the Kievan Rus |location=New York | publisher=Longman |isbn=0-582-23627-4 |page=113}}</ref> It formed part of the [[Urnfield]] systems, origin of the [[Celts]] and [[Ancient Rome|Romans]],<ref name="schrijver">[[Peter Schrijver]], 2016, "Sound Change, the Italo-Celtic Linguistic Unity, and the Italian Homeland of Celtic", in John T. Koch & Barry Cunniffe, ''Celtic From the West 3: Atlantic Europe in the Metal Ages: questions of shared language''. Oxford, England; Oxbow Books, pp. 9, 489–502.</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Lorrio|first=Alberto|title=The Celts in Iberia: An Overview|journal=E-Keltoi: Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies |volume=6}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://indo-european.eu/2019/11/r1b-rich-bell-beaker-derived-italic-peoples-from-the-west-vs-etruscans-from-the-east/ | title=R1b-L23-rich Bell Beaker-derived Italic peoples from the West vs. Etruscans from the East | date=17 November 2019 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.historyfiles.co.uk/KingListsEurope/CulturesUrnfield.htm | title=Early European Cultures - Urnfield Culture / Proto-Celts }}</ref> found from eastern [[France]], southern Germany and Austria to [[Hungary]] and the [[Nordic Bronze Age]] in northwestern Germany and [[Scandinavia]]. It was followed by the [[Billendorf culture]] of the [[Early Iron Age]] in the West. In Poland, the Lusatian culture is taken have spanned part of the Iron Age as well (there is only a terminological difference) and was succeeded in Montelius VIIbc in the northern ranges around the mouth of [[Vistula]] by the [[Pomeranian culture]] spreading south.


'Lusatian-type' burials were first described by the [[Germans|German]] pathologist and archaeologist [[Rudolf Virchow]] (1821–1902). The name refers to the [[Lusatia]] area in eastern Germany ([[Brandenburg]] and [[Saxony]]) and western Poland. Virchow identified the pottery artifacts as 'pre-Germanic' but refused to speculate on the ethnic identity of their makers.{{Citation needed|date=June 2018}} The [[Polish people|Polish]] archeologist [[Józef Kostrzewski]], who started in 1934 to conduct extensive excavations of a Lusatian settlement of [[Biskupin]], hypothesised that the Lusatian culture was a predecessor of later cultures that belonged to the [[early Slavs]].<ref>Józef Kostrzewski, Od mezolitu do okresu wędrówek ludów, Prehistoria ziem polskich, Kraków 1939.</ref> Modern archeologists, such as both [[:pl:Kazimierz Godłowski|K. Godłowski]] and [[:pl:Piotr Kaczanowski|P. Kaczanowski]], hold the view that the ethnic geography of Bronze Age Central Europe then included peoples whose languages and ethnic identity are simply unknown.<ref>{{cite book |first=K. |last=Godłowski |author-link=:pl:Kazimierz Godłowski |year=1979 |title=Z badań nad zagadnieniem rozprzestrzeniania Słowian {{nobr|w V–VII w. n.e.}} |language=pl |trans-title=From the research on the spread of the Slavs in the 5th–7th centuries AD |publisher=Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im S. Staszica |place=Kraków, PL |lccn=80128712}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |first=P. |last=Kaczanowski |author-link=:pl:Piotr Kaczanowski |year=2003 |title=Epoka brązu – pomiędzy centrami cywilizacyjnymi Bałkanów i Alp a Skandynawią |language=pl |trans-title=Bronze Age – between the civilization centers of the Balkans and the Alps and Scandinavia |series=Wielka historia Polski |volume=I |page=170 |publisher=Fogra |place=Kraków, PL}}</ref>
Burial was by cremation, inhumations are rare. The urn is usually accompanied by numerous, up to 40 secondary vessels. Metal grave gifts are sparse, but there are numerous hoards (e.g. Kopaniewo, Pomerania) that contain rich metalwork, both bronze and gold (hoard of Eberswalde, [[Brandenburg]]). Graves containing moulds, like at Bataune, [[Saxony]] or tuyeres attest the production of bronze tools and weapons at village level.
The 'royal' tomb of [[Seddin]], [[Brandenburg]], Germany, covered by a large earthen [[barrow]] contained Mediterranean imports like bronze-vessels and glass beads. Cemeteries can be quite large and contain thousands of graves.


