Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q5914561> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 65 of
65
with 100 triples per page.
- Q5914561 subject Q11721818.
- Q5914561 subject Q7722499.
- Q5914561 subject Q8671711.
- Q5914561 abstract "In the archaeology of Neolithic Europe, the burned house horizon is the geographical extent of the phenomenon of intentionally burned settlements.This was a widespread and long-lasting tradition in what is now Southeastern and Eastern Europe, lasting from as early as 6,500 BCE (the beginning of the Neolithic) to as late as 2000 BCE (the end of the Chalcolithic and the beginning of the Bronze Age). A notable representative of this tradition is the Cucuteni-Trypillian culture, which was centered on the burned-house horizon both geographically and temporally.There is a consensus in the study of Neolithic and Eneolithic Europe that the majority of burned houses were intentionally set alight.Although the reasons behind why house burning was practiced are still debated, the evidence seems to support that it occurred in such a way as to indicate it was highly unlikely to have been as a result of accidental cause. If these regularly occurring burnings, in which the entire settlement is destroyed, were deliberate, then there has still been a debate about why this happened. However, in recent years, the consensus has begun to gel around the Domicide theory supported by Tringham, Stevanovic and others.Cucuteni-Trypillian settlements were completely burned every 75–80 years, leaving behind successive layers consisting mostly of large amounts of rubble from the collapsed wattle-and-daub walls. This rubble was mostly ceramic material that had been created as the raw clay used in the daub of the walls became vitrified from the intense heat that would have turned it a bright orange color during the conflagration that destroyed the buildings, much the same way that raw clay objects are turned into ceramic products during the firing process in a kiln.Moreover, the sheer amount of fired-clay rubble found within every house of a settlement indicates that a fire of enormous intensity would have raged through the entire community to have created the volume of material found.".
- Q5914561 thumbnail Burned_House_Horizon_Map.PNG?width=300.
- Q5914561 wikiPageExternalLink arheo.
- Q5914561 wikiPageExternalLink Trypillia.html.
- Q5914561 wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Q5914561 wikiPageExternalLink index.htm.
- Q5914561 wikiPageExternalLink balk4.htm.
- Q5914561 wikiPageExternalLink the_earlyest.html.
- Q5914561 wikiPageExternalLink theiss_english_version.
- Q5914561 wikiPageExternalLink history-pre.htm.
- Q5914561 wikiPageExternalLink ru3.shtml.
- Q5914561 wikiPageExternalLink index.shtml.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q11196.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q1162419.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q11642.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q11721818.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q1246.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q1275904.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q128593.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q1483547.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q16988755.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q171393.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q171558.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q173324.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q182660.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q191797.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q193291.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q2038432.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q2039029.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q207388.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q208629.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q21095978.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q212.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q214.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q219.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q2370603.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q2556093.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q28.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q331483.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q355777.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q369012.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q39473.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q403.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q40855.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q43004.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q44475.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q44749.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q45922.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q5063664.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q60915.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q7383243.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q756102.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q7722499.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q776437.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q806348.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q825643.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q831336.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q8671711.
- Q5914561 wikiPageWikiLink Q9165.
- Q5914561 comment "In the archaeology of Neolithic Europe, the burned house horizon is the geographical extent of the phenomenon of intentionally burned settlements.This was a widespread and long-lasting tradition in what is now Southeastern and Eastern Europe, lasting from as early as 6,500 BCE (the beginning of the Neolithic) to as late as 2000 BCE (the end of the Chalcolithic and the beginning of the Bronze Age).".
- Q5914561 label "Burned house horizon".
- Q5914561 depiction Burned_House_Horizon_Map.PNG.