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Neolithic Europe

The European Neolithic is the period from the arrival of Neolithic (New Stone Age) technology and the associated population of Early European Farmers in Europe, c. 7000 BC (the approximate time of the first farming societies in Greece) until c. 2000–1700 BC (the beginning of Bronze Age Europe with the Nordic Bronze Age). The Neolithic overlaps the Mesolithic and Bronze Age periods in Europe as cultural changes moved from the southeast to northwest at about 1 km/year – this is called the Neolithic Expansion.[1]

Map of the spread of farming into Europe up to about 3800 BC
Female figure from Tumba Madžari, North Macedonia

The duration of the Neolithic varies from place to place, its end marked by the introduction of bronze tools: in southeast Europe it is approximately 4,000 years (i.e. 7000 BC–3000 BC) while in parts of Northwest Europe it is just under 3,000 years (c. 4500 BC–1700 BC). In parts of Europe, notably the Balkans, the period after c. 5000 BC is known as the Chalcolithic (Copper Age) due to the invention of copper smelting and the prevalence of copper tools, weapons and other artifacts.

The spread of the Neolithic from the Pre-Pottery Neolithic in the Near East to Europe was first studied quantitatively in the 1970s, when a sufficient number of 14C age determinations for early Neolithic sites had become available.[2] Ammerman and Cavalli-Sforza discovered a linear relationship between the age of an Early Neolithic site and its distance from the conventional source in the Near East (Jericho), thus demonstrating that the Neolithic spread at an average speed of about 1 km/yr.[2] More recent studies confirm these results and yield a speed of 0.6–1.3 km/yr at a 95% confidence level.[2]

Basic cultural characteristics edit

 
An array of Neolithic artifacts, including bracelets, axe heads, chisels, and polishing tools.

Regardless of specific chronology, many European Neolithic groups share basic characteristics, such as living in small-scale, family-based communities, subsisting on domesticated plants and animals supplemented with the collection of wild plant foods and with hunting, and producing hand-made pottery, that is, pottery made without the potter's wheel. Polished stone axes lie at the heart of the neolithic (new stone) culture, enabling forest clearance for agriculture and production of wood for dwellings, as well as fuel.[citation needed]

 
Ancient Greek Early and Middle Neolithic pottery 6500–5300 BC. National Museum of Archaeology, Athens

There are also many differences, with some Neolithic communities in southeastern Europe living in heavily fortified settlements of 3,000–4,000 people (e.g., Sesklo in Greece) whereas Neolithic groups in Britain were small (possibly 50–100 people) and highly mobile cattle-herders.[original research?]

The details of the origin, chronology, social organization, subsistence practices and ideology of the peoples of Neolithic Europe are obtained from archaeology, and not historical records, since these people left none. Since the 1970s, population genetics has provided independent data on the population history of Neolithic Europe, including migration events and genetic relationships with peoples in South Asia.[original research?]

A further independent tool, linguistics, has contributed hypothetical reconstructions of early European languages and family trees with estimates of dating of splits, in particular theories on the relationship between speakers of Indo-European languages and Neolithic peoples. Some archaeologists believe that the expansion of Neolithic peoples from southwest Asia into Europe, marking the eclipse of Mesolithic culture, coincided with the introduction of Indo-European speakers,[3][page needed][4][page needed] whereas other archaeologists and many linguists believe the Indo-European languages were introduced from the Pontic-Caspian steppe during the succeeding Bronze Age.[5][page needed]

Archaeology edit

 
Neolithic expansion of Cardium pottery and Linear Pottery culture according to archaeology.
 
A stone used in Neolithic rituals, in Detmerode, Wolfsburg, Germany.

Archeologists trace the emergence of food-producing societies in the Levantine region of southwest Asia to the close of the last glacial period around 12,000 BC, and these developed into a number of regionally distinctive cultures by the eighth millennium BC. Remains of food-producing societies in the Aegean have been carbon-dated to c. 6500 BCE at Knossos, Franchthi Cave, and a number of mainland sites in Thessaly. Neolithic groups appear soon afterwards in the rest of Southeast Europe and south-central Europe. The Neolithic cultures of Southeast Europe (including the Aegean) show some continuity with groups in southwest Asia and Anatolia (e.g., Çatalhöyük).

In 2018, an 8,000-year-old ceramic figurine portraying the head of the "Mother Goddess", was found near Uzunovo, Vidin Province in Bulgaria, which pushes back the Neolithic revolution to 7th millennium BC.[6]

Current evidence suggests that Neolithic material culture was introduced to Europe via western Anatolia, and that similarities in cultures of North Africa and the Pontic steppes are due to diffusion out of Europe. All Neolithic sites in Europe contain ceramics,[original research?] and contain the plants and animals domesticated in Southwest Asia: einkorn, emmer, barley, lentils, pigs, goats, sheep, and cattle. Genetic data suggest that no independent domestication of animals took place in Neolithic Europe, and that all domesticated animals were originally domesticated in Southwest Asia.[7] The only domesticate not from Southwest Asia was broomcorn millet, domesticated in East Asia.[8][citation needed] The earliest evidence of cheese-making dates to 5500 BC in Kuyavia, Poland.[9]