==Culture==
Well known settlements include [[Biskupin]] in Poland and [[Buch]] near [[Berlin]]. There are both open villages and fortified settlements ([[Gord (Slavic settlement)|gords]]) on hilltops or in swampy areas. The ramparts were constructed of wooden boxes filled with soil or stones.
Burial was by cremation; inhumations are rare. The urn is usually accompanied by numerous (up to 40) secondary vessels. Metal grave gifts are sparse, but there are numerous hoards (such as Kopaniewo, [[Pomerania]]) that contain rich metalwork, both bronze and gold (hoard of Eberswalde, [[Brandenburg]]). Graves containing moulds (like at Bataune, in [[Saxony]]) and [[tuyere]]s attest to the production of bronze tools and weapons at the village level. The 'royal' tomb of [[Seddin]], [[Brandenburg]], Germany, covered by a large earthen [[tumulus|barrow]], contained Mediterranean imports like bronze vessels and glass beads. Cemeteries can be quite large and contain thousands of graves.


Well-known settlements include [[Biskupin]], in Poland, and Buch, near [[Berlin]]. There are both open villages and fortified settlements ([[gord (archaeology)|''burgwall'' or ''gord'']]) on hilltops or in swampy areas. The ramparts were constructed of wooden boxes filled with soil or stones.
The economy was mainly based on arable agriculture, as is attested by numerous storage pits. Wheat ([[emmer]]) and six-row [[barley]] formed the basic crops, together with millet, rye and oats, peas, broad beans, lentils and [[gold of pleasure]] (Camelina sativa). Flax was grown, and remains of domesticated apples, pears and plums have been found. Cattle and pigs were the most important domestic animals, followed by sheep, goats, horses and dogs. Pictures on Iron Age urns from [[Silesia]] attest horse riding, but horses were used to draw chariots as well.
Hunting was practiced, as bones of red and roe deer, boar, bison, elk, hare, fox and wolf attest, but did not provide much of the meat consumed. The numerous frog-bones found at Biskupin may indicate that frog's legs were eaten as well.


Its economy was mainly based on arable agriculture, as is attested by numerous [[storage pit (archaeology)|storage pits]]. Wheat ([[emmer]]) and six-row [[barley]] formed the basic crops, together with [[millet]], [[rye]] and [[oat]]s, [[pea]]s, [[Vicia faba|broad beans]], [[lentil]]s, and [[gold of pleasure]] (Camelina sativa). [[Flax]] was grown, and remains of domesticated [[apple]]s, [[pear]]s, and [[plum]]s have been found. [[Cattle]] and [[pig]]s were the most important domestic animals, followed by [[sheep]], [[goat]]s, [[horse]]s, and [[dog]]s. Pictures on Iron Age urns from [[Silesia]] attest horse riding, but horses were used to draw chariots as well. Hunting was practiced, as bones of [[red deer|red]] and [[roe deer]], [[Wild boar|boar]], [[european bison|bison]], [[elk]], [[hare]], [[fox]], and [[wolf]] attest, but it did not provide much of the meat consumed. The numerous [[frog]] bones found at Biskupin may indicate that frogs' legs were eaten as well.
Hoards in swampy areas are considered by some archaeologists as 'gifts for the Gods'. Human bones in 5m deep sacrificial pits in Lossow (Brandenburg) might point to human sacrifice and probably [[cannibalism]].


