The younger Nordic Bronze Age (about 1100-800 BC)
excerpt from the e-book and paperback, "The Nordic Bronze Age" by Ernst Probst:
The Seddiner "King grave"
In Norse early Bronze Age from about 1100-800 enlarged BC, the distribution area of the Nordic circle around a multiple of its original extension. It now extended as far south as the Oder, and Weser, Saale, and in the north to Sweden and Norway. Because of this development, it also speaks of the great northern circle. In Germany, belonged Schleswig-Holstein, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Brandenburg and the north of the northern Saxony-Anhalt to the field of Nordic early Bronze Age.
This culture is divided into several groups from the prehistoric. In Mecklenburg-West Pomerania Rügen, there was the group and group Neubrandenburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in the southern and northern Saxony-Anhalt, the Elbe-Havel-group, in northern Western Pomerania and in the West Pomeranian Uckermärkische-group and the Usedom-Wolin group in northern Prignitz the group (also Seddiner group), and the Rhin-group. In contrast, so far in Schleswig-Holstein, were correspondingly further subdivision. People from
this time are considered the direct ancestors of the Germans. In the investigation of the cremated remains from the flat cemetery in Warlin (District Mecklenburg-Strelitz) was the stature of the person buried there, to be determined. Accordingly, the men were great in this area from 1.55 to 1.63 meters. A woman brought it to about 1.55 meters tall.
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