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Topic: Funnelbeaker culture


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  Funnelbeaker culture - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The successor culture was the Corded Ware culture and the overlapping Globular Amphora culture.
Oddly, it was later pushed south from the Mälaren basin, and from the east, by a hunter and gatherer culture called the Pitted Ware culture (the debate on whether it was by demic diffusion or cultural diffusion mirrors the arrival of the Funnelbeaker culture).
The Funnelbeaker culture marks the appearance of megalithic tombs at the coasts of the Baltic and of the North sea, an example of which are the Sieben Steinhäuser in northern Germany.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Funnelbeaker_culture   (947 words)

  
 Pitted Ware culture - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Pitted Ware culture (ca 3200 BC– ca 2300 BC) was a neolithic Hunter-gatherer culture in southern Scandinavia, mainly along the coasts of Svealand, Götaland, Åland, north-eastern Denmark and southern Norway.
It was first contemporary and overlapping with the agricultural Funnelbeaker culture, and later with the agricultural Corded Ware culture.
The culture is most easily accounted for as deriving from the mesolithic Nøstvet and Lihult cultures that received additional population and skills from the Funnelbeaker culture, but less of its economy.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Pitted_Ware_culture   (584 words)

  
 Quaest.io on Corded Ware
The Corded Ware culture, alternatively characterized as the Battle Axe culture or Single Grave culture is an enormous European archaeological horizon that begins in the late Neolithic (stone age), flourished through the copper age and finally culminates in the early bronze age, developing in various areas from ca.
This is marked by the fact that the Funnelbeaker culture had collective megalithic graves with a great deal of sacrifices to the graves, but the Battle Axe culture has individual graves with individual sacrifices.
The eastern outposts of the Corded Ware culture are the Middle Dnieper culture and on the upper Volga, the Fatyanovo-Balanovo culture.
www.quaest.io /?title=Corded_ware   (1412 words)

  
 Beaker culture Did You Mean beaker_culture   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
Beaker culture are defined by the common use of a pottery style -- a beaker with a distinctive bell-shaped profile found across the western part of the Continent during the late 3rd millennium BC.
In contrast to this, Marija Gimbutas derived the Beakers from east central European cultures that became "Kurganized" by incursions of steppe tribes.
There is no necessary correlation between an archaeological culture and an ethnic group however, as there is no one-to-one correlation between the material culture excavated by archaeologists and an ethnicity or society.
www.did-you-mean.com /Beaker_culture.html   (555 words)

  
 Slavic Origins   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
In this culture are traces of protobaltic and protoslavic cultures.
This culture is example of an early Indo-European culture, which in one part is derived from early Corded Ware culture, but in second part it is derived from east and central European cultures, which become "Kurganized" under incursions from steppe tribes from east.
Ertebolle culture is a culture of Western European natives, whom were according to archeological diggouts mixed race Cro-Magnon.
home.swipnet.se /Piotr_Glownia/Pochodzenie_e.htm   (4450 words)

  
 [ information-center.be | Beaker_culture Resources ]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
To others, the Beaker culture apparently derives from early Corded Ware culture elements, with the Netherlands/Rhineland region as probably the most widely accepted site of origin, (J.
suggests, from a compilation context, that Bell Beaker culture emerged on the Rhine delta from a Corded Ware culture conext.
A recent Strontium isotope analysis of 86 people from Bell Beaker graves in Bavaria suggests that between 18-25% of all graves were occuped by people who came from a considerable distance outside the area.
information-center.be /Beaker_culture.html   (796 words)

  
 Farmers in Europe 8000 B.C. - 800 B.C.
The shift to agriculture brought with it different cultures since groups of people were more likely to settle in one particular area, and in doing so own more goods and build stronger shelters than would have been feasible as part of a nomadic existence.
The west coast was influenced by Atlantic cultures, Catalonia was influenced by central European cultures and the south was influenced by original Iberian cultures.
This suggests that the natives took on the culture of the newcomers.
www.let.leidenuniv.nl /history/migration/chapter112.html   (1627 words)

