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Topic: Przeworsk culture


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In the News (Wed 11 Nov 09)

  
  Encyclopedia: Przeworsk culture   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The red area is the extent of the Wielbark culture, the yellow area is a Baltic culture (Yotvingian?), and the pink area is the Debczyn Culture.
The Przeworsk culture is part of an Iron Age archaeological complex that dates from the 2nd century BC to the 4th century.
The Zarubintsy culture was one of the major archaeological cultures which flourished in the area north of the Black Sea along the upper Dnieper and Pripyat Rivers, stretching west towards the Vistula Basin from the 3rd or 2nd centuries BC until the 2nd century AD.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Przeworsk-culture   (1214 words)

  
 Wielbark Culture Encyclopedia Article, Description, History and Biography @ 209.197.89.145   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The green area is the Przeworsk culture, the yellow area is a Baltic culture (Aesti?), and the pink area is the Debczyn Culture.
Wielbark Culture or Willenberg Culture was an archaeological culture which appeared during the first half of the 1st century AD, and replaced the local Oksywie Culture, a culture which was part of the Przeworsk culture.
The red area is the extent of the Wielbark Culture in the early 3rd century, and the orange area is the Chernyakhov Culture, in the early 4th century.
209.197.89.145 /encyclopedia/Wielbark_Culture   (1031 words)

  
 Wielbark Culture: Just the facts...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Wielbark Culture or Willenberg Culture was an archaeological culture which appeared during the first half of the 1st century (additional info and facts about 1st century) AD, and replaced the local Oksywie Culture, a culture which was part of the Przeworsk culture (additional info and facts about Przeworsk culture).
The Wielbark Culture started out covering the same area as the Oksywie Culture reaching from Gdansk (A port city of northern Poland near the mouth of the Vistula River on a gulf of the Baltic Sea; a member of the Hanseatic League in the 14th century) to Chelmno (additional info and facts about Chelmno).
A characteristic of this culture, which it had in common with southern Scandinavia, was the raising of stone covered mounds, stone circles (additional info and facts about stone circles), stelae and variations of cobble cladding.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/w/wi/wielbark_culture.htm   (653 words)

  
 Przeworsk On-line   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The material culture, characteristic for that period, and high, for that time, level of pottery production and iron processing became the basis of the term: The "Przeworsk Culture", which is widely recognised in the terminology of the Polish archaeology.
In 1850 Przeworsk became the seat of a court district and in 1867 it lost that function.
Przeworsk was the seat of the district until the reform of administration in 1975.
www.przeworsk.com /english/history   (1033 words)

  
 The Goths in Greater Poland
Southern and central Poland was occupied by the Przeworsk Culture, which gained its name from the village of Przeworsk, situated in Lesser Poland (Maűopolska), where the first cemeteries typical of this culture were discovered.
Researchers have traditionally associated the Wielbark Culture with the Scandinavian peoples known as the Goths, maintaining that it was founded as a result of Gothic migration from their home territories in the Swedish province of Gotland or the Island of Gotlandia.
The Wielbark Culture is thought to have reached Greater Poland from Pomerania, displacing the local Przeworsk Culture.
www.muzarp.poznan.pl /archweb/gazociag/title5.htm   (2268 words)

  
 Vandals - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Przeworsk culture (green) in the first half of the 3rd century.
The map shows the extent of the Wielbark culture (Goths) in red, a Baltic culture (Aesti?) in yellow, and the Debczyn Culture, pink.
This tradition supports the identification of the Vandals with the Przeworsk culture, since the Gothic Wielbark culture seems to have replaced a branch of that culture.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vandals   (1374 words)

  
 Polish culture: PRZEWORSK MUSEUM   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The Przeworsk Museum is housed in the former seat of the Lubomirski family, a property which dates back to the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
There are also two manorial outhouses, one from the seventeenth and the other from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a greenhouse built in the years 1803-1807, early nineteenth century stables, an early twentieth century guardhouse and two entry gates dating to the second half of the nineteenth century.
Of special interest are the ornate Przeworsk belts, made from brass plates, and the eighteenth century corsets, which are lavishly embroidered with gold thread.
www.culture.pl /en/culture/artykuly/in_mu_przeworsk   (306 words)

