Three Naked gazed at the sun
excerpt from the paperback "The Stade group in the Bronze Age," by Ernst Probst:
In between the Elbe and Weser triangle and up to the lowlands of the East in the Stade Geest was in the earlier Bronze Age from about 1500-1200 BC, the home Stader group. Its area of distribution included - need for knowledge of the Hamburg prehistorian Friedrich Laux - today's circles Stade, Cuxhaven, Rotenburg and Verden. The term "Stader group has used 1981, the archaeologist Arne Lucke in his Hamburg dissertation for the first time for a local group of the early Bronze Age. In contrast, the term used Laux Stader group, which he mentioned in 1987 at a lecture in Bad Stuer and which he took back in 1991 in an essay for a group that claimed in the older, middle and late Bronze Age.
The Stade group with the Nordic Circle of the Bronze Age counted. He included in the Early Bronze Age southern Norway, southern and central Sweden, Denmark, Schleswig-Holstein, the area of Stade in Lower Saxony and the coastal region of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. Its southern limit was in the room Stade.
As in the Lüneburg group, there was apparently also in the population of the Stade group a social upper class. Then the rich grave goods point in the stone box graves of Heerstedt (Kreis Cuxhaven) and nettle in Kutenholz (district Stade) out. This noble warrior with bronze weapons and jewelry were buried. In the cist grave of Heerstedt was also a precious carved wooden bowl. Also, the folding chair of Daensen (District Stade) is expected to hold a ranking of people have counted.
from the clothing of the Stade people were left with the bronze brooches received, that the clothes were held together. Judging by the finds, round head fibulae were compared with the less common flat-head brooches preference. The former were in Heerstedt, Meckelstedt at Lintig and Dornsode at Armstorf (all in the district of Cuxhaven) and discovered in Anderlingen (Kreis Rotenburg) and nettle in Kutenholz (district Stade). A flat-head brooch with Sanduhrkopf came in at Hagenah Heinbockel (district Stade) to light.
on beard and hair have the finds out of double-edged bronze razors. They are considered as new that time. Such a toilet as we know from Essel at Kutenholz.
property to important people - maybe chiefs - was sometimes a folding chair with leather lining and bronze fittings and jewelry parts. Radicals such rare seats have been recovered only in men's graves of the Bronze Age in Lower Saxony, Schleswig-Holstein and Denmark. As one of the most precious discoveries of this type of folding chair is made of a grave mound of Daensen in Buxtehude (district Stade). It is the furthest south to find such a piece of furniture ...
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orders of the pocket book "The Stade group in the Bronze Age" at:
http://www.grin.com/e-book/93578/die-stader-gruppe-in-der-bronzezeit
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