One of the most interesting periods in history, ITT post some items from your cultural area in the Bronze Age
Dumping Nordic Bronze Age beauties
One of the most interesting periods in history, ITT post some items from your cultural area in the Bronze Age
Dumping Nordic Bronze Age beauties
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The Nordic Bronze Age lasted from 1800-500 BC.
The Germanic language and peoples descend from this culture.
The Trundholm Sun Chariot, dated to 1800-1600 BC.
wait do our people actually have to have discovered bronze to participate in this thread or are you talking about the bronze "age" as in a reference to a certain era that historians make reference to
We have this thing. Its a solar calendar. It shines a beam of light into a chamber during the equinoxes.
The bronze age is a level of technology I am pretty sure.
Vekso ceremonial helmets, dated to 1100-900 BC.
Egebak Ceremonial axes, dated to 1500-1400 BC.
fuck. guess I'll wait for the stick age thread
kewl
Lurs, dated to 1100-800 BC.
Some 55 have been found.
uh, really? Citation please?
Not saying you're wrong just...you know.
Rorby curved swords, dated to 1700-1600 BC. That's right, who /curved swords/ here?
would give anything to see those ancient repoussé techniques.
Some shields, dated to 1200-800 BC.
this thing is ~4000 years old and was identified to be made by a bronce age culture pretty much in the middle of what Germany is today. It was used for astronomy, in a loose sense.
It's pretty much THE "look we were not barbaric after all!" item over here.
Gold-hilted Egebjerg Sword, dated to 1300-1100 BC.
That's one of the oldest buildings in Europe isn't it? Awesome
Dystrup swords, dated to 1300-1100 BC.
Biskupin
Techically from Iron Age.
Fragments were reconstructed and turned to open-air museum.
WE
Flodhoj dagger, dated to 1300-1100 BC.
Possibly the most interesting Bronze Age item in all of Europe!
Borgbjerg goldbowls, dated to 1200-900 BC.
You weren't barbaric, you just didn't have cities. Civilization, civilized come from the concept of cities. You had more of a nomadic culture.
huh. Didn't even know that, and I've been reading up a lot on this topic these days.
Though to be fair in your second image the red origin area goes a bit further south. But who knows. Thanks though!
So far, let's hope for more.
Nice dagger btw, same poster.
Avernako goldbowls, dated to 1200-1100 BC.
Assyria is one of my favourite civilizations. Most of the agrarian civilizations of the world are living in villages with
dunno celtiberian shit
Hanging bowl, dated to 1000-900 BC.
The wave symbol-theme is extremely common in items past 1000 BC for some reason.
I assume there was wood between the slots on the grip?
Belt plate from Langstrup, dated to 1500-1400 BC.
While spiral symbol was the main theme of the older items.
Where can I find information on them? Google doesn't help. Museum?
Belt plate from Hverrehus, dated to 1500-1400 BC.
We may never know, could be anything.
bronze wheels
to be fair that plate was likely more of a celtic thing. And then we can argue how much celt is in modern Germans, which is not a whole lot, but instead many strands of Germanic tribes.
But yes, you're right anyway.
Cities are cool though.
Razor, tweezers, clothes pin and tutulus from Lydshoj, dated to 900-700 BC.
I guess the Alpine people of today are mostly related to these cultures?
Darup razor, dated to 1400-1300 BC.
Comb, dated to 900-700 BC.
Grevensvænge figurines, dated to 800-500 BC.
Wow, those wheels are in perfect condition, how old are they?
Bronze age was a good time. OP, was all this found in Norway? I've never seen it before and Google snubs it.
Reconstruction of some city 2200 years bc in what is today Spains southern coast. They had a capital, satellite cities and build support systems that sustained their mountain based fortress capital with water and other ressources.
Women never left their village or city, while men waged communicated with the other settlements and fought off enemies. Women had relative well off positions in the cities because of that, and were likely also in administrative positions. After a while, they just vanished and we don't know why. Fortified stone cities only came back with the Romans.
We wuz fighting in Troy during the bronze age.
OMFG
HAHAH
The fucking cucks are out of control in thisthread.
I'm pretty sure some irish and scottish areas have by far the highest density of celtic "blood", but it's also very reasonable to assume that alpine people these days have significantly more celt in them than northern germanics and slavs.
...
"that's a nice civilization u got there..."
"would be a shame if something were to happen to it heheh"
They all rook same.
I live 30 minutes drive away from the place this sword was found, it's incredible to think how long ago people lived here.
Blindheim sword, dated to 1600 BC.
All of the items posted so far (besides this one) are from the Danish National Museum. You can scroll through the items here:
...
>We wuz Romans
>We wuz Trojans
It never ends.
Maybe romanians are nords after all. Meme magic.
9th century bc, so about 3000 years.
Yeah they're pretty neat. Guaranteed only used in ceremonies.
>Bronze Age
Not my area but this recreation of Minoan armor is a beauty.
It's like a tank. And also like you can see how primitive all the ideas are. Segmented armor, but almost useless for movement. They just didn't know.
Like the descriptions of early riders sitting on the back end of the horse.
> Nonstop cruelty
> The more things change, the more they stay the same
So, like Syria today?
Thracians did fight in Troy though.
> King Rhesus of Thrace being murdered in sleep. Minerva put courage into the heart of Diomed, and he smote them right and left.
Now pay debts.
bronze age lads surely liked their horned helmets it seems
Joking man.
This is from Sweden Yes.
This is a Rooster. It was most likely the most intelligent and the largest contributor to science from my ancestors.
swedish artifact
MAP OF ANCIENT DNA FOUND IN EUROPE AND SURROUNDING AREAS
umap.openstreetmap.fr
Horns = Fertility
Me too. Fuck the bankers. Don't pay a dime.
Fun Fact: We also had Celts in Transylvania during the bronze age.
>The wave symbol-theme is extremely common in items past 1000 BC for some reason.
probably because of the flood, which shows up in mythologies and cultures the world over
...
>We also had Celts in Transylvania during the bronze age.
I know, I know. From Romania all the way to Germany it was like this big trade road.
>Asks about Bronze Age
>Golden artifacts postings
Whew lads
>bronze age scandis were as advanced as egyptians even though harder conditions and much less populated
>they were more advanced than present day niggers
why do people keep making threads about how nords were as bad as niggers and why do people doubt that whites are superior to all other races?
We wuz blacksmiths and shieeeet.
How did people back then find enough tin for there to be a whole age of bronze?
getting rare metals was one of the main driving forces behind the expansion of trade all around the med sea and beyond
whenever someone found some, you could possibly exchange that all over the med sea
some of the swords found in Sweden from this era seem to have been made with metals coming from Sardinian mines or instance
One of my favourite swords, from the Spring and Autumn period around 700BC to 500BC.
Besides the jewels in the hilt being lost, the actual blade is still well preserved.
Do you have some more info about that? Interesting
To be frank with you senpai, the pyramids are pretty impressive.
We've been stuck in the stick age for 60 000 years. Why can we not into farming or metallurgy? Is it because we can't even make fire?
"as advanced" is a big stretch, keep in mind bronze age started in different times for different folks, and by the time it was in Scandinavia Egypt already had an advanced civilization
still the comparison with niggers is wrong as you say
>post some items from your cultural area in the Bronze Age
Wtf i love chinks now
Germanic peoples and cultures are all shit.
>nigger in denmark
>has nothing to be proud of in his cultural heritage
oh look, a neanderthal.
Neanderthals were more intelligent than Proto-Eurasians. If they had been primitive morons, they would have never been able to survive in the harsh climate in Europe especially duing the ice ages.
They were a dying species and knew this, so they let Proto-Eurasians live with them, showed them how to survive and live in the harsh northern environments and crossbread with them to live on and help Proto Eurasians to adapt.
Most Eurasians have 2%-4% clearly identifyable Neanderthal DNA.
The Indus Valley Civilization was a Bronze Age civilization. The Bronze Age in South Asia begins around 3000 BCE, and in the end gives rise to the Indus Valley Civilization, which had its (mature) period between 2600 BCE and 1900 BCE. It continues into the Rigvedic period, the early part of the Vedic period. It is succeeded by the Iron Age in India, beginning in around 1000 BCE. It's one of the earliest urban areas along with egypt and mesopotamia
Varg approves this post.
The people of the Indus Civilization achieved great accuracy in measuring length, mass, and time. They were among the first to develop a system of uniform weights and measures. A comparison of available objects indicates large scale variation across the Indus territories. Their smallest division, which is marked on an ivory scale found in Lothal in Gujarat, was approximately 1.704 mm, the smallest division ever recorded on a scale of the Bronze Age. Harappan engineers followed the decimal division of measurement for all practical purposes, including the measurement of mass as revealed by their hexahedron weights.
Pic related one of the oldest docks known to mankind at Lothal in Gujrat India
Woops forgot pic
...
Gold was being worked even before bronze.
So there are in fact neolithic gold artifacts.
I says on the wiki article its from 3200 BC making it older than the pyramids.
Arr you bein fuckin racisiss cunt? We wuz habbin lotta technological innovashins in thah bush, you white dog. Paintin fuckin dots n tha fuckin dream time before you stole our land you white cunt.
Figures a gypsy would know metallurgy well, gotta sort all these stolen pipes.
Some scientists took samples from the graves in Harappa and they said they would reconstruct their appearance/DNA ..
Middle kingdoms of India (or Classical India) refers to the political entities in India from the 3rd century BCE to the 13th century CE. This period begins after the decline of the Maurya Empire, and the corresponding rise of the Satavahana dynasty, beginning with Simuka, from 230 BCE. The "Middle" period lasts for some 1500 years, and ends in the 13th century with the rise of the Delhi Sultanate and the end of the Later Cholas (Rajendra Chola III died in 1279). The period is known as the classical period of India, during which India is estimated to have had the largest economy of the world controlling between one third and one fourth of the world's wealth.
I heard that too, whatever happened to it
Dunno, it's been 2 years.
...
Read recently that the Irish were culturally celtic but not genetically.
Ancient Irish have more in common with Finns and Russians, which explains the drinking.
During the two centuries of their rule, the Indo-Greek kings combined the Greek and Indian languages and symbols, as seen on their coins, and blended Greek, Hindu and Buddhist religious practices, as seen in the archaeological remains of their cities and in the indications of their support of Buddhism, pointing to a rich fusion of Indian and Hellenistic influences. The diffusion of Indo-Greek culture had consequences which are still felt today, particularly through the influence of Greco-Buddhist art. The Indo-Greeks ultimately disappeared as a political entity around 10 CE following the invasions of the Indo-Scythians, although pockets of Greek populations probably remained for several centuries longer under the subsequent rule of the Indo-Parthians and Kushan Empire
Our countries share a long history .
MUST KICK IT
Source?