The Dawn of Celtic Europe? The Únětice Culture

Buy a DNA kit here: bit.ly/DanDavisHistory_DNA Use the coupon code DAVIS for free shipping. As an added bonus, you can start a 30-day free trial of MyHeritage's best subscription for family history research.
Over four thousand years ago in the early bronze age, great princes emerged to rule over central Europe. They controlled copper and tin production, creating vast amounts of bronze that made them rich. These powerful rulers also facilitated the amber trade along the so-called Amber Road, transporting the precious material from the Baltic to the civilisations of the Near East. They were so rich they could afford grand burials beneath enormous barrows, their tombs laden with gold weapons and jewellery. To protect their wealth they had standing armies of axe wielding warriors and officers bearing halberds and huge daggers. And they created the incredible Nebra Sky Disc, oldest depiction of astronomical phenomena in the world. This is the story of the Únětice Culture.
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My Links
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Sources
The Oxford Handbook of the European Bronze Age: amzn.to/3ZXIGh0
Papac et al, Dynamic changes in genomic and social structures in third millennium BCE central Europe (2021)
Haral Meller, Princes, Armies, Sanctuaries the Emergence of Complex Authority in the Central German Únětice Culture (2019)
Penske et al, Kinship practices at the early bronze age site of Leubingen in Central Germany (2024)
Nicklisch et al, Bioarchaeological investigations of the princely grave at Helmsdorf attesting to the violent death of an Early Bronze Age leader (2022)
André Spatzier, The enclosure complex Pömmelte-Schönebeck (2019)
Pavol Jelínek, Interpretation possibilities of the so-called collective graves in the milieu of the Únětice culture
The above links include affiliate links which means we will earn a small commission from your purchases at no additional cost to you which is a way to support the channel.
Thank you
Ancient Europeans for use of artwork: / ancienteuropea1
Únětice village reconstruction by Filip Ševčík: www.artstation.com/seva_3d
Video Chapters
00:00 The Únětice Culture
02:32 MyHeritage
04:20 Origins of the Únětice Culture
07:45 Houses and settlements
09:00 Únětice burial traditions
10:05 DNA and Family Structure
10:58 Pömmelte “Germany’s Stonehenge”
13:04 The Princely Graves
16:52 Bronze Hoards
22:22 Trade and the Amber Road
24:52 Early Bronze Age Europe
26:39 the Nebra Sky Disc
28:09 The Únětice legacy

Пікірлер: 315

  • @DanDavisHistory
    @DanDavisHistory20 күн бұрын

    Buy a DNA kit here: bit.ly/DanDavisHistory_DNA Use the coupon code DAVIS for free shipping. As an added bonus, you can start a 30-day free trial of MyHeritage's best subscription for family history research. Thanks for watching! Please smash your bronze axe into the like button. Cheers!

  • @user-eh6fi1yp7n

    @user-eh6fi1yp7n

    20 күн бұрын

    not a good idea

  • @spacerx

    @spacerx

    19 күн бұрын

    Does My Heritage tell you your y-DNA and mtDNA haplogroups?

  • @RaisinBran-ir4iq

    @RaisinBran-ir4iq

    19 күн бұрын

    @@user-eh6fi1yp7n If you've ever had your blood drawn in a doctor's office, your DNA is compromised.

  • @shzarmai

    @shzarmai

    19 күн бұрын

    thank you very much for this video:))

  • @fuferito
    @fuferito20 күн бұрын

    It's a great Sunday morning when Stefan Milo and Dan Davis History synchronize their video drop at the exact same time to the minute.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    20 күн бұрын

    Oh no, he didn't, did he? Damn 😭

  • @WCU_LLC

    @WCU_LLC

    20 күн бұрын

    This dude got the vibes

  • @ruththinkingoutside.707

    @ruththinkingoutside.707

    20 күн бұрын

    Exactly what I was thinking 😂.. spoiled for choice this morning!

  • @eacalvert

    @eacalvert

    20 күн бұрын

    Don't tell Stephen but I watched yours first😅

  • @calhowell6798

    @calhowell6798

    20 күн бұрын

    This my type of guy

  • @pekarr1
    @pekarr119 күн бұрын

    Thank you from Únětice, Czech republic 🇨🇿

  • @andyfrolik3961

    @andyfrolik3961

    2 күн бұрын

    Ta výslovnost mě triggeruje celý video

  • @kleinweichkleinweich
    @kleinweichkleinweich19 күн бұрын

    it's a nice day in 1605 BC and the first thing you hear is that BROPEC will cut down production to keep bronze prices up

  • @violenceislife1987

    @violenceislife1987

    16 күн бұрын

    KZread asked me to rate your comment. I marked it as good and funny.

  • @GSXK4

    @GSXK4

    10 күн бұрын

    that probably actually happened.

  • @AndrewBearchell-ci3bx

    @AndrewBearchell-ci3bx

    3 күн бұрын

    Thanks, I like your humour 😀. Yes their was even politics with cavemen.

  • @compassioncampaigner728

    @compassioncampaigner728

    Күн бұрын

    ​@@GSXK4 Greed ,? Humans? Ubiquitous.

  • @eftalanquest
    @eftalanquest20 күн бұрын

    that moment when a history youtuber starts talking about a village you lived close to for decades

  • @amandatully9677

    @amandatully9677

    17 күн бұрын

    I also clicked on it because I recognized the village name (actually, I know the beer first!)

  • @violenceislife1987

    @violenceislife1987

    16 күн бұрын

    Take pics for research

  • @anon3336
    @anon333620 күн бұрын

    Bronze Age Europe is so fascinating. I really like the stylistic expression of the period. Really wish I could go back and see what it was like, without dying or being enslaved..

  • @cris_ad

    @cris_ad

    19 күн бұрын

    @ConontheBinarian A shitty day is still a shitty day even if you don't have to wipe your butt with a cob of corn, I promise.

  • @stefanfranke5651

    @stefanfranke5651

    19 күн бұрын

    @@cris_ad You get me in quite a mood for the coming monday morning 😩😅.

  • @clasdauskas

    @clasdauskas

    19 күн бұрын

    @@cris_ad It would be a really shitty having to wait around 4000 years for corn cobs to be available for arse wiping ...

  • @bmetalfish3928

    @bmetalfish3928

    18 күн бұрын

    @ConontheBinarian modern day problems are a different kind of shit, mostly because they're a kind of bad that's mostly man made instead of the natural world doing as it does. the long work days and school sysems are designed with the idea of breaking the spirit and will of it's workers for pre world war factories, but mistakenly the ruling class decided to put their kids through it and now it's all people know. The only thing stopping us from getting the best of both worlds, the materialist ideology that everyone who may be in charge of anything major gets indoctrinated in.

  • @ionelghiorghita688

    @ionelghiorghita688

    18 күн бұрын

    ​@@clasdauskasburdock then.... 😊

  • @Pirrata123
    @Pirrata12320 күн бұрын

    Thank you! I live in Germany and visited the places you mentioned. Also Landesmuseum Halle/ Saale, which i can highly recommend. Very interesting and suitable for the whole Family.

  • @user-wd2ds6vb7b
    @user-wd2ds6vb7b20 күн бұрын

    Thanks from Poland👍🇵🇱

  • @mattstakeontheancients7594
    @mattstakeontheancients759413 күн бұрын

    Videos like this are why I enjoy Dan’s channel. Not many people cover ancient Europe since they don’t have the well known empires like the Bronze Age Middle East but have such fascinating and advanced cultures. Happy Dan is showing these cultures love.

  • @CarpathianCZ
    @CarpathianCZ19 күн бұрын

    Greetings from Únětice, Dan :-) great work as always. Keep it coming.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    19 күн бұрын

    Thank you very much.

  • @McVet3
    @McVet320 күн бұрын

    God bless everyone! Thanks Dan for your hard work! It's really nice to be able to learn about historical eras that are often left out by mainstream history creators.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    20 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much, that's so nice to hear.

  • @McVet3

    @McVet3

    20 күн бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory Very welcome!💪🏻🤝🙌🏻🙏🏻

  • @vanrensburgsgesicht4048
    @vanrensburgsgesicht404819 күн бұрын

    Thanks Dan, I was looking forward to this video. The Bohemian massif has always been a strategically important fortress. Even in the last war it was called "the arms factory of Europe".

  • @liezldldb
    @liezldldb20 күн бұрын

    You made my Sunday! Like always, brilliant, thank you.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    20 күн бұрын

    Well, you made my Sunday. Thanks for watching, glad you enjoyed it.

  • @TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods
    @TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods20 күн бұрын

    You always narrate an incredible journey! Thank you, Dan!

  • @chpet1655
    @chpet165518 күн бұрын

    My father side of the family comes from the area in the centre of the Únětice culture according to this map and a good chunk of my mothers side actually comes from the eastern edges according to the map shown in the video. It’s pretty cool that for once I’m feeling a real connection to a historical topic.

  • @appelflapdrol
    @appelflapdrol20 күн бұрын

    Thank you for your efforts, really enjoy the vids. Much love from Amsterdam ✌️

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    19 күн бұрын

    Thanks for watching!

  • @YamiKisara
    @YamiKisara20 күн бұрын

    Really looking forward to this when I have the time later today! Thank you for covering a topic from my homeland. And kudos for a better pronunciation today, I watched the intro and you did a good job! ;)

  • @JessicaHoeschen
    @JessicaHoeschen20 күн бұрын

    Excellent! ✨ Thank you for your research and sharing this video. ❤

  • @trollsmyth
    @trollsmyth19 күн бұрын

    Fascinating! Thank you for these great videos.

  • @joeshmoe8345
    @joeshmoe834520 күн бұрын

    Thanks a bunch for sharing this with us Big Dog!

  • @nikbear
    @nikbear18 күн бұрын

    As always Dan, a sumptuous feast for the eyes and ears, your videos are just superb! 👏👏👏 appreciate all the hard work you put into them, they really are wonderful 👌

  • @morganbonczek6428
    @morganbonczek642819 күн бұрын

    Another great video! I actually got a tattoo of the Nebra Sky Disc on my back a couple of years ago to represent my love all all things history and archaeology!

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    19 күн бұрын

    That's a cool idea for a tattoo.

  • @thefisherking78
    @thefisherking7818 күн бұрын

    Love your work Mr. Davis! Keep it up!

  • @ericcloud1023
    @ericcloud102319 күн бұрын

    i never miss your uploads Dan, much love

  • @cykkm
    @cykkm20 күн бұрын

    Hi Dan, thank you very much and kudos to your next fragment of restoration of the early European archaeological history! Please please please keep them coming! I'm only a common man interested in archaeology. I'm working at the intersection of linguistics, brain science, and computer wicca. I naturally took up historical linguistics but used to be sort of dismissive of the link between languages and cultures (Latin all over Europe or Normann French in England as a societal stratum are counterexamples showing that language ≠ culture). There is a correlation on the whole, but what language which culture spoke is more often is a conundrum than not. I was surprised to learn that Anthony's “The Horse, the Wheel and the Language” has received so much critique, entirely undeservedly if you ask me, from both the linguistics and archeology communities. This at times rose to a grotty level: the burials at Sintasha/Arkhanar(sp?) and smaller surrounding settlement so precisely match the funeral ritual in Rig Veda that it at the least should have been at the least interesting to the archeologists... IMO, the studies combining historic linguistics and archaeology are sorely wanting. 1) A question: were the Únětice culture PIE-speaking? The kurgan burials seem to suggest so, if what you're describing are in fact classified as kurgans. 2) A note: It's been known that the trade around the Mediterranean has not developed money at all, all the way until the 12c. collapse. It's so surprising that a culture of a smaller scale had possibly invented _fiat(!)_ money (there's no intrinsic value in these globular clay tokens) centuries earlier, if it's reasonably confirmed. If so, that attests to the great power of the chiefs, as fiat money are trusted only as much as their guarantor.

  • @shannondavis3686
    @shannondavis368619 күн бұрын

    Love it man. Another great dive into Historical Knowledge. 👏

  • @alexmilink3420
    @alexmilink342019 күн бұрын

    Your vidéos are so good! Please keep them coming sir !

  • @SlightlySusan
    @SlightlySusan20 күн бұрын

    As soon as I heard your description of the men's houses, I immediately thought of Beowulf.

  • @samsonsoturian6013

    @samsonsoturian6013

    20 күн бұрын

    Longhouses? Yep

  • @juancolladocanas4989

    @juancolladocanas4989

    20 күн бұрын

    Me too. I am from Spain, and I wonder why archaeologists have recently found "Germanic" longhouses in Madrid. They date back to the year 1100 BC. You can search for more information if you type "Villaverde Longhouses".

  • @cal2127

    @cal2127

    19 күн бұрын

    ​@@juancolladocanas4989 are they germamic or celtic?

  • @juancolladocanas4989

    @juancolladocanas4989

    19 күн бұрын

    @@cal2127 Germanic. In fact, their descendents, who are established in the area of "Castilla-La Mancha"some centuries later, are called "The Oretanni Germani" by the Roman historians.