  
 Chełm Official Home Page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
On the area of Chełm and in its environs there are numerous vestiges of the existence and influence of great cultural regions as well as the sojourns of earlier local prehistoric communities.
Culturally unidentified places and places of the Western-Slavonic Wend culture also known as Przeworsk culture date back to the younger periods of the Iron Age - pre - Roman period also known as "La Tene" period (the last four centuries BC) and Roman influences (the first four centuries AD).
The implementation of that one and smaller outside projects was accompanied by manifold local actions enriching the educational, cultural, literary and paper-reading traditions of the region.
www.um.chelm.pl /ver_english/history.htm   (3651 words)

  
 [Projekat Rastko] Valentin V. Sedov: Slavs in Antiquity
The territory of Przeworsk culture expands to the south-east (Upper Dniester, Volyn') and to the south (northern-eastern Slovakia).
As far as in the 3rd/2nd centuries B.C. a part of the population of the Podkloszove Burials culture and the Pomorye culture settled in the Pripyat' basin, Middle Dnieper and part of Upper Dnieper.
The development of Provincial Roman cultures had been interrupted, the majority of crafts centers stopped functioning, the period of cultural regress began, and it was strengthened by the unfavorable conditions for the agriculture.
www.rastko.org.yu /arheologija/vsedov-slavs.html   (919 words)

  
 L'Âge de la Pierre - Stone Age : Beblo, distr. Cracovie, grotte Beblowska Dolna — MARS
Fouilles archéologiques en Pologne : Lubowice, district of Bacibórz (An eartwork of the Lusatian culture)
Fouilles archéologiques en Pologne : Lubowice, Province of Katowice (A Fortified Township and Cemetery of Lusatian Culture)
Fouilles archéologiques en Pologne : Zbrojewsko, district of Klobuck (A cemetery of the Lusatian culture)
www.naturalsciences.be /mars/litterature/bibliography/rbins-praehistory/Grabowska1968/view   (2437 words)

  
 P U B L I C A T I O N S - Expansion and reaction...
It concerns such cultures as the Corded Ware Culture, the Lausitz Culture or the culture of the Slavs in the Middle Ages.
Different archaeological cultures can undergo more or less significant changes of their character under the influence of external factors such as economic and social transformations, but without changes of population.
Continuing such studies on earlier cultures, it is possible to prove the "age-long" presence of Slavs and pre-Slavs in the present Polish territories.
www.muzarp.poznan.pl /archweb/archweb_eng/Publications/eksp/index_eks.html   (4198 words)

  
 Vandal   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The red area is the extent of the Wielbark culture (Goths), the yellow area is a Baltic culture (Aesti?), and the pink area is the Debczyn Culture.
The dark blue area is the Roman Empire]] They were identified with Przeworsk culture in the 19th century.
This tradition supports the identification between the Vandals and the Przeworsk culture since the Gothic Wielbark culture seems to have replaced a branch of that culture.
vandal.infohub.dnip.net   (1273 words)

  
 Wikipedia: Vandal
The Vandals probably gave their name to the province of Andalusia (originally, Vandalusia), in Spain, where they temporarily settled before pushing on to Africa.
They were identified with Przeworsk culture in the 19th century.
Controversial connections exist between the Vandals and another Germanic tribe, the Lugii (Lygier, Lugier or Lygians), some scientists believing that either Lugii was an earlier name of the Vandals, or the Vandals were part of the Lugian federation.
www.factbook.org /wikipedia/en/v/va/vandal.html   (1100 words)

  
 Lugii - Freepedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The source of their power was control of the most important middle part of the Amber Road from Sambia at the Baltic Sea to the provinces of Roman Empire: Pannonia, Noricum and Raetia.
All these Celts brought with them the dicoveries of La Tene culture and mixing with the local populations played a decisive role in formation of the Przeworsk culture.
According to Strabo the Lugians were 'a great people' and—together with other peoples like Semnones and the otherwise unknown Zumi, Butones, Mugilones and Sibini—were part of a federation subjected to the rule of Marbod, ruler of the Marcomanni with their centre in modern Bohemia 9 BC–19 AD.
en.freepedia.org /Lugii.html   (635 words)