Archaeologists agreed for some time that the culture of the early Neolithic is relatively homogeneous, compared to the late Mesolithic. DNA studies tend to confirm this, indicating that agriculture was brought to Western Europe by the Aegean populations, that are known as 'the Aegean Neolithic farmers'. When these farmers arrived in Britain, DNA studies show that they did not seem to mix much with the earlier population of the Western Hunter-Gatherers. Instead, there was a substantial population replacement.[10][11]

The diffusion of these farmers across Europe, from the Aegean to Britain, took about 2,500 years (6500–4000 BC). The Baltic region was penetrated a bit later, c. 3500 BCE, and there was also a delay in settling the Pannonian plain. In general, colonization shows a "saltatory" pattern, as the Neolithic advanced from one patch of fertile alluvial soil to another, bypassing mountainous areas. Analysis of radiocarbon dates show clearly that Mesolithic and Neolithic populations lived side by side for as much as a millennium in many parts of Europe, especially in the Iberian peninsula and along the Atlantic coast.[12] The Neolithic began on the Iberian Peninsula in 5700/5600 cal. BC according to several sites in the Levant area of the Peninsula. On the Northern Iberian Plateau, domestic agrotypes of wheat and barley, ovicaprid livestock, Neolithic pottery, shaped and polished tools are all present in the karst records and the open air sites from the last third of the VI millennium cal. BC.[13][14][15]

Investigation of the Neolithic skeletons found in the Talheim Death Pit suggests that prehistoric men from neighboring tribes were prepared to fight and kill each other in order to capture and secure women.[16] The mass grave at Talheim in southern Germany is one of the earliest known sites in the archaeological record that shows evidence of organised violence in Early Neolithic Europe, among various Linear Pottery culture tribes.[17]

In terms of overall size, some settlements of the Cucuteni–Trypillia culture, such as Talianki (with a population of around 15,000) in western Ukraine, were as large as the city-states of Sumer in the Fertile Crescent, and these Eastern European settlements predate the Sumerian cities by more than half of a millennium.[18]

End of the Neolithic and transition to the Copper age edit

With some exceptions, population levels rose rapidly at the beginning of the Neolithic until they reached the carrying capacity.[19] This was followed by a population crash of "enormous magnitude" after 5000 BC, with levels remaining low during the next 1,500 years.[19]

The oldest golden artifacts in the world (4600 BC - 4200 BC) are found in the Varna Necropolis, Bulgaria - grave offerings on exposition in Varna Archaeological Museum[20][21][22]

 
Scheme of Indo-European migrations from c. 4000 to 1000 BC according to the widely held Kurgan hypothesis. These migrations are thought to have spread Yamnaya steppe pastoralist ancestry and Indo-European languages throughout large parts of Eurasia.[23]

Populations began to rise after 3500 BC, with further dips and rises occurring between 3000 and 2500 BC but varying in date between regions.[19] Around this time is the Neolithic decline, when populations collapsed across most of Europe, possibly caused by climatic conditions, plague, or mass migration. A study of twelve European regions found most experienced boom and bust patterns and suggested an "endogenous, not climatic cause".[24] Recent archaeological evidence suggests the possibility of plague causing this population collapse, as mass graves dating from c. 2900 BCE were discovered containing fragments of Yersinia pestis genetic material consistent with pneumonic plague.[25]

The Chalcolithic Age in Europe started from about 3500 BC, followed soon after by the European Bronze Age. This also became a period of increased megalithic construction. From 3500 BC, copper was being used in the Balkans and eastern and central Europe. Also, the domestication of the horse took place during that time, resulting in the increased mobility of cultures.

Nearing the close of the Neolithic, c. 2500 BC, large numbers of Eurasian steppe peoples migrated in Southeast and Central from eastern Europe, from the Pontic–Caspian steppe north of the Black Sea.[26][27]

Gallery edit

Genetics edit

 
Simplified model for the demographic history of Europeans during the Neolithic period in the introduction of agriculture[29]

Genetic studies since the 2010s have identified the genetic contribution of Neolithic farmers to modern European populations, providing quantitative results relevant to the long-standing "replacement model" vs. "demic diffusion" dispute in archaeology.

The earlier population of Europe were the Mesolithic hunter-gatherers, called the "Western Hunter-Gatherers" (WHG). Along with the Scandinavian Hunter-Gatherers (SHG) and Eastern Hunter-Gatherers (EHG), the WHGs constituted one of the three main genetic groups in the postglacial period of early Holocene Europe. Later, the Neolithic farmers expanded from the Aegean and Near East; in various studies, they are described as the Early European Farmers (EEF); Aegean Neolithic Farmers (ANF),[11] First European Farmers (FEF), or also as the Early Neolithic Farmers (ENF).

