Global Information Lookup Global Information

Neolithic long house information


Kelheim (Lower Bavaria). Archaeological Museum: Reconstruction of a settlement of the Linear pottery culture ( 5th millennium BC ) from Hienheim

The Neolithic long house was a long, narrow timber dwelling built by the first farmers in Europe beginning at least as early as the period 5000 to 6000 BC.[1] They first appeared in central Europe in connection with the early Neolithic cultures such as the Linear Pottery culture or Cucuteni culture. This type of architecture represents the largest free-standing structure in the world in its era. Long houses are present across numerous regions and time periods in the archaeological record.

The long house was a rectangular structure, 5.5 to 7 m (18 to 23 ft) wide, of variable length, around 20 m (66 ft) up to 45 m (148 ft). Outer walls were wattle and daub, sometimes alternating with split logs, with pitched, thatched roofs, supported by rows of poles, three across.[2] The exterior walls would have been quite short beneath the large roof. They were solid and massive, oak posts being preferred. Clay for the daub was dug from pits near the house, which were then used for storage. Extra posts at one end may indicate a partial second story. Some Linear Pottery culture houses were occupied for as long as 30 years.[3]

Surviving evidence suggests these houses had no windows and only one doorway. The door was located at one end of the house. Internally, the house had one or two partitions creating up to three areas. Interpretations of the use of these areas vary. Working activities might be carried out in the better lit door end, the middle used for sleeping and eating and the end farthest from the door could have been used for grain storage. According to another view, the interior was divided in areas for sleeping, common life and a fenced enclosure at the back end for keeping animals.[3]

Twenty or thirty people could have lived in each house, with villages composed typically of five to eight houses. Exceptionally, nearly 30 longhouses in a fortified settlement (dating to 4300 BC, i.e., Late Linear Pottery culture) were revealed by excavations at Oslonki in Poland.[4][5]

  1. ^ Rodney Castleden. 1987
  2. ^ The numbers are from Gimbutas (1991) pages 39–41. However, they are approximately the same as the numbers given by other researchers and can therefore be taken as true measurements within a tolerance.
  3. ^ a b Marciniak, Chapter 1.
  4. ^ "Archaeological Research at Oslonki, Poland". Princeton.edu. Archived from the original on 2013-03-18. Retrieved 2013-04-23.
  5. ^ "Linearbandkeramik Culture - The First Farmers of Europe". Archaeology.about.com. 2013-01-17. Archived from the original on 2011-11-07. Retrieved 2013-04-23.

and 25 Related for: Neolithic long house information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8308 seconds.)

Neolithic long house

Last Update:

The Neolithic long house was a long, narrow timber dwelling built by the first farmers in Europe beginning at least as early as the period 5000 to 6000...

Word Count : 583

Longhouse

Last Update:

form of permanent structure in many cultures. Types include the Neolithic long house of Europe, the Norman Medieval Longhouses that evolved in Western...

Word Count : 2766

Neolithic architecture

Last Update:

villages. At Çatalhöyük, houses were plastered and painted with elaborate scenes of humans and animals. In Europe, the Neolithic long house with a timber frame...

Word Count : 1204

Neolithic Europe

Last Update:

The European Neolithic is the period from the arrival of Neolithic (New Stone Age) technology and the associated population of Early European Farmers...

Word Count : 6209

Long barrow

Last Update:

Long barrows are a style of monument constructed across Western Europe in the fifth and fourth millennia BCE, during the Early Neolithic period. Typically...

Word Count : 4775

Neolithic Greece

Last Update:

"Tsangli-type" houses), as well as elaborate art and tool manufacturing. Neolithic Greece is part of the Prehistory of Southeastern Europe. The Neolithic Revolution...

Word Count : 3267

Neolithic

Last Update:

The Neolithic or New Stone Age (from Greek νέος néos 'new' and λίθος líthos 'stone') is an archaeological period, the final division of the Stone Age...

Word Count : 7917

Neolithic British Isles

Last Update:

The Neolithic period in the British Isles lasted from c. 4100 to c. 2,500 BC. Constituting the final stage of the Stone Age in the region, it was preceded...

Word Count : 3598

Balbridie

Last Update:

Balbridie is the site of a Neolithic long house in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, situated on the south bank of the River Dee, east of Banchory. The site is...

Word Count : 497

Narva culture

Last Update:

The Narva culture or eastern Baltic was a European Neolithic archaeological culture in present-day Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Kaliningrad Oblast (former...

Word Count : 1212

Linear Pottery culture

Last Update:

Pottery culture (LBK) is a major archaeological horizon of the European Neolithic period, flourishing c. 5500–4500 BC. Derived from the German Linearbandkeramik...

Word Count : 8547

Funnelbeaker culture

Last Update:

north-central Europe. It developed as a technological merger of local neolithic and mesolithic techno-complexes between the lower Elbe and middle Vistula...

Word Count : 4567

Karanovo culture

Last Update:

culture (Bulgarian: Карановска култура, romanized: Karanovska kultura) is a Neolithic culture (Karanovo I-III ca. 62nd to 55th centuries BC) named after the...

Word Count : 1159

Cursus

Last Update:

Cursuses are monumental Neolithic structures resembling ditches or trenches in the islands of Great Britain and Ireland. Relics found within them indicate...

Word Count : 764

Neolithic Revolution

Last Update:

The Neolithic Revolution, also known as the First Agricultural Revolution, was the wide-scale transition of many human cultures during the Neolithic period...

Word Count : 10373

Comb Ceramic culture

Last Update:

PMID 28712569. Zvelebil, Marek (2004). "Pitted Ware And Related Cultures Of Neolithic Northern Europe". In Bogucki, Peter I.; Crabtree, Pam J. (eds.). Ancient...

Word Count : 1173

Round barrow

Last Update:

most of them were built between 2200BC and 1100BC. This was the Late Neolithic period to the Late Bronze Age. Later Iron Age barrows were mostly different...

Word Count : 544

Pitted Ware culture

Last Update:

Norway. Despite its Mesolithic economy, it is by convention classed as Neolithic, since it falls within the period in which farming reached Scandinavia...

Word Count : 3183

Baden culture

Last Update:

circle Tor enclosure Unchambered long barrow Technology Grooved ware Lithic industries Metallurgy Neolithic long house Unstan ware Concepts Danubian culture...

Word Count : 1202

West Kennet Long Barrow

Last Update:

of an architectural tradition of long barrow building that was widespread across Neolithic Europe, the West Kennet Long Barrow belongs to a localised regional...

Word Count : 4290

List of architectural styles

Last Update:

United Kingdom – Dartmoor longhouse, Neolithic long house, palisade church, mid-20th-century system-built houses Scotland – Broch, Atlantic roundhouse...

Word Count : 2912

Neman culture

Last Update:

millennium BC, starting in the Mesolithic and continued into the middle Neolithic. It was located in the upper basin of the Neman River (present-day northern...

Word Count : 634

Hamangia culture

Last Update:

The Hamangia culture is a Late Neolithic archaeological culture of Dobruja (Romania and Bulgaria) between the Danube and the Black Sea and Muntenia in...

Word Count : 541

Danubian culture

Last Update:

The characteristic tool of the culture is the shoe-last celt, a kind of long thin stone adze which was used to fell trees and sometimes as a weapon, evidenced...

Word Count : 278

Corded Ware culture

Last Update:

archaeological horizon of Europe between c. 3000 BC – 2350 BC, thus from the late Neolithic, through the Copper Age, and ending in the early Bronze Age. Corded Ware...

Word Count : 8620

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net