==Gallery==
==History of research==
<gallery widths="110" heights="110" perrow="8">
File:DSC 0766 (2) Lausitzer Kultur in der Bronzezeit, Bronzeschwert.jpg|Lusatian weapons
File:02019 0799 (2) Bronzegeschirr aus Schlesien, Import in der Lausitzer-Kultur im Oder-Zuflussbereich.jpg|Various artefacts, Bronze and Iron Age
File:020210828 Bronze Age hoard from Miejsce, around 1000-900 BC, Namysłów district.jpg|Socketed axes and [[arm ring]]s
File:ALB - Kultwagen.jpg|Bronze cult wagon model, Germany
File:Biskupin Museum 021.JPG|Pottery from Biskupin
File:02019 0773 (3) Lausitzer Urne mit Erzählgrafiken aus Schlesien.jpg|Lusatian cinerary urn
File:Smac Eisenzeit 020.jpg|Pottery and figurines, Germany
File:020210904 113916 Bronze Tresure from Zagórze, Early Iron Age, around 600 BC, Lusatian Culture, fibula, nacklace, bangle.jpg|[[Torc]]s and [[arm ring]]s
File:Bronze Age Europe Jewelry and Ornaments (28140516733).jpg|Bronze fibulae, Germany
File:020210904 Bronze Tresure from Zagórze, Early Iron Age, around 600 BC, Lusatian Culture, fibula, nacklace, bangle.jpg|Fibula and [[arm ring]]s
File:Bronze Age Europe Bronze Ornaments (28471739120).jpg|Bronze Age ornaments, Germany
File:Lusatian1.jpg|Bronze vessel, Poland, {{nobr|c. 950 {{sc|BC}} }}
File:Lusatian2.jpg|Bronze collar with [[Solar deity#Solar vessels and chariots|sun ship]] motifs.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Kaczmarek |first=Maciej |year=2022 |title=Kaliska I: A Late Bronze Age metal hoard from Pomerania (Poland) |journal=Antiquity |volume=96 |issue=390 |pages=1612–1620 |doi=10.15184/aqy.2022.119 |s2cid=253071583 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/antiquity/article/kaliska-i-a-late-bronze-age-metal-hoard-from-pomerania-poland/DBDC9C8A696862F0D16DCF6F98DD3183}}</ref>
File:020220130 Hoard from Woskowice Małe.jpg|Hoard from Woskowice Małe, Poland, c. 550 BC
File:Smac Bronzezeit 083.jpg|Bronze [[arm ring]]s, Germany
File:Seddin grave contents.jpg|[[:de:Königsgrab von Seddin|Seddin grave]] contents, c. 900 BC, Germany
File:Sun ship1.jpg|Belt plate with [[Solar deity#Solar vessels and chariots|sun ship motif]], Poland, {{nobr|9th c. {{sc|BC}}.}}<ref name=Meller-2021-Nebra-disc>{{cite conference |last=Meller |first=Harald |year=2021 |title=The Nebra sky disc – astronomy and time determination as a source of power |book-title=Time is power. Who makes time? |conference=13th&nbsp;Archaeological Conference of Central Germany |publisher=Landesmuseum für Vorgeschichte Halle (Saale) |url=https://www.academia.edu/80363367 |isbn=978-3-948618-22-3}}</ref>{{efn|"This Late Bronze Age belt hook from Radolinek (former Floth), woj. wielkopolskie (Poland), shows two ships, keels facing each other, on each of which a figure stands with arms raised in worship. Above each ship, three phases of the sun’s journey are shown. The sun is pulled across the sky by birds and only seems to rest at its zenith. The metal plate is framed at the edges by two more {{nobr|sun-ships." — Meller (2021)<ref name=Meller-2021-Nebra-disc/>}} }}
File:02019 0749 (3) Lausitzer Kultur in der Bronzezeit, Armbinde.jpg|Bronze [[arm ring|arm bands]]
File:Smac Bronzezeit 051.jpg|Bronze tableware, 1200–1000 BC, [[Dresden]], Germany
File:Kultura łużycka, lusatian culture 16.JPG|Bronze spiral 'spectacle' pendants
File:Diadem, Sichów, okres brązu, Wrocław 1.jpg|Gold diadem from Sichów, Poland
File:Lusatian bronze hanging bowls.jpg|Bronze hanging bowls, Poland
File:Lusatian1.png|Lusatian pottery, Germany
File:02019 1501 Skelettgrab des 12. Jahrhunderts v. Chr. aus Grodzisko Dolne.jpg|Burial, Poland, c. 1200 BC
File:Römerschanze bei Potsdam Geländemodell.jpg|3D model of a Lusatian rampart fortification in [[Potsdam]] near [[Berlin]]
File:Lusatian reconstruction 1.jpg|Reconstruction of Lusatian artefacts
</gallery>