A seminal 2014 study first identified the contribution of three main components to modern European lineages (the third being "Ancient North Eurasians", associated with the later Indo-European expansion). The EEF component was identified based on the genome of a woman buried c. 7,000 years ago in a Linear Pottery culture grave in Stuttgart, Germany.[30]

This 2014 study found evidence for genetic mixing between WHG and EEF throughout Europe, with the largest contribution of EEF in Mediterranean Europe (especially in Sardinia, Sicily, Malta and among Ashkenazi Jews), and the largest contribution of WHG in Northern Europe and among Basque people.[31]

Nevertheless, DNA studies show that when the Neolithic farmers arrived in Britain, these two groups did not seem to mix much. Instead, there was a substantial population replacement.[10][11]

Since 2014, further studies have refined the picture of interbreeding between EEF and WHG. In a 2017 analysis of 180 ancient DNA datasets of the Chalcolithic and Neolithic periods from Hungary, Germany and Spain, evidence was found of a prolonged period of interbreeding. Admixture took place regionally, from local hunter-gatherer populations, so that populations from the three regions (Germany, Iberia and Hungary) were genetically distinguishable at all stages of the Neolithic period, with a gradually increasing ratio of WHG ancestry of farming populations over time. This suggests that after the initial expansion of early farmers, there were no further long-range migrations substantial enough to homogenize the farming population, and that farming and hunter-gatherer populations existed side by side for many centuries, with ongoing gradual admixture throughout the 5th to 4th millennia BC (rather than a single admixture event on initial contact).[32] Admixture rates varied geographically; in the late Neolithic, WHG ancestry in farmers in Hungary was at around 10%, in Germany around 25% and in Iberia as high as 50%.[33]

During late Neolithic and early Bronze Age, the EEF-derived cultures of Europe were overwhelmed by successive invasions of Western Steppe Herders (WSHs) from the Pontic–Caspian steppe.[34] These invasions led to EEF paternal DNA lineages in Europe being almost entirely replaced with WSH paternal DNA (mainly R1b and R1a). EEF mtDNA however remained frequent, suggesting admixture between WSH males and EEF females.[35][36]

Language edit

 
Neolithic cultures in Europe in ca. 4000–3500 BC.

There is no direct evidence of the languages spoken in the Neolithic. Some proponents of paleolinguistics attempt to extend the methods of historical linguistics to the Stone Age, but this has little academic support. Criticising scenarios which envision for the Neolithic only a small number of language families spread over huge areas of Europe (as in modern times), Donald Ringe has argued on general principles of language geography (as concerns "tribal", pre-state societies), and the scant remains of (apparently indigenous) non-Indo-European languages attested in ancient inscriptions, that Neolithic Europe must have been a place of great linguistic diversity, with many language families with no recoverable linguistic links to each other, much like western North America prior to European colonisation.[37]

Discussion of hypothetical languages spoken in the European Neolithic is divided into two topics, Indo-European languages and "Pre-Indo-European" languages.

Early Indo-European languages are usually assumed to have reached Danubian (and maybe Central) Europe in the Chalcolithic or early Bronze Age, e.g. with the Corded Ware or Beaker cultures (see also Kurgan hypothesis for related discussions). The Anatolian hypothesis postulates arrival of Indo-European languages with the early Neolithic. Old European hydronymy is taken by Hans Krahe to be the oldest reflection of the early presence of Indo-European in Europe.

Theories of "Pre-Indo-European" languages in Europe are built on scant evidence. The Basque language is the best candidate for a descendant of such a language, but since Basque is a language isolate, there is no comparative evidence to build upon. Theo Vennemann nevertheless postulates a "Vasconic" family, which he supposes had co-existed with an "Atlantic" or "Semitidic" (i. e., para-Semitic) group. Another candidate is a Tyrrhenian family which would have given rise to Etruscan and Raetic in the Iron Age, and possibly also Aegean languages such as Minoan or Pelasgian in the Bronze Age.

In the north, a similar scenario to Indo-European is thought to have occurred with Uralic languages expanding in from the east. In particular, while the Sami languages of the indigenous Sami people belong in the Uralic family, they show considerable substrate influence, thought to represent one or more extinct original languages. The Sami are estimated to have adopted a Uralic language less than 2,500 years ago.[38] Some traces of indigenous languages of the Baltic area have been suspected in the Finnic languages as well, but these are much more modest. There are early loanwords from unidentified non-IE languages in other Uralic languages of Europe as well.[39]

Guus Kroonen brought up the so-called "Agricultural Substrate Hypothesis", based on the comparison of presumable Pre-Germanic and Pre-Greek substrate lexicon (especially agricultural terms without clear IE etymologies). Kroonen links that substrate to the gradual spread of agriculture in Neolithic Europe from Anatolia and the Balkans, and associates the Pre-Germanic agricultural substrate language with the Linear Pottery culture. The prefix *a- and the suffix *-it- are the most apparent linguistic markers by which a small group of "Agricultural" substrate words - i.e. *arwīt ("pea") or *gait ("goat") - can be isolated from the rest of the Proto-Germanic lexicon.[40] According to Aljoša Šorgo, there are at least 36 Proto-Germanic lexical items very likely originating from the "agricultural" substrate language (or a group of closely related languages). It is proposed by Šorgo that the Agricultural substrate was characterized by a four-vowel system of */æ/ */ɑ/ */i/ */u/, the presence of pre-nasalized stops, the absence of a semi-vowel */j/, a mobile stress accent, and reduction of unstressed vowels.[41]

List of cultures and sites edit

 
Excavated dwellings at Skara Brae (Orkney, Scotland), Europe's most complete Neolithic village.

