A model about the social development of a TRB society – the change from a society with individual and group diversity around 3400 BC to a more stratified social formation around 3000 BC – is shown to be the outcome of both burial evidence on the North Friesian Islands as well as information on enclosures, decoration diversity and economic variables from further regions of the southern TRB North group.While the former is linked to ideological concepts of “ritual cooperation”, the later ideology might be labelled “ritual collectiveness”. Expressions of “ritual cooperation” are causewayed enclosures and different burial customs, the means of “ritual collectiveness” passage graves
In 2015 a rescue excavation took place at Oosterdalfsen (municipality of Dalfsen, Overijssel, the Ne...
The main objective of the dissertation was to discuss, departing from the taxonomical viewpoint, the...
The Early and Middle Neolithic in Northern Central Europe and Southern Scandinavia is characterised ...
The study presented here deals with the ceramic grave goods recovered from a selection of megalithic...
Since 2009, a Priority Program of the German Research Foundation (DFG) deals with the Funnel Beaker ...
The study presented here deals with the ceramic grave goods recovered from a selection of megalithic...
At the beginning of the 4th millennium BC, a new archaeological unit, the southeastern variant of th...
This article summarises the results of several subprojects of the Priority Programme 1400 ‘Early Mon...
This study focuses upon the nature of change in egalitarian social organization, specifically upon t...
In northeastern North America, elaboration of mortuary ceremonialism and the widespread distribution...
In the regions of southern Scandinavia and northern Germany, within the Neolithic (c. 4100–1700 BCE)...
Neolithic funerary monuments across north-west Europe are considered as cemeteries and here divide...
Throughout northern Europe, thousands of burial mounds were erected in the third millennium BCE. Sta...
One of the most discussed issues in European archaeology is the significance and context of monument...
Megalith building constitutes not only a past, but also a recent phenomenon, which is still practise...
In 2015 a rescue excavation took place at Oosterdalfsen (municipality of Dalfsen, Overijssel, the Ne...
The main objective of the dissertation was to discuss, departing from the taxonomical viewpoint, the...
The Early and Middle Neolithic in Northern Central Europe and Southern Scandinavia is characterised ...
The study presented here deals with the ceramic grave goods recovered from a selection of megalithic...
Since 2009, a Priority Program of the German Research Foundation (DFG) deals with the Funnel Beaker ...
The study presented here deals with the ceramic grave goods recovered from a selection of megalithic...
At the beginning of the 4th millennium BC, a new archaeological unit, the southeastern variant of th...
This article summarises the results of several subprojects of the Priority Programme 1400 ‘Early Mon...
This study focuses upon the nature of change in egalitarian social organization, specifically upon t...
In northeastern North America, elaboration of mortuary ceremonialism and the widespread distribution...
In the regions of southern Scandinavia and northern Germany, within the Neolithic (c. 4100–1700 BCE)...
Neolithic funerary monuments across north-west Europe are considered as cemeteries and here divide...
Throughout northern Europe, thousands of burial mounds were erected in the third millennium BCE. Sta...
One of the most discussed issues in European archaeology is the significance and context of monument...
Megalith building constitutes not only a past, but also a recent phenomenon, which is still practise...
In 2015 a rescue excavation took place at Oosterdalfsen (municipality of Dalfsen, Overijssel, the Ne...
The main objective of the dissertation was to discuss, departing from the taxonomical viewpoint, the...
The Early and Middle Neolithic in Northern Central Europe and Southern Scandinavia is characterised ...