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Corded Ware culture : ウィキペディア英語版
Corded Ware culture

The Corded Ware culture ((ドイツ語:Schnurkeramik); (フランス語:ceramique cordée); (オランダ語:snoerbekercultuur);〔http://www.enciklopedija.hr/Natuknica.aspx?ID=68835〕 in Middle Europe c. 2900–2450/2350 cal. BC), alternatively characterized as the Battle Axe culture or Single Grave culture, is an enormous European archaeological horizon that begins in the late Neolithic (Stone Age), flourishes through the Copper Age and culminates in the early Bronze Age. Other terms are corded pottery and corded ceramic, the latter being a calque in translations.
The Corded Ware culture is the major north and central European cultural grouping of the Copper Age, stretching from the Netherlands and Switzerland in the west, across southern Scandinavia and Central Europe as far east as the upper Volga (Fatyanovo–Balanovo culture) and middle Dnieper (Middle Dnieper culture). The culture is reflected primarily by its burials, which consisted of inhumation under tumulus with various artifacts (notably battle-axes).
Corded Ware is generally considered to have played a key role in disseminating a form of the Indo-European language ancestral to the Germanic languages, Baltic languages and Slavic languages.〔
==Extent==
Corded Ware encompassed most of continental northern Europe from the Rhine River on the west, to the Volga River in the east, including most of modern-day Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Belarus, Czech Republic, Slovakia, northwestern Romania, northern Ukraine, and the European part of Russia, as well as coastal Norway and the southern portions of Sweden and Finland.
The contemporary Beaker culture overlapped with the western extremity of this culture, west of the Elbe, and may have contributed to the pan-European spread of that culture. Although a similar social organization and settlement pattern to the Beaker were adopted, the Corded Ware group lacked the new refinements made possible through trade and communication by sea and rivers.

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