Talk:Jastorf culture

Latest comment: 4 years ago by Andrew Lancaster in topic Useful sources

edit

Berig, the only difference between your and my edit is the line "It evolved out of the Nordic Bronze Age, through influence from the Halstatt culture further south." The other lines you can find elsewhere in the text: "It is named after a site near the village of Jastorf, Lower Saxony (53°3′N 10°36′E / 53.050°N 10.600°E / 53.050; 10.600)" and "Its area was first restricted to northern Lower Saxony and Schleswig-Holstein" can be found two times now. If you don't mind I restore my edit, since the logic of the previous version first expands on the "nordic bronze age" for Jastorf to emerge, before following the text of Dab. If you think it is more appropiate, I will open with that single line you think is important (even though this information is already contained and scattered within the article). Rokus01 22:55, 14 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

Anglo-Saxons? edit

What connection does this culture have with the Angles and Saxons who invaded Britain in the early AD centuries? 92.29.18.107 (talk) 15:14, 22 August 2013 (UTC)Reply

Useful sources edit

  • Martens, Jes (2014), "Jastorf and Jutland (On the northern extent of the so-called Jastorf Culture)", Das Jastorf-Konzept und die vorrömische Eisenzeit im nördlichen Mitteleuropa
  • Wofagiewicz, Ryszard (1997), "The Pre-Roman Iron Age in Pomerania", Chronological Problems of the Pre-Roman Iron Age in Northern Europe, Arkæologiske skrifter, vol. 7

Anyone want to work on them?--Andrew Lancaster (talk) 10:03, 11 February 2020 (UTC)Reply