Europes oldest civi...
 
Notifications
Clear all

Europes oldest civilisation 4800BC

1 Posts
1 Users
0 Reactions
1,414 Views
Posts: 3958
Topic starter
(@sacredstar)
Famed Member
Joined: 21 years ago

Front page 'The Independent' talks about the discovery of the oldest European civilisation 2,000 years older then the pyramids and older then Uruk the first city in Mesopotamia and ancient city of Sumer.

By David Keys, Archaeology Correspondent

11 June 2005

Archaeologists have discovered Europe's oldest civilisation, a network of dozens of temples, 2,000 years older than Stonehenge and the Pyramids.

More than 150 gigantic monuments have been located beneath the fields and cities of modern-day Germany, Austria and Slovakia. They were built 7,000 years ago, between 4800BC and 4600BC. Their discovery, revealed today by The Independent, will revolutionise the study of prehistoric Europe, where an appetite for monumental architecture was thought to have developed later than in Mesopotamia and Egypt.

In all, more than 150 temples have been identified. Constructed of earth and wood, they had ramparts and palisades that stretched for up to half a mile. They were built by a religious people who lived in communal longhouses up to 50 metres long, grouped around substantial villages. Evidence suggests their economy was based on cattle, sheep, goat and pig farming.

Their civilisation seems to have died out after about 200 years and the recent archaeological discoveries are so new that the temple building culture does not even have a name yet.

Love beyond measure

Kim

Share: