Friday, February 5, 2010

Why Does Red Wine Cause Palpitations

E-Book "The Nordic Bronze Age"



content of the e-book "The Nordic Bronze Age" by Ernst Probst:

The Bronze Age is more than 2000-800 BC as the first and longer of the Metal Ages in Europe. During this time, tools, weapons and ornaments made of bronze were made. In some areas of the Bronze Age had a different time period. So they began in southern Germany before about 2300 BC and ended around 800 BC In northern Germany, however, it lasted from about 1600 to 500 BC BC The spread of the Bronze Age cultures in Germany include the Nordic Bronze Age or early Bronze Age of the Northern district (about 1800 to 1500 BC), the Northern Early Bronze Age (about 1500 to 1200 BC), the Nordic Middle Bronze Age (about 1200 to 1100. BC) and the Nordic Late Bronze Age (about 1100 to 800 BC). The Swedish archaeologist Oscar Montelius of the (1843-1921) derived term "Nordic group" based on the intrinsically-sized development of northern regions of Europe. The texts of the Nordic Bronze Age date from the print book "Germany in the Bronze Age" (1996) of the Wiesbaden science writer Ernst Probst old German spelling and comply with the standard of knowledge. Other cultures of the Bronze Age from Germany will also be presented in separate publications. http://www.grin.com/e-book/93450/die-nordische-bronzezeit


View Actual Rose Garden Seating

E-Book "The urnfield culture"

: order the e-book "The Nordic Bronze Age" at "GRIN"

content of the e-book "The urnfield culture" by Ernst Probst:

The Bronze Age is more than 2000-800 BC as the first and longer of the Metal Ages in Europe. During this time, tools, weapons and ornaments made of bronze were made. In some areas the Bronze Age had a different time period. So they began in southern Germany before about 2300 BC and ended around 800 BC In northern Germany, however, it lasted from about 1600 to 500 BC The spread in Germany Cultures of the Bronze Age urn field culture is against such 1300/1200 to 800 BC It is valid in Europe as one of the major cultures of the Late Bronze Age and could be from the northern Balkan countries on the Danube to the Upper Rhine region spread. In Germany it was in Baden-Wuerttemberg, Bavaria, Saarland, Rhineland-Palatinate, Hesse, North Rhine-Westphalia parts (Lower Rhine Basin) and south home of the Thuringian Forest. The term urnfield culture based upon the that were then burned to death on funeral pyre and then often dumped their ashes or bones in clay urns and buried in cremations. Occasionally formed the cremations urns expansive fields with dozens or hundreds of funerals. The text on the urnfield culture comes from the print book "Germany in the Bronze Age" (1996) Science of the Wiesbaden author Ernst Probst old German spelling and corresponds to the standard of knowledge. Other cultures of the Bronze Age from Germany will also be presented in separate publications.

order the e-book "The urn-field culture" "GRIN"
http://www.grin.com/e-book/93166/die-urnenfelder-kultur

Dream Mousse Bronzer Swatches

E-Book "The Stade group in the Bronze Age "



content of the e-book "The Stade group in the Bronze Age," by Ernst Probst:

The Bronze Age is more than 2000-800 BC as the first and longer of the Metal Ages in Europe. During this time, tools, weapons and ornaments made of bronze were made. In some areas of the Bronze Age had a different time period. So they began in southern Germany before about 2300 BC and ended around 800 BC In northern Germany, however, it lasted from about 1600 to 500 BC

The spread of the Bronze Age cultures in Germany include the Stade Group the earlier Bronze Age (about 1500 to 1200 BC), the Stade group in the Middle Bronze Age (about 1200 to 1100. BC) and the Stade group in the early Bronze Age (about 1100 to 800 BC). The term "Stader group has used 1981, the archaeologist Arne Lucke in his Hamburg dissertation for the first time for a local group of the early Bronze Age. In contrast, use of the Hamburg archaeologist Friedrich Laux called "Stader group," he mentioned in 1987 at a lecture in Bad Stuer and which he in 1991 in an essay back, reached for a group that in the older, middle and late Bronze Age claimed. Read

this is in the E-Book "The Stade Group in the Bronze Age "of the Wiesbaden science author Ernst Probst. The 61-page book is published in "GRIN for academic texts" http://www.grin.de and as a printed book wholesaler in Paperback "Libri" at the Internet address http://www.libri.de/shop / action / quick search? searchString = The + + + Group Stader available.

The texts of the Stade group are from the print book "Germany in the Bronze Age" (1996) by Ernst Probst old German spelling and comply with the standard of knowledge. Other cultures of the Bronze Age from Germany are also in individual publications presented and are available at "Libri". http://www.grin.com/e-book/93578/die-stader-gruppe-in-der-bronzezeit



:
order the e-book "The Stade group" with "GRIN"