  
 Celtic Pottery Workshop in the Settlement of Kraków-Pleszów (Site 20)
25-26 specimens are wheel-made vessels while the rest represents hand-made pottery of the Przeworsk culture ("tableware" and "kitchenware") and "crude" vessels corresponding to the Púchov-Dacian tradition.
Alongside painted pottery in the assemblages of the III phase a new category, unknown in the previous phase, of hand-made "crude" pottery representing the Púchov-Dacian tradition, which may cast some light on the origin of the youngest pottery workshops of the Tyniec group.
It is assumed that the pottery of the Tyniec group was affected by the Dacian culture not as a result of direct interaction with this culture but due to indirect contacts.
www.ma.krakow.pl /publikacje/manh/xxii/poleska/warsztat/en   (1703 words)

  
 Relationet VI SO 41 X RU
At present they are filled either with overflows and low peat bogs the strata of which reach up to 3 m in depth or with meadows.
The late Quaternary period is already connected with the existence of man and the development of his culture.
Settlement places of the Mierzanowicka and Strzyżowska cultures come from the early Bronze Age (3-2 thousands years BC) and those of Trzcinecka culture date back to the late Bronze Age (1700/1600 - 1300 BC).Big settlements and crematory burial grounds of the Lusatian culture (e.g.
viso41ru.blogspot.com   (3789 words)

  
 Early History of The Slavs? - Stormfront White Nationalist Community   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Speaking an archaic form of the Sateen branch of Indo?European, they almost miraculously succeeded in maintaining their linguistic integrity through the period of obscurity which preceded their time of dispersion, despite the widespread activities of the Kelts, the Scythians, and the Germans.
It is not yet possible to associate the early, united Slavs with any specific archaeological horizon more remote in tune than the comparatively recent Burgwall mooted villages of the early centuries of the present era.
A few islands of Slavic speech and culture survived this movement, notably that of the Wends in the Saxon Spreewald.
www.stormfront.org /forum/showthread.php?t=74583   (2801 words)

  
 Slavic Peoples Encyclopedia Article, Description, History and Biography @ TheArts.us   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
However, other scholars believe that the Proto-Slavs had been in north-east Central Europe since very early times, and were the bearers of the Lusatian culture and later the Przeworsk culture (and were also part of the Chernyakhov culture).
The Chernoles culture is "sometimes portrayed as either a state in the development of the Slavic languages or at least some form of late Indo-European ancestral to the evolution of the Slavic stock" (James P. Mallory, "Chernoles Culture", Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997).
There is plenty of archeological evidence for settlements in northern Ukraine and Poland as far back as 3rd millennium BC (Trypillian, Tishinets, Peshevor, Zarubinets cultures).
thearts.us /encyclopedia/Slavic_peoples   (1869 words)

  
 Slavonic Pride Productions - Strona związana z historią, kulturą i wierzeniami Słowian   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Their material culture overlaps at so man y points with that of their neighbours that it is sometimes difficult to assert categorically that an object is indubitably and exclusively Slav.
Their place of origin may be located between the rivers Vistula and Dnjeper, their migration routes were varied and the area they came to occupy extended from Greece in the south to the Baltic in the north and to the River Main in the west.
This opened a new corridor to Mediterranean culture, and in the centuries that followed cultural and economic impulses originating in this area were transmitted as far as the Slav tribes on the Baltic coast.
klub.chip.pl /wsd/eng/index.php?go=artykuly   (1663 words)

  
 SLAVIC PEOPLES BOOKS SOURCE, FOR CHILDREN AND ADULTS
The idea that the Slavic people have more in common than their origin, the origin of their languages, and some cultural aspects is derived from romantic nationalism, the panslavism movement, and the notion of ethnicity as a biological basis of nations.
However, the claim that the Venedes were a Slavic or even a proto-Slavic people is very controversial, and many scholars believe that the ''Venedes'' belonged to another Indo-European branch, rather than Slavic.
The Chernoles_culture is "sometimes portrayed as either a state in the development of the Slavic languages or at least some form of late Indo-European ancestral to the evolution of the Slavic stock" (James P. Mallory, "Chernoles Culture", Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997).
www.lilbooks.com /Slavic_peoples   (1716 words)