== See also ==
'Lausitz-type' burials were first described by the German doctor and archaeologist [[Rudolf Virchow]] (1821-1902). The name refers to the [[Lusatia]] (Lausitz) area in eastern Germany ([[Brandenburg]] and [[Saxony]]) and Poland. Virchow identified the pottery as 'pre-Germanic' but refused to speculate on the ethnic identity of their makers.
{{Prehistory of Poland}}
*[[Lusatia]]
*[[Urnfield culture]]
*[[Nordic Bronze Age]]
*[[Hallstatt culture]]
*[[:de:Hügelgräberfeld „Schweinert“|Schweinert burial mounds]]
*[[:de:Heidenschanze bei Dresden|Heidenschanze fortified settlement]]


== Footnotes ==
Numerous Czech (Pí&#263;, Niederle, &#262;ervinka) and Polish (Majewski, [[Józef Kostrzewski| Kostrzewski]], Koz&#322;owski) authors believed the Lusatians to be Proto-Slavs, while the German archaeologist A. Götze saw them as [[Thracians|Thracian]], and G. [[Gustav Kossinna|Kossinna]] first as [[Karpo-Dacian]], a tribe mentioned by [[Zosimus]] and then as [[Illyrians|Illyrian]].
{{notelist}}


== References ==
Today, most scholars have accepted the historical and changing nature of ethnic groups and do not try to continue ethnic groups known from written sources into the prehistoric period.
{{reflist|25em}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
{{refbegin|colwidth=25em|small=yes}}
* {{cite book |first1=J.M. |last1=Coles |first2=A.F. |last2=Harding |year=1979 |title=The Bronze Age in Europe |place=London, UK |language=en}}
* {{cite conference |last=Dabrowski |first=J. |year=1986 |title=Nordische Kreis und Kulturen Polnischer Gebiete |book-title=Die Bronzezeit im Ostseegebiet |editor=Ambrosiani, B. |publication-date=1989 |conference=Kgl. Schwedischen Akademie der Literatur-Geschichte und Altertumsforschung über das Julita-Symposium 1986 |editor-link=Björn Ambrosiani |series=Konferenser&nbsp;22: Kungl. Vitterhets Historie och Antikvitets Akademien |place=Stockholm, SV |lang=de, sv}}
{{refend}}


==External links==
*J. M. Coles and A. F. Harding, ''The Bronze Age in Europe'' (London 1979).
{{Commons category|Lusatian culture}}
* [http://www.dziejba.org Hypothetical reconstruction of a Lusatian culture settlement, raised using only bronze age tools - Wola Radziszowska (near Cracow)- Poland]
* [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/antiquity/article/kaliska-i-a-late-bronze-age-metal-hoard-from-pomerania-poland/DBDC9C8A696862F0D16DCF6F98DD3183 Kaliska I: a Late Bronze Age metal hoard from Pomerania (Poland)]


{{Vistula}}
[[pl:Kultura &#322;u&#380;ycka]]
{{Bronze Age footer}}
{{Authority control}}

[[Category:Archaeological cultures of Europe]]
[[Category:Iron Age cultures of Europe]]
[[Category:Bronze Age cultures of Europe]]
[[Category:Archaeological cultures in the Czech Republic]]
[[Category:Archaeological cultures in Germany]]
[[Category:Archaeological cultures in Poland]]
[[Category:Archaeological cultures in Slovakia]]
[[Category:Archaeological cultures in Ukraine]]
[[Category:Prehistoric Poland]]

