- The
Urnfield culture (c. 1300–750 BC) was a late
Bronze Age
culture of
Central Europe,
often divided into
several local cultures within a
broader Urnfield...
-
Interpretations of the
markings of the
bronze sickles ****ociated with the
Urnfield culture,
especially the
large number of so-called "****-sickles" discovered...
- East" theory, says the proto-Celtic
language arose in the late
Bronze Age
Urnfield culture of
central Europe,
named after grave sites in
southern Germany...
-
Carpathian Basin,
Poland and France. It was
succeeded by the Late
Bronze Age
Urnfield culture and part of the
origin of the
Italic and
Celtic cultures. The Tumulus...
- the socio-political
network of Iron Age Europe. It
formed part of the
Urnfield systems,
origin of the
Celts and Romans,
found from
eastern France, southern...
-
Hallstatt D) from the 8th to 6th
centuries BC,
developing out of the
Urnfield culture of the 12th
century BC (Late
Bronze Age) and
followed in much of...
-
Nordic Bronze Age,
Tumulus culture,
Nuragic culture,
Terramare culture,
Urnfield culture and
Lusatian culture),
lasting until c. 800 BC in
central Europe...
- and the
graves in
Helmsdorf and Bornhöck. By the late
Bronze Age, the
Urnfield culture (c. 1300 BC – c. 750 BC) had
replaced the Bell Beaker, Unetice...
- Württemberg, Mediatised)
Early history Linear Pottery culture Únětice
culture Urnfield culture Germanic peoples Migration Period Barbarian kingdoms Frankish Empire...
-
followed the
Bronze Age Proto-Villanovan
culture which branched off from the
Urnfield culture of
Central Europe. The name
derives from the
locality of Villanova...