Megalithic edit

 
Klekkende Høj passage grave, Denmark, c. 3500-2800 BC

Some Neolithic cultures listed above are known for constructing megaliths. These occur primarily on the Atlantic coast of Europe, but there are also megaliths on western Mediterranean islands.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ammerman & Cavalli-Sforza 1971.
  2. ^ a b c Original text published under Creative Commons license CC BY 4.0: Shukurov, Anvar; Sarson, Graeme R.; Gangal, Kavita (2014). "The Near-Eastern Roots of the Neolithic in South Asia". PLOS ONE. 9 (5): e95714. Bibcode:2014PLoSO...995714G. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0095714. PMC 4012948. PMID 24806472.   Material was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
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  4. ^ Bellwood 2004.
  5. ^ Anthony 2007.
  6. ^ . Archaeology in Bulgaria. 27 October 2018. Archived from the original on 26 October 2019. Retrieved 3 November 2018.
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  8. ^ Bellwood 2004, pp. 74, 118.
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Further reading edit

  • Bellwood, Peter (2001). "Early Agriculturalist Population Diasporas? Farming, Languages, and Genes". Annual Review of Anthropology. 30: 181–207. doi:10.1146/annurev.anthro.30.1.181. JSTOR 3069214. S2CID 12157394.
  • Cavalli-Sforza, Luigi Luca; Menozzi, Paolo; Piazza, Alberto (1994). The History and Geography of Human Genes. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-08750-4.
  • Cavalli-Sforza, Luigi Luca (2001). Genes, Peoples, and Languages. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-22873-3.
  • Gimbutas, Marija (1989). The Language of the Goddess. Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-250356-5.
  • Fu Q, Posth C, Hajdinjak M, Petr M, Mallick S, Fernandes D, et al. (June 2016). "The genetic history of Ice Age Europe". Nature. 534 (7606): 200–5. Bibcode:2016Natur.534..200F. doi:10.1038/nature17993. hdl:10211.3/198594. PMC 4943878. PMID 27135931.

External links edit

  Media related to Neolithic Europe at Wikimedia Commons

  • Hofmanová, Zuzana; Kreutzer, Susanne; Hellenthal, Garrett; et al. (2016). "Early farmers from across Europe directly descended from Neolithic Aegeans". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 113 (25): 6886–6891. Bibcode:2016PNAS..113.6886H. doi:10.1073/pnas.1523951113. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 4922144. PMID 27274049.
  • The genetic structure of the world's first farmers, Lazaridis et al, 2016
  • Massive migration from the steppe is a source for Indo-European languages in Europe, Haak et al, 2015
  • Population genomics of Bronze Age Eurasia, Allentoft et al, 2015
  • Eight thousand years of natural selection in Europe, Mathieson et al, 2015
  • "The Horse, the Wheel and Language, How Bronze-Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes shaped the Modern World", David W Anthony, 2007
  • General table of Neolithic sites in Europe
  • culture.gouv.fr: Life along the Danube 6500 years ago

