Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
According to them, this fits a homeland of early core Indo-European within the westernmost Yamnaya horizon, around and west of the Dnieper, while its basal stage, Indo-Anatolian, may have originated in the Sredny Stog culture, as opposed to the eastern Yamnaya horizon. They also argue that this new data contradicts a possible earlier origin of ...
It has been suggested that this is a reflection of an aristocratic element of the Sredny Stog culture, rather than a separate cultural group. In the Kurgan hypothesis , the Novodanilovka group is often presented as the archetypical warlike patriarchal society of the early Indo-Europeans .
Dnieper-Donets culture, Sredny Stog culture Deriivka ( Ukrainian : Деріївка , Russian : Дериевка ; the notoriously mistaken notation "Dereivka" was introduced by a translation of D.Ya. Telegin (1959) and all copiers) is an archaeological site located in the village of the same name in Kirovohrad Oblast , Ukraine , on the right ...
The islet of Sredeny Stih (to the northeast of Khortytsia), excavated during construction of the hydroelectric station in 1927, gave its name to the Sredny Stog culture. In the Early Middle Ages , Khortytsia was a key centre for the trade route from the Varangians to the Greeks .
The Sredny Stog culture: 5,000 BCE: is a pre-Kurgan archaeological culture of the 5th millennium BCE. The Yamna culture: 3,500 to 2,300 BCE: or Yamnaya culture, also called Pit Grave Culture and Ochre Grave Culture was a late Copper Age/early Bronze Age culture of the Southern Bug/Dniester/Ural region (the Pontic steppe) The Poltavka culture ...
[7] [8] Striking similarities with the Khvalynsk culture and the Sredny Stog culture have also been detected. [7] A much larger horizon from the upper Vistula to the lower half of Dnieper to the mid-to-lower Volga has therefore been drawn. [9] Influences from the DDCC and the Sredny Stog culture on the Funnelbeaker culture have been suggested. [10]
It has been theorized that Cernavodă culture, together with the Sredny Stog culture, was the source of Anatolian languages and introduced them to Anatolia through the Balkans after Anatolian split from the Proto-Indo-Anatolian language, which some linguists and archaeologists place in the area of the Sredny Stog culture.
The Suvorovo (Suvorove in Ukrainian) culture, part of the Suvorovo–Novodanilovka group, was a Copper Age culture which flourished on the northwest Pontic steppe and the lower Danube from 4400 BC to 4000 BC. [1] The Suvorovo culture is entirely defined by its burials. These include kurgans and flat graves. Burials are oriented towards the east ...