iBet uBet web content aggregator. Adding the entire web to your favor.
iBet uBet web content aggregator. Adding the entire web to your favor.



Link to original content: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerny_culture
Cerny culture - Wikipedia Jump to content

Cerny culture

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cerny culture
Geographical rangeFrance
PeriodNeolithic
Dates4700–4000 BC
Preceded byLinear Pottery culture
Followed byCastellic culture, Chasséen culture, Michelsberg culture
Schist bracelet

The Cerny culture (French: La Culture de Cerny, German: Cerny-Kultur) is a Neolithic culture in France that dates to the second half of the 5th millennium B.C. and that is particularly prevalent in the Paris Basin. It is characterized by monumental earth mounds, known as long barrows of the Passy type.[1][2] The term is derived from the "Parc aux Bœufs" in Cerny in the department of Essonne who authorized the name.

Important sites

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Reconstruction of the Passy culture long barrow monuments at Fleury-sur-Orne, France".
  2. ^ Rivollat, M.; Thomas, A.; Ghesquière, E.; Rohrlach, A. B.; Späth, E.; Pemonge, M. H.; Haak, W.; Chambon, P.; Deguilloux, M. F. (2022). "Ancient DNA gives new insights into a Norman Neolithic monumental cemetery dedicated to male elites". PNAS. 119 (18): e2120786119. Bibcode:2022PNAS..11920786R. doi:10.1073/pnas.2120786119. PMC 9170172. PMID 35446690. The cemetery of Fleury-sur-Orne (Normandy, France) belongs to the first monumental funeral manifestations in Europe and predates Atlantic megalithic societies. Established during the second quarter of the fifth millennium calibrated (cal.) BCE, Fleury-sur-Orne consisted of earthen long barrows, some measuring up to 300 m in length. These monuments belong to the "Passy" phenomenon, named after the eponymous site. They are part of the Cerny culture that originated in the Yonne and upper Seine valley region, hereafter called "the Paris Basin," around 4,700 cal. BCE at the beginning of the local Middle Neolithic. The Passy-type monuments or STP (structure de type Passy) then spread to Normandy, where Fleury-sur-Orne is located.
  3. ^ L'Étoile Neolithic Camp, Ghislain Lancel (in French)
  4. ^ The Neolithic enclosures of l'Étoile, Aerial Archaeology, Roger Agache, Ministry of Culture (in French)
  5. ^ Daniel Mordant: Le complexe des Réaudins à Balloy enceinte et nécropole monumentale. In: C. Constantin, D. Mordant, D. Simonin (ed.): La Culture de Cerny, nouvelle économie, nouvelle société au Néolithique. pp. 449-479, 1997; Philippe Chambon: La nécropole de Balloy "les Réaudins", approche archéo-anthropologique. In: C. Constantin, D. Mordant, D. Simonin (eds.): La Culture de Cerny, nouvelle économie, nouvelle société au Néolithique. Actes du colloque international de Nemours, 1994, Mémoires du musée de Préhistoire d'Île-de-France, 6, éd. APRAIF, Nemours, pp. 489-498, 1997
  6. ^ Pierre Duhamel: La nécropole monumentale de Passy (Yonne): description d'ensemble et problème d'interprétation. In: C. Constantin, D. Mordant, D. Simonin (eds.): La Culture de Cerny, nouvelle économie, nouvelle société au Néolithique. Actes du colloque international de Nemours, 1994, Mémoires du musée de Préhistoire d'Île-de-France, 6, éd. APRAIF, Nemours, pp. 397-448, 1997
  7. ^ F. Müller, Pierre Duhamel, A. Augereau, G. Depierre: Une nouvelle nécropole monumentale Cerny à Gron "les Sablons" (Yonne). Actes du 22e colloque interrégional sur le Néolithique, Strasbourg, 27-29 octobre 1995. Supplement aux Cahiers de l'Association pour la Promotion de la Recherche archéologique en Alsace pp. 103-133, 1997

Literature

[edit]
  • Roger Joussaume: La culture de Cerny: Nouvelle economie, nouvelle societe au Neolithique : actes du colloque international de Nemours, 1994