neolithic, europe, european, neolithic, period, from, arrival, neolithic, stone, technology, associated, population, early, european, farmers, europe, 7000, approximate, time, first, farming, societies, greece, until, 2000, 1700, beginning, bronze, europe, wit. The European Neolithic is the period from the arrival of Neolithic New Stone Age technology and the associated population of Early European Farmers in Europe c 7000 BC the approximate time of the first farming societies in Greece until c 2000 1700 BC the beginning of Bronze Age Europe with the Nordic Bronze Age The Neolithic overlaps the Mesolithic and Bronze Age periods in Europe as cultural changes moved from the southeast to northwest at about 1 km year this is called the Neolithic Expansion 1 Map of the spread of farming into Europe up to about 3800 BCFemale figure from Tumba Madzari North MacedoniaThe duration of the Neolithic varies from place to place its end marked by the introduction of bronze tools in southeast Europe it is approximately 4 000 years i e 7000 BC 3000 BC while in parts of Northwest Europe it is just under 3 000 years c 4500 BC 1700 BC In parts of Europe notably the Balkans the period after c 5000 BC is known as the Chalcolithic Copper Age due to the invention of copper smelting and the prevalence of copper tools weapons and other artifacts The spread of the Neolithic from the Pre Pottery Neolithic in the Near East to Europe was first studied quantitatively in the 1970s when a sufficient number of 14C age determinations for early Neolithic sites had become available 2 Ammerman and Cavalli Sforza discovered a linear relationship between the age of an Early Neolithic site and its distance from the conventional source in the Near East Jericho thus demonstrating that the Neolithic spread at an average speed of about 1 km yr 2 More recent studies confirm these results and yield a speed of 0 6 1 3 km yr at a 95 confidence level 2 Contents 1 Basic cultural characteristics 2 Archaeology 3 End of the Neolithic and transition to the Copper age 4 Gallery 5 Genetics 6 Language 7 List of cultures and sites 7 1 Megalithic 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksBasic cultural characteristics edit nbsp An array of Neolithic artifacts including bracelets axe heads chisels and polishing tools Regardless of specific chronology many European Neolithic groups share basic characteristics such as living in small scale family based communities subsisting on domesticated plants and animals supplemented with the collection of wild plant foods and with hunting and producing hand made pottery that is pottery made without the potter s wheel Polished stone axes lie at the heart of the neolithic new stone culture enabling forest clearance for agriculture and production of wood for dwellings as well as fuel citation needed nbsp Ancient Greek Early and Middle Neolithic pottery 6500 5300 BC National Museum of Archaeology AthensThere are also many differences with some Neolithic communities in southeastern Europe living in heavily fortified settlements of 3 000 4 000 people e g Sesklo in Greece whereas Neolithic groups in Britain were small possibly 50 100 people and highly mobile cattle herders original research The details of the origin chronology social organization subsistence practices and ideology of the peoples of Neolithic Europe are obtained from archaeology and not historical records since these people left none Since the 1970s population genetics has provided independent data on the population history of Neolithic Europe including migration events and genetic relationships with peoples in South Asia original research A further independent tool linguistics has contributed hypothetical reconstructions of early European languages and family trees with estimates of dating of splits in particular theories on the relationship between speakers of Indo European languages and Neolithic peoples Some archaeologists believe that the expansion of Neolithic peoples from southwest Asia into Europe marking the eclipse of Mesolithic culture coincided with the introduction of Indo European speakers 3 page needed 4 page needed whereas other archaeologists and many linguists believe the Indo European languages were introduced from the Pontic Caspian steppe during the succeeding Bronze Age 5 page needed Archaeology edit nbsp Neolithic expansion of Cardium pottery and Linear Pottery culture according to archaeology nbsp A stone used in Neolithic rituals in Detmerode Wolfsburg Germany Further information Old Europe archaeology Archeologists trace the emergence of food producing societies in the Levantine region of southwest Asia to the close of the last glacial period around 12 000 BC and these developed into a number of regionally distinctive cultures by the eighth millennium BC Remains of food producing societies in the Aegean have been carbon dated to c 6500 BCE at Knossos Franchthi Cave and a number of mainland sites in Thessaly Neolithic groups appear soon afterwards in the rest of Southeast Europe and south central Europe The Neolithic cultures of Southeast Europe including the Aegean show some continuity with groups in southwest Asia and Anatolia e g Catalhoyuk In 2018 an 8 000 year old ceramic figurine portraying the head of the Mother Goddess was found near Uzunovo Vidin Province in Bulgaria which pushes back the Neolithic revolution to 7th millennium BC 6 Current evidence suggests that Neolithic material culture was introduced to Europe via western Anatolia and that similarities in cultures of North Africa and the Pontic steppes are due to diffusion out of Europe All Neolithic sites in Europe contain ceramics original research and contain the plants and animals domesticated in Southwest Asia einkorn emmer barley lentils pigs goats sheep and cattle Genetic data suggest that no independent domestication of animals took place in Neolithic Europe and that all domesticated animals were originally domesticated in Southwest Asia 7 The only domesticate not from Southwest Asia was broomcorn millet domesticated in East Asia 8 citation needed The earliest evidence of cheese making dates to 5500 BC in Kuyavia Poland 9 Archaeologists agreed for some time that the culture of the early Neolithic is relatively homogeneous compared to the late Mesolithic DNA studies tend to confirm this indicating that agriculture was brought to Western Europe by the Aegean populations that are known as the Aegean Neolithic farmers When these farmers arrived in Britain DNA studies show that they did not seem to mix much with the earlier population of the Western Hunter Gatherers Instead there was a substantial population replacement 10 11 The diffusion of these farmers across Europe from the Aegean to Britain took about 2 500 years 6500 4000 BC The Baltic region was penetrated a bit later c 3500 BCE and there was also a delay in settling the Pannonian plain In general colonization shows a saltatory pattern as the Neolithic advanced from one patch of fertile alluvial soil to another bypassing mountainous areas Analysis of radiocarbon dates show clearly that Mesolithic and Neolithic populations lived side by side for as much as a millennium in many parts of Europe especially in the Iberian peninsula and along the Atlantic coast 12 The Neolithic began on the Iberian Peninsula in 5700 5600 cal BC according to several sites in the Levant area of the Peninsula On the Northern Iberian Plateau domestic agrotypes of wheat and barley ovicaprid livestock Neolithic pottery shaped and polished tools are all present in the karst records and the open air sites from the last third of the VI millennium cal BC 13 14 15 Investigation of the Neolithic skeletons found in the Talheim Death Pit suggests that prehistoric men from neighboring tribes were prepared to fight and kill each other in order to capture and secure women 16 The mass grave at Talheim in southern Germany is one of the earliest known sites in the archaeological record that shows evidence of organised violence in Early Neolithic Europe among various Linear Pottery culture tribes 17 In terms of overall size some settlements of the Cucuteni Trypillia culture such as Talianki with a population of around 15 000 in western Ukraine were as large as the city states of Sumer in the Fertile Crescent and these Eastern European settlements predate the Sumerian cities by more than half of a millennium 18 End of the Neolithic and transition to the Copper age editMain article Chalcolithic Europe With some exceptions population levels rose rapidly at the beginning of the Neolithic until they reached the carrying capacity 19 This was followed by a population crash of enormous magnitude after 5000 BC with levels remaining low during the next 1 500 years 19 The oldest golden artifacts in the world 4600 BC 4200 BC are found in the Varna Necropolis Bulgaria grave offerings on exposition in Varna Archaeological Museum 20 21 22 nbsp Scheme of Indo European migrations from c 4000 to 1000 BC according to the widely held Kurgan hypothesis These migrations are thought to have spread Yamnaya steppe pastoralist ancestry and Indo European languages throughout large parts of Eurasia 23 Populations began to rise after 3500 BC with further dips and rises occurring between 3000 and 2500 BC but varying in date between regions 19 Around this time is the Neolithic decline when populations collapsed across most of Europe possibly caused by climatic conditions plague or mass migration A study of twelve European regions found most experienced boom and bust patterns and suggested an endogenous not climatic cause 24 Recent archaeological evidence suggests the possibility of plague causing this population collapse as mass graves dating from c 2900 BCE were discovered containing fragments of Yersinia pestis genetic material consistent with pneumonic plague 25 The Chalcolithic Age in Europe started from about 3500 BC followed soon after by the European Bronze Age This also became a period of increased megalithic construction From 3500 BC copper was being used in the Balkans and eastern and central Europe Also the domestication of the horse took place during that time resulting in the increased mobility of cultures Nearing the close of the Neolithic c 2500 BC large numbers of Eurasian steppe peoples migrated in Southeast and Central from eastern Europe from the Pontic Caspian steppe north of the Black Sea 26 27 Gallery edit nbsp Pottery 6th millennium BC Karanovo I Bulgaria 28 nbsp Female figurine marble Thessaly 5300 3300 BC Neolithic Greece nbsp Ancient Neolithic Greece stone tools and weapons nbsp Ancient Neolithic Greece stone grinder nbsp Clay vase with polychrome decoration Dimini Neolithic Greece 5300 3300 BC nbsp Neolithic site of Nea Nikomedeia Northern GreeceGenetics editFurther information Genetic history of Europe nbsp Simplified model for the demographic history of Europeans during the Neolithic period in the introduction of agriculture 29 Genetic studies since the 2010s have identified the genetic contribution of Neolithic farmers to modern European populations providing quantitative results relevant to the long standing replacement model vs demic diffusion dispute in archaeology The earlier population of Europe were the Mesolithic hunter gatherers called the Western Hunter Gatherers WHG Along with the Scandinavian Hunter Gatherers SHG and Eastern Hunter Gatherers EHG the WHGs constituted one of the three main genetic groups in the postglacial period of early Holocene Europe Later the Neolithic farmers expanded from the Aegean and Near East in various studies they are described as the Early European Farmers EEF Aegean Neolithic Farmers ANF 11 First European Farmers FEF or also as the Early Neolithic Farmers ENF A seminal 2014 study first identified the contribution of three main components to modern European lineages the third being Ancient North Eurasians associated with the later Indo European expansion The EEF component was identified based on the genome of a woman buried c 7 000 years ago in a Linear Pottery culture grave in Stuttgart Germany 30 This 2014 study found evidence for genetic mixing between WHG and EEF throughout Europe with the largest contribution of EEF in Mediterranean Europe especially in Sardinia Sicily Malta and among Ashkenazi Jews and the largest contribution of WHG in Northern Europe and among Basque people 31 Nevertheless DNA studies show that when the Neolithic farmers arrived in Britain these two groups did not seem to mix much Instead there was a substantial population replacement 10 11 Since 2014 further studies have refined the picture of interbreeding between EEF and WHG In a 2017 analysis of 180 ancient DNA datasets of the Chalcolithic and Neolithic periods from Hungary Germany and Spain evidence was found of a prolonged period of interbreeding Admixture took place regionally from local hunter gatherer populations so that populations from the three regions Germany Iberia and Hungary were genetically distinguishable at all stages of the Neolithic period with a gradually increasing ratio of WHG ancestry of farming populations over time This suggests that after the initial expansion of early farmers there were no further long range migrations substantial enough to homogenize the farming population and that farming and hunter gatherer populations existed side by side for many centuries with ongoing gradual admixture throughout the 5th to 4th millennia BC rather than a single admixture event on initial contact 32 Admixture rates varied geographically in the late Neolithic WHG ancestry in farmers in Hungary was at around 10 in Germany around 25 and in Iberia as high as 50 33 During late Neolithic and early Bronze Age the EEF derived cultures of Europe were overwhelmed by successive invasions of Western Steppe Herders WSHs from the Pontic Caspian steppe 34 These invasions led to EEF paternal DNA lineages in Europe being almost entirely replaced with WSH paternal DNA mainly R1b and R1a EEF mtDNA however remained frequent suggesting admixture between WSH males and EEF females 35 36 Language editMain article Paleo European languages nbsp Neolithic cultures in Europe in ca 4000 3500 BC There is no direct evidence of the languages spoken in the Neolithic Some proponents of paleolinguistics attempt to extend the methods of historical linguistics to the Stone Age but this has little academic support Criticising scenarios which envision for the Neolithic only a small number of language families spread over huge areas of Europe as in modern times Donald Ringe has argued on general principles of language geography as concerns tribal pre state societies and the scant remains of apparently indigenous non Indo European languages attested in ancient inscriptions that Neolithic Europe must have been a place of great linguistic diversity with many language families with no recoverable linguistic links to each other much like western North America prior to European colonisation 37 Discussion of hypothetical languages spoken in the European Neolithic is divided into two topics Indo European languages and Pre Indo European languages Early Indo European languages are usually assumed to have reached Danubian and maybe Central Europe in the Chalcolithic or early Bronze Age e g with the Corded Ware or Beaker cultures see also Kurgan hypothesis for related discussions The Anatolian hypothesis postulates arrival of Indo European languages with the early Neolithic Old European hydronymy is taken by Hans Krahe to be the oldest reflection of the early presence of Indo European in Europe Theories of Pre Indo European languages in Europe are built on scant evidence The Basque language is the best candidate for a descendant of such a language but since Basque is a language isolate there is no comparative evidence to build upon Theo Vennemann nevertheless postulates a Vasconic family which he supposes had co existed with an Atlantic or Semitidic i e para Semitic group Another candidate is a Tyrrhenian family which would have given rise to Etruscan and Raetic in the Iron Age and possibly also Aegean languages such as Minoan or Pelasgian in the Bronze Age In the north a similar scenario to Indo European is thought to have occurred with Uralic languages expanding in from the east In particular while the Sami languages of the indigenous Sami people belong in the Uralic family they show considerable substrate influence thought to represent one or more extinct original languages The Sami are estimated to have adopted a Uralic language less than 2 500 years ago 38 Some traces of indigenous languages of the Baltic area have been suspected in the Finnic languages as well but these are much more modest There are early loanwords from unidentified non IE languages in other Uralic languages of Europe as well 39 Guus Kroonen brought up the so called Agricultural Substrate Hypothesis based on the comparison of presumable Pre Germanic and Pre Greek substrate lexicon especially agricultural terms without clear IE etymologies Kroonen links that substrate to the gradual spread of agriculture in Neolithic Europe from Anatolia and the Balkans and associates the Pre Germanic agricultural substrate language with the Linear Pottery culture The prefix a and the suffix it are the most apparent linguistic markers by which a small group of Agricultural substrate words i e arwit pea or gait goat can be isolated from the rest of the Proto Germanic lexicon 40 According to Aljosa Sorgo there are at least 36 Proto Germanic lexical items very likely originating from the agricultural substrate language or a group of closely related languages It is proposed by Sorgo that the Agricultural substrate was characterized by a four vowel system of ae ɑ i u the presence of pre nasalized stops the absence of a semi vowel j a mobile stress accent and reduction of unstressed vowels 41 List of cultures and sites edit nbsp Excavated dwellings at Skara Brae Orkney Scotland Europe s most complete Neolithic village Mesolithic Lepenski Vir culture 10th 8th to 6th millennium BC Megalithic culture 8th to 2nd millennium BC Early Neolithic Franchthi Cave 20th to 3rd millennium BC Greece First European Neolithic site Sesklo 7th millennium BC Greece Karanovo culture Bulgaria 7th millennium BC 4 000 BC Starcevo Criș culture Starcevo I Koros Cris Central Balkans 7th to 6th millennium BC Dudești culture 6th millennium BC Middle Neolithic La Almagra pottery culture Andalusia 6th to 5th millennium BC Vinca culture 6th to 5th millennium BC Hamangia culture Romania Bulgaria c 5200 to c 4500 BC Linear Pottery culture 6th to 5th millennium BC Circular enclosures Butmir culture 5100 4500 BC Cardium pottery culture Mediterranean coast 7th to 4th millennium BC Pit Comb Ware culture a k a Comb Ceramic culture Northeast Europe 6th to 3rd millennium BC Cucuteni Trypillian culture Moldova Ukraine Romania c 5200 to 3500 BC Ertebolle culture Denmark 5th to 3rd millennium BC Cortaillod culture Switzerland 4th millennium BC Hembury culture Britain 5th to 4th millennium BC Boian culture Romania Bulgaria c 4300 to 3500 BC Windmill Hill culture Britain 3rd millennium BC Pfyn culture Switzerland 4th millennium BC Globular Amphora culture Central Europe 4th to 3rd millennium BC Horgen culture Switzerland 4th to 3rd millennium BC Eneolithic Chalcolithic nbsp A model of the prehistoric town of Los Millares with its walls Andalusia Spain Lengyel culture 5th millennium BC A culture in Central Europe produced monumental arrangements of circular ditches between 4800 BC and 4600 BC Varna culture Bulgaria c 4550 BC c 4 100 BC Funnelbeaker culture 4th millennium BC Cernavodă culture Bulgaria Romania c 4000 BC 3200 BC Eutresis culture Greece 4th to 3rd Millennium BC Yamnaya culture 3300 BC to 2600 BC Baden culture Central Europe 4th to 3rd millennium BC Vucedol culture North west Balkans Pannonian Plain late 4th to 3rd millennia Los Millares culture Almeria Spain 4th to 2nd millennia Corded Ware culture a k a Battle axe or Single Grave culture Northern Europe 3rd millennium Gaudo culture 3rd millennium early Bronze Age in Italian Beaker culture 3rd to 2nd millennia early Bronze Age Stonehenge Skara BraeMegalithic edit nbsp Klekkende Hoj passage grave Denmark c 3500 2800 BCSome Neolithic cultures listed above are known for constructing megaliths These occur primarily on the Atlantic coast of Europe but there are also megaliths on western Mediterranean islands c 5000 BCE Constructions in Portugal Evora Emergence of the Atlantic Neolithic period the age of agriculture along the fertile shores of Europe c 4800 BCE Constructions in Brittany Barnenez and Poitou Bougon c 4000 BCE Constructions in Brittany Carnac Portugal Lisbon Spain Galicia and Andalusia France central and southern Corsica England Wales Northern Ireland Banbridge and elsewhere c 3700 BCE Constructions in Ireland Carrowmore and elsewhere and Spain Dolmen of Menga Antequera Dolmens Site Malaga c 3600 BCE Constructions in England Maumbury Rings and Godmanchester and Malta Ġgantija and Mnajdra temples c 3500 BCE Constructions in Spain Dolmen of Viera Antequera Dolmens Site Malaga and Guadiana Ireland south west France Arles and the north north west and central Italy Piedmont Valle d Aosta Liguria and Tuscany Mediterranean islands Sardinia Sicily Malta and elsewhere in the Mediterranean Belgium north east and Germany central and south west c 3400 BCE Constructions in Ireland Newgrange Netherlands north east Germany northern and central Sweden and Denmark c 3200 BCE Constructions in Malta Ħaġar Qim and Tarxien c 3000 BCE Constructions in France Saumur Dordogne Languedoc Biscay and the Mediterranean coast Spain Los Millares Belgium Ardennes and Orkney as well as the first henges circular earthworks in Britain c 2900 BCE Constructions in Spain Tholos of El Romeral Antequera Dolmens Site Malaga c 2800 BCE Climax of the megalithic Funnel beaker culture in Denmark and the construction of the henge at Stonehenge See also editPrehistoric Europe Chalcolithic Europe Germanic substrate hypothesis Indo Iranians Neolithic tomb Old European culture Pre Indo European languages Proto Indo European language Proto Indo Europeans Vinca symbolsReferences edit Ammerman amp Cavalli Sforza 1971 a b c Original text published under Creative Commons license CC BY 4 0 Shukurov Anvar Sarson Graeme R Gangal Kavita 2014 The Near Eastern Roots of the Neolithic in South Asia PLOS ONE 9 5 e95714 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 995714G doi 10 1371 journal pone 0095714 PMC 4012948 PMID 24806472 nbsp Material was copied from this source which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4 0 International License Renfrew 1987 Bellwood 2004 Anthony 2007 Discovery of 8 000 year old veiled Mother Goddess near Bulgaria s Vidin pushes back Neolithic revolution in Europe Archaeology in Bulgaria 27 October 2018 Archived from the original on 26 October 2019 Retrieved 3 November 2018 Bellwood 2004 pp 68 9 Bellwood 2004 pp 74 118 Subbaraman 2012 a b Paul Rincon Stonehenge DNA reveals origin of builders BBC News website 16 April 2019 a b c Brace Selina Diekmann Yoan Booth Thomas J van Dorp Lucy Faltyskova 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12020 S2CID 180646880 Haak Wolfgang Forster Peter Bramanti Barbara Matsumura Shuichi Brandt Guido Tanzer Marc Villems Richard Renfrew Colin et al 2005 Ancient DNA from the First European Farmers in 7500 Year Old Neolithic Sites Science 310 5750 1016 8 Bibcode 2005Sci 310 1016H doi 10 1126 science 1118725 ISSN 1095 9203 PMID 16284177 S2CID 11546893 Zvelebil Marek 1989 On the transition to farming in Europe or what was spreading with the Neolithic a reply to Ammerman 1989 Antiquity 63 239 379 83 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00076110 S2CID 162882505 Archived from the original on 2013 10 30 Zvelebil Marek 2009 Mesolithic prelude and neolithic revolution In Zvelebil Marek ed Hunters in Transition Mesolithic Societies of Temperate Eurasia and Their Transition to Farming Cambridge University Press pp 5 15 ISBN 978 0 521 10957 4 Zvelebil Marek 2009 Mesolithic societies and the transition to farming problems of time scale and organisation In Zvelebil Marek ed Hunters in Transition Mesolithic Societies of Temperate Eurasia and Their Transition to Farming Cambridge University Press pp 167 88 ISBN 978 0 521 10957 4 Further reading editBellwood Peter 2001 Early Agriculturalist Population Diasporas Farming Languages and Genes Annual Review of Anthropology 30 181 207 doi 10 1146 annurev anthro 30 1 181 JSTOR 3069214 S2CID 12157394 Cavalli Sforza Luigi Luca Menozzi Paolo Piazza Alberto 1994 The History and Geography of Human Genes Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 08750 4 Cavalli Sforza Luigi Luca 2001 Genes Peoples and Languages Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 22873 3 Gimbutas Marija 1989 The Language of the Goddess Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 250356 5 Fu Q Posth C Hajdinjak M Petr M Mallick S Fernandes D et al June 2016 The genetic history of Ice Age Europe Nature 534 7606 200 5 Bibcode 2016Natur 534 200F doi 10 1038 nature17993 hdl 10211 3 198594 PMC 4943878 PMID 27135931 External links edit nbsp Media related to Neolithic Europe at Wikimedia Commons Hofmanova Zuzana Kreutzer Susanne Hellenthal Garrett et al 2016 Early farmers from across Europe directly descended from Neolithic Aegeans Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113 25 6886 6891 Bibcode 2016PNAS 113 6886H doi 10 1073 pnas 1523951113 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 4922144 PMID 27274049 The genetic structure of the world s first farmers Lazaridis et al 2016 Massive migration from the steppe is a source for Indo European languages in Europe Haak et al 2015 Population genomics of Bronze Age Eurasia Allentoft et al 2015 Eight thousand years of natural selection in Europe Mathieson et al 2015 The Horse the Wheel and Language How Bronze Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes shaped the Modern World David W Anthony 2007 General table of Neolithic sites in Europe Mario Alinei et al Paleolithic Continuity Theory of Indo European Origins culture gouv fr Life along the Danube 6500 years ago Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neolithic Europe amp oldid 1194919990, 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