Latest revision as of 17:18, 2 December 2024

Lusatian culture
Lusatian culture's furthest extent (green)
Alternative namesLausitz culture
Geographical rangeCentral Europe
PeriodLate Bronze Age to early Iron Age
Datesc. 1200–500 BC
Preceded byTrzciniec culture, Tumulus culture, Nordic Bronze Age, Urnfield culture
Followed byPomeranian culture, Cimmerians

The Lusatian culture existed in the later Bronze Age and early Iron Age (1300–500 BC) in most of what is now Poland and parts of the Czech Republic, Slovakia, eastern Germany and western Ukraine. It covers the Periods Montelius III (early Lusatian culture) to V of the Northern European chronological scheme.[1] It has been associated or closely linked with the Nordic Bronze Age.[2] Hallstatt influences can also be seen particularly in ornaments (fibulae, pins) and weapons.

Origins

[edit]
Reconstructed Biskupin (Poland)
Reconstructed fortifications and longhouses at Biskupin

The Lusatian culture developed as the preceding Trzciniec culture experienced influences from the Tumulus culture of the Middle Bronze Age, essentially incorporating the local communities into the socio-political network of Iron Age Europe.[3] It formed part of the Urnfield systems, origin of the Celts and Romans,[4][5][6][7] found from eastern France, southern Germany and Austria to Hungary and the Nordic Bronze Age in northwestern Germany and Scandinavia. It was followed by the Billendorf culture of the Early Iron Age in the West. In Poland, the Lusatian culture is taken have spanned part of the Iron Age as well (there is only a terminological difference) and was succeeded in Montelius VIIbc in the northern ranges around the mouth of Vistula by the Pomeranian culture spreading south.

'Lusatian-type' burials were first described by the German pathologist and archaeologist Rudolf Virchow (1821–1902). The name refers to the Lusatia area in eastern Germany (Brandenburg and Saxony) and western Poland. Virchow identified the pottery artifacts as 'pre-Germanic' but refused to speculate on the ethnic identity of their makers.[citation needed] The Polish archeologist Józef Kostrzewski, who started in 1934 to conduct extensive excavations of a Lusatian settlement of Biskupin, hypothesised that the Lusatian culture was a predecessor of later cultures that belonged to the early Slavs.[8] Modern archeologists, such as both K. Godłowski and P. Kaczanowski, hold the view that the ethnic geography of Bronze Age Central Europe then included peoples whose languages and ethnic identity are simply unknown.[9][10]

Culture

[edit]

Burial was by cremation; inhumations are rare. The urn is usually accompanied by numerous (up to 40) secondary vessels. Metal grave gifts are sparse, but there are numerous hoards (such as Kopaniewo, Pomerania) that contain rich metalwork, both bronze and gold (hoard of Eberswalde, Brandenburg). Graves containing moulds (like at Bataune, in Saxony) and tuyeres attest to the production of bronze tools and weapons at the village level. The 'royal' tomb of Seddin, Brandenburg, Germany, covered by a large earthen barrow, contained Mediterranean imports like bronze vessels and glass beads. Cemeteries can be quite large and contain thousands of graves.

Well-known settlements include Biskupin, in Poland, and Buch, near Berlin. There are both open villages and fortified settlements (burgwall or gord) on hilltops or in swampy areas. The ramparts were constructed of wooden boxes filled with soil or stones.

Its economy was mainly based on arable agriculture, as is attested by numerous storage pits. Wheat (emmer) and six-row barley formed the basic crops, together with millet, rye and oats, peas, broad beans, lentils, and gold of pleasure (Camelina sativa). Flax was grown, and remains of domesticated apples, pears, and plums have been found. Cattle and pigs were the most important domestic animals, followed by sheep, goats, horses, and dogs. Pictures on Iron Age urns from Silesia attest horse riding, but horses were used to draw chariots as well. Hunting was practiced, as bones of red and roe deer, boar, bison, elk, hare, fox, and wolf attest, but it did not provide much of the meat consumed. The numerous frog bones found at Biskupin may indicate that frogs' legs were eaten as well.

