SwePub
Sök i LIBRIS databas

  Extended search

id:"swepub:oai:gup.ub.gu.se/253964"
 

Search: id:"swepub:oai:gup.ub.gu.se/253964" > Re-theorising mobil...

  • 1 of 1
  • Previous record
  • Next record
  •    To hitlist

Re-theorising mobility and the formation of culture and language among the Corded Ware Culture in Europe

Kristiansen, Kristian, 1948 (author)
Gothenburg University,Göteborgs universitet,Institutionen för historiska studier,Department of Historical Studies
Allentoft, Morten E. (author)
Frei, Karin M. (author)
show more...
Iversen, Rune (author)
Johannsen, Niels N. (author)
Kroonen, Guus (author)
Pospieszny, Łukasz (author)
Price, T. Douglas (author)
Rasmussen, Simon (author)
Sjögren, Karl-Göran, 1949 (author)
Gothenburg University,Göteborgs universitet,Institutionen för historiska studier,Department of Historical Studies
Sikora, Martin (author)
Willerslev, Eske (author)
show less...
 (creator_code:org_t)
2017-04-04
2017
English.
In: Antiquity. - : Antiquity Publications. - 0003-598X .- 1745-1744. ; 91:356, s. 334-347
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)
Abstract Subject headings
Close  
  • Copyright © 2017 Antiquity Publications Ltd.Recent genetic, isotopic and linguistic research has dramatically changed our understanding of how the Corded Ware Culture in Europe was formed. Here the authors explain it in terms of local adaptations and interactions between migrant Yamnaya people from the Pontic-Caspian steppe and indigenous North European Neolithic cultures. The original herding economy of the Yamnaya migrants gradually gave way to new practices of crop cultivation, which led to the adoption of new words for those crops. The result of this hybridisation process was the formation of a new material culture, the Corded Ware Culture, and of a new dialect, Proto-Germanic. Despite a degree of hostility between expanding Corded Ware groups and indigenous Neolithic groups, stable isotope data suggest that exogamy provided a mechanism facilitating their integration. This article should be read in conjunction with that by Heyd (2017, in this issue).

Subject headings

HUMANIORA  -- Historia och arkeologi (hsv//swe)
HUMANITIES  -- History and Archaeology (hsv//eng)

Publication and Content Type

ref (subject category)
art (subject category)

Find in a library

  • Antiquity (Search for host publication in LIBRIS)

To the university's database

  • 1 of 1
  • Previous record
  • Next record
  •    To hitlist

Kungliga biblioteket hanterar dina personuppgifter i enlighet med EU:s dataskyddsförordning (2018), GDPR. Läs mer om hur det funkar här.
Så här hanterar KB dina uppgifter vid användning av denna tjänst.

 
pil uppåt Close

Copy and save the link in order to return to this view