  
 IAE PAN O/Kraków - studies   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Long-term research with the Archaeological Institute of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic in Brno focuses on the Stone Age to Bronze Age transition in the western Carpathian Zone.
The Przeworsk Culture between the Vistula and the Lower Course of the Szreniawa River: a Settlement Study (Dr. Halina Dobrzanska).
Cultural and Settlement Relations between Basins of Dniester, Bug and Vistula Rivers in the Neolithic and the Early Bronze Age.
www.archeo.pan.krakow.pl /Studies.htm   (952 words)

  
 Roman Army Talk v2 :: View topic - [Cacaius] Jewellery - brooches   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The fibulae Almgren 41, one of the most common types of the Wielbark Culture brooches from second half of 2nd century A.D. This example is rich variety of this type, decorated by engraving and stamp ornament.
The fibulae Almgren 68 was very popular among Barbarian tribes in 1 half of 1st century A.D. This kind of brooch is treat as an imitation of brooch Almgren 67 which was produced in Roman workshops.
Przeworsk Culture, end of the 1st century A.D. length: 3,8 cm, weight: 9,5 grams
www.romanarmy.com /rat/viewtopic.php?t=4889   (1294 words)

  
 Dictionary of Meaning www.mauspfeil.net   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Almost all of the '''South Slavs''' can be traced to ethnic Slavs who mixed with the local population of the Balkans (Illyrians, Thracians, Dacians and Getae) and with later invaders from the East (Bulgars, Avars, Alans, Petchenegs, Cumans), then fell under the hegemony of the Ottoman Empire.
There are thus two major historical theories that address the issue of the original homeland of Slavs: # the ''autochthonic'' theory assumes that Slavs had lived north of the Carpathian Mountains since the Lusatian culture (before 1000 BC).
There is plenty of archeological evidence for settlements in northern Ukraine and Poland as far back as 3rd millennium BC (Trypillian culture Trypillian, Tishinets, Peshevor, Zarubinets cultures).
www.mauspfeil.net /Slavic_peoples.html   (1871 words)

  
 Humbul : Archaeology 1500 - 750 BCE
Developed and compiled by Scott Noegel (University of Washington), Okeanos is a comprehensive and detailed gateway to a large cache of electronic resources related to the study of the culture of the ancient Near Eastern.
The site, which is among the largest and oldest set of earthworks in the western hemisphere, has given its name to the prehistoric culture which flourished in the Lower Mississippi between circa 1730 and 1350 BC and which, in its day, was the most sophisticated and socially complex culture in North America.
'The prehistory of mainland Greece' is a series of short, clearly written lectures outlining the material culture and society of the Greek mainland from the Palaeolithic period to the beginning of the Iron Age (circa 30,000-1000 BC) by leading experts in Aegean archaeology.
www.humbul.ac.uk /output/shortout.php?no=120&type1=1500-750_BCE&type2=&subj=archaeology&ref=byperiod   (986 words)

  
 Polish culture: National Archeological Museum
The holdings encompass archeological excavations from the territory of Poland and lands historically associated with Poland, dating from the Paleolithic to modern times.
The Bronze Age is represented by a rich collection of ceramics and metal objects of the Trzciniec and Lusatian cultures and by jar tombs from Kamionka Nadbuzna and other settlements; collective findings such as the treasures of Dratow, Stawiszyce and Ginetowka.
The Iron Age is represented chiefly by exhibits of the Przeworsk culture, such as items from the princely graves of leg Piekarski and a part of the amber treasure from Bassonia.
www.culture.pl /en/culture/instytucje/muzea/in_mu_archeologiczne_warszawa   (310 words)

  
 de Wandalen This page is about the East Germanic...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The Vandals probably gave their name to the province of Andalusia Andalusia (originally, "Vandalusia"), in Spain, where they temporarily settled before pushing on to Africa.
They were identified with Przeworsk culture Przeworsk culture in the 19th century 19th century.
Controversial connections exist between the Vandals and another Germanic tribe, the Lugii Lugii (Lygier, Lugier or Lygians), some scientists believing that either Lugii was an earlier name of the Vandals, or the Vandals were part of the Lugian federation.
www.biodatabase.de /Vandal   (1172 words)

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