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- Hinkelstein_culture abstract "The Hinkelstein culture is a Neolithic archaeological culture situated in Rhine-Main and Rhenish Hesse, Germany.It is a Megalithic culture, part of the wider Linear Pottery horizon, dating to approximately the 50th to 49th century BC.The culture's name is due to a suggestion of Karl Koehl of Worms (1900). Hinkelstein is the term for menhir in the local Hessian dialect, after a menhir discovered in 1866 in Monsheim. Hinkel is a Hessian term for \"chicken\"; the Standard German name for menhirs, Hünenstein \"giants' stone\", having sometimes been jokingly mutated into Hühnerstein \"chicken-stone\".".
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageID "25241412".
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageLength "1995".
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageOutDegree "22".
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageRevisionID "660201475".
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Archaeological_culture.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Category:5th_millennium_BC.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Archaeology_of_Germany.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Neolithic_Europe.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Europe.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Frankfurt_Rhine-Main.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Germany.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Hessian_dialects.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Karl_Koehl.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Linear_Pottery_culture.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Megalith.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Menhir.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Monsheim.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Neolithic_Europe.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLink Rhenish_Hesse.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hinkelstein culture".
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hinkelstein".
- Hinkelstein_culture caption "Map of Germany showing important sites that were occupied in the Hinkelstein culture .".
- Hinkelstein_culture dates "circa 5,000 B.C.E. — circa 4,900 B.C.E.".
- Hinkelstein_culture float "left".
- Hinkelstein_culture majorsites Frankfurt_Rhine-Main.
- Hinkelstein_culture majorsites Rhenish_Hesse.
- Hinkelstein_culture name "Hinkelstein culture".
- Hinkelstein_culture period Neolithic_Europe.
- Hinkelstein_culture precededby Linear_Pottery_culture.
- Hinkelstein_culture region Europe.
- Hinkelstein_culture width "300".
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_archaeological_culture.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Location_map+.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Location_map~.
- Hinkelstein_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Hinkelstein_culture subject Category:5th_millennium_BC.
- Hinkelstein_culture subject Category:Archaeology_of_Germany.
- Hinkelstein_culture subject Category:Neolithic_Europe.
- Hinkelstein_culture hypernym Culture.
- Hinkelstein_culture type Magazine.
- Hinkelstein_culture type Art.
- Hinkelstein_culture comment "The Hinkelstein culture is a Neolithic archaeological culture situated in Rhine-Main and Rhenish Hesse, Germany.It is a Megalithic culture, part of the wider Linear Pottery horizon, dating to approximately the 50th to 49th century BC.The culture's name is due to a suggestion of Karl Koehl of Worms (1900). Hinkelstein is the term for menhir in the local Hessian dialect, after a menhir discovered in 1866 in Monsheim.".
- Hinkelstein_culture label "Hinkelstein culture".
- Hinkelstein_culture sameAs Q1619406.
- Hinkelstein_culture sameAs Hinkelstein-Gruppe.
- Hinkelstein_culture sameAs m.09gp5jh.
- Hinkelstein_culture sameAs Q1619406.
- Hinkelstein_culture wasDerivedFrom Hinkelstein_culture?oldid=660201475.
- Hinkelstein_culture isPrimaryTopicOf Hinkelstein_culture.