  
 Microlith - Wikipedia Light!   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
They can be formed as various kinds of triangles, lunate shaped, trapezes, etc. The shape of the microlith can be used for dating.
Some types of microliths, such as trapezes, were used in the Neolithic as well (the Linear Pottery culture and Funnelbeaker culture).
Microliths were produced during the middle stone age (Mesolithic), in a period which is in some areas denoted as the epipalaeolithic.
www.godseye.com /wiki/index.php/Microlith   (167 words)

  
 Reginheim
Origins of the Germanic culture and cultural interactions between the Germans and their neighbours.
Neolithicum; the transfer to farming, the Bandceramic culture, the Funnelbeaker culture, and Neolithic culture and religion.
The Corded Ware culture, the Bellbeaker culture, the Aunjetitz culture, the Nordic circle, information about Bronze smelting, the Bronze Age cultures, Bronze Age religion, and information about iron smelting.
www.geocities.com /reginheim/home.html   (1383 words)

  
 Hunebed,Thuine (Germany)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
This passage grave is the most impressive in Northwest Germany.
With no less than 17 capstones (only 3 are missing) and a length of 26,5 m, this giant is the biggest known prehistoric burial chamber of the Funnelbeaker Culture.
Unique is the dubble ring of kerbstones which is almost complete.
users.bart.nl /~jbmeijer/thuine_eng.htm   (94 words)

  
 ISH 2003 International Symposium on Hearing
What remains as evidence from this society today are impressive megalith tombs and typical tools and artwork (the society is called "funnelbeaker culture" after the typical pottery that can be found).
We will inspect signs from the Neolithic culture in the Cloppenburg area on short walks (60 min and an optional 30 min for a second site) that will also take us through a nice stretch of flowering heath and some old German woodland.
The northwestern part of Germany has often been considered as being inferior to more famous German landscapes and cities (like Bavaria or Heidelberg) due to its agricultural heritage and its not so well established university system.
www.uni-oldenburg.de /ish2006/social.html   (517 words)

  
 Ancient Art Gallery Traces from the Past; Dealer in artefacts & coins from European history: from Bronze Age, Roman ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
Ancient Art Gallery Traces from the Past; Dealer in artefacts & coins from European history: from Bronze Age, Roman & Medieval to 20th century."
We recently acquired a collection of North-European battle- or cult axes from the Single grave culture (also known as the Corded Ware culture or Battle axe culture).
This period follows after the Funnelbeaker culture and covered the area from the lands of the West Rhine to the east of the Wolga.
www.traces.nu /artefacts_neolithicbattleaxes.htm   (109 words)

  
 Culture Page Titles @ TodaysCulture.com (Today's Culture)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
Directory: Regional: Europe: United Kingdom: Society and Culture: Genealogy: Surnames: L
Directory: Regional: Europe: United Kingdom: Society and Culture: Genealogy: Surnames: V
Directory: Regional: Europe: United Kingdom: Society and Culture: Genealogy: Surnames: Y
www.todaysculture.com /toc   (1265 words)

  
 flint information   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
In Europe, some of the best flint has come from Belgium (Obourg, flintmines of Spiennes), the coastalchalks of the English Channel, the Paris Basin, the Sennonian deposits of Rügen and the Jurassic deposits of the Kraków -area in Poland.
Flint mining isattested since the Palaeolithic, but became more common since the Neolithic (Michelsberg culture, Funnelbeaker culture).
We hope our site let you find what you have been looking for.
www.vsearchmedia.com /flint.html   (227 words)

  
 CMC - The Mysterious Bog People , caption 12   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
CMC - The Mysterious Bog People, caption 12
Ceramic jar with a style of decoration identified with the Funnelbeaker Culture (3400–2850 B.C.).
Standing more than 17 cm high, this vessel was found in the spring of 1931 in a bog near the Drents village of Weerdinge (Netherlands).
media.civilization.ca /captions/bpcp12_e.htm   (47 words)

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