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ "This Late Bronze Age belt hook from Radolinek (former Floth), woj. wielkopolskie (Poland), shows two ships, keels facing each other, on each of which a figure stands with arms raised in worship. Above each ship, three phases of the sun’s journey are shown. The sun is pulled across the sky by birds and only seems to rest at its zenith. The metal plate is framed at the edges by two more sun-ships." — Meller (2021)[12]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Ljungström, Rasmus (2001). OPIA 26. Institutionen för arkeologi och antik historia (Report). Occasional Papers in Archaeology (in Swedish). Vol. 26. Uppsala, SV: Uppsala universitet. Retrieved 2023-05-16 – via arkeologi.uu.se.
  2. ^ Kaliff, Anders (2001). "Gothic connections: Contacts between eastern Scandinavia and the southern Baltic coast 1000 BC – 500 AD". OPIA 26 (Report). Occasional Papers in Archaeology. Vol. 26. Uppsala, SV: Uppsala University – via arkeologi.uu.se.
  3. ^ Dolukhanov, Pavel M. (1996), The Early Slavs: Eastern Europe from the Initial Settlement to the Kievan Rus, New York: Longman, p. 113, ISBN 0-582-23627-4
  4. ^ Peter Schrijver, 2016, "Sound Change, the Italo-Celtic Linguistic Unity, and the Italian Homeland of Celtic", in John T. Koch & Barry Cunniffe, Celtic From the West 3: Atlantic Europe in the Metal Ages: questions of shared language. Oxford, England; Oxbow Books, pp. 9, 489–502.
  5. ^ Lorrio, Alberto. "The Celts in Iberia: An Overview". E-Keltoi: Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies. 6.
  6. ^ "R1b-L23-rich Bell Beaker-derived Italic peoples from the West vs. Etruscans from the East". 17 November 2019.
  7. ^ "Early European Cultures - Urnfield Culture / Proto-Celts".
  8. ^ Józef Kostrzewski, Od mezolitu do okresu wędrówek ludów, Prehistoria ziem polskich, Kraków 1939.
  9. ^ Godłowski, K. [in Polish] (1979). Z badań nad zagadnieniem rozprzestrzeniania Słowian w V–VII w. n.e. [From the research on the spread of the Slavs in the 5th–7th centuries AD] (in Polish). Kraków, PL: Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza im S. Staszica. LCCN 80128712.
  10. ^ Kaczanowski, P. [in Polish] (2003). Epoka brązu – pomiędzy centrami cywilizacyjnymi Bałkanów i Alp a Skandynawią [Bronze Age – between the civilization centers of the Balkans and the Alps and Scandinavia]. Wielka historia Polski (in Polish). Vol. I. Kraków, PL: Fogra. p. 170.
  11. ^ Kaczmarek, Maciej (2022). "Kaliska I: A Late Bronze Age metal hoard from Pomerania (Poland)". Antiquity. 96 (390): 1612–1620. doi:10.15184/aqy.2022.119. S2CID 253071583.
  12. ^ a b Meller, Harald (2021). "The Nebra sky disc – astronomy and time determination as a source of power". Time is power. Who makes time?. 13th Archaeological Conference of Central Germany. Landesmuseum für Vorgeschichte Halle (Saale). ISBN 978-3-948618-22-3.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Coles, J.M.; Harding, A.F. (1979). The Bronze Age in Europe. London, UK.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Dabrowski, J. (1986). "Nordische Kreis und Kulturen Polnischer Gebiete". In Ambrosiani, B. (ed.). Die Bronzezeit im Ostseegebiet. Kgl. Schwedischen Akademie der Literatur-Geschichte und Altertumsforschung über das Julita-Symposium 1986. Konferenser 22: Kungl. Vitterhets Historie och Antikvitets Akademien (in German and Swedish). Stockholm, SV (published 1989).
[edit]