Western Baltic culture

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The Western Baltic culture ( also known as krąg zachodniobałtyjski (West Baltic circle), ) was the westernmost branch of the Balts, representing a distinct archaeological culture of the Bronze Age and Iron Age, along the southern coast of the Baltic Sea. It is a zone of several small archaeological cultures that were ethnically Baltic and had similar cultural features (e.g. similar monuments or some features of the funeral rite). They included tribes such as the Old Prussians, Galindians, Yotvingians (or Sudovians) and Skalvians, in addition to the little-known Pomeranian Balts or Western Balts proper, in the area now known as Pomerania.

[Cultures in Northern and Central Europe during the late Iron Age.

pale green (centre) – Przeworsk culture dark green – Nordic group dark red – Jastorf culture yellow – Harpstedt-Nienburger group orange – Celtic groups brown – Oksywie culture pink – East Baltic forest zone cultures magenta – West Baltic cairn culture turquoise – Milogrady culture black – Estonian group | upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a9/Archeological///cultures///in///Northern///and///Central///Europe///at///the///late///pre-Roman///Iron///Age.png]

History

Most of the Western Balts arose from the dating back to the early Iron Age. The Western Baltic culture includes:

Geography, chronology and ancient mentions

According to Marija Gimbutas, the Baltic culture of the Early and Middle Bronze Age covered a territory which, at its maximal extent, included "all of Pomerania almost to the mouth of the Oder, and the whole Vistula basin to Silesia in the south-west" before the spread of the Lusatian culture to the region and was inhabited by the ancestors of the later (Baltic) Old Prussians. The Western Baltic cultures were located to the north-east of the Wielbark and Przeworsk cultures, between the Pasłęka and Daugava rivers. They lived there from the end of c. 1st millennium B.C. until the mid-7th century. According to Tacitus, these areas were inhabited by the Aesti, while Ptolemy speaks of the Galindians and the Sudines.

Art and structures

The Balts decorated their pots by creating "deep incisions and ridges around the neck." Baltic graves consisted of huts made out of timber, or stone cists with floors of pavement "encircled by timber posts".

Sources

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