  • @cal2127

    @cal2127

    19 күн бұрын

    ​@@juancolladocanas4989 fascinating

  • @MacNab23
    @MacNab2320 күн бұрын

    Great video! I've been down an early Bronze Age rabbit hole lately and this is just the sort of presentation I'm always looking for.

  • @KatherineHugs
    @KatherineHugs19 күн бұрын

    Another great video! Thanks, Dan!

  • @tonnywildweasel8138
    @tonnywildweasel81382 күн бұрын

    Fascinating! Still enjoy your videos a LOT 👍 Greetings from the Netherlands 🇳🇱, TW.

  • @jeffbartlett8565
    @jeffbartlett856520 күн бұрын

    Amazing work as usual

  • @mikef.1000
    @mikef.100017 күн бұрын

    Another great explanation and treatment of an important culture of the ancient world. Thanks Dan!

  • @MysticChronicles712
    @MysticChronicles71219 күн бұрын

    A fantastic adventure is always narrated by you!

  • @johnsannini1060
    @johnsannini106015 күн бұрын

    Love your videos. Thank you for continuing to use “BC” and “AD”.

  • @Mumbamumba
    @Mumbamumba14 күн бұрын

    Fantastic! Thank you so much for your entertaining and very informative video!

  • @TheGunnarRoxen
    @TheGunnarRoxen18 күн бұрын

    I really like this video. The use of period documents and lots of maps and photos was great. The artwork was amazing and i prefer all of this relevant material to random stock footage. What a fascinating culture!

  • @Not-Ap
    @Not-Ap2 күн бұрын

    This must have been a exciting time to live in as a craftsman or skilled artisan. A time of transformation and change but also one of immense opportunities for the ambitious.

  • @hoperules8874
    @hoperules887419 күн бұрын

    Thank you, My Heritage, for sponsoring the video!!

  • @candylandi5351

    @candylandi5351

    19 күн бұрын

    More like Israel trying to buy the very few good video producers left on KZread.

  • @LucasMeadows
    @LucasMeadows19 күн бұрын

    Cheers Dan, another great video

  • @RollingThunderModels
    @RollingThunderModels12 күн бұрын

    Thank you Dan! I just love these videos!

  • @mohammedsaysrashid3587
    @mohammedsaysrashid358719 күн бұрын

    It was an informative and wonderful historical coverage video about pioneer unetic culture civilization in the Central Europe area ,early settlement of corded ware & bell beaker culture...,shared by an amazing ( Dan Davis history) channel ...thanks for sharing

  • @louiseedwards29
    @louiseedwards2915 сағат бұрын

    Just found your channel, very fascinating. Great to watch on a cold Saturday here in New Zealand 🙂

  • @mrvn000
    @mrvn00020 күн бұрын

    Thank you!!

  • @bc7138
    @bc713820 күн бұрын

    One of the best documentaries you've done yet. I have no theory of my own on the burial of the Nebra Sky Disk but the theory put forward here sounds very plausible. It's tantalising when you have evidence for ancient life but knowing you'll never have definitive proof (unless a time machine is built).

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    20 күн бұрын

    Thank you, pleased to hear it. I started wondering if I'd made it too boring.

  • @cal2127

    @cal2127

    19 күн бұрын

    ​@@DanDavisHistoryno such thing. i could watch a 3 hour doccumentary on this stuff if there were that much evidence.

  • @stripeytawney822

    @stripeytawney822

    18 күн бұрын

    ​@@DanDavisHistory your core audience likes 'boring'. We appreciate your work reading the journals and distilling all that into these videos. Where else can someone learn current archeological progress?

  • @trikepilot101
    @trikepilot10119 күн бұрын

    I love all your videos, Dan.

  • @haroldgodwinsonshouldhavew3875
    @haroldgodwinsonshouldhavew387518 күн бұрын

    my man Dan and his amazing mini documentaries

  • @tedcruz212
    @tedcruz21213 күн бұрын

    It would be so fascinating to use a time machine to go back and study these people. Their cultures are so alien to us, yet so very human. Excellent video as always!

  • @wesley907
    @wesley90717 күн бұрын

    Well done once again.

  • @oreo507
    @oreo50720 күн бұрын

    Just finished up at the gym. Perfect time for a Dan Davis video

  • @kaisersozay99
    @kaisersozay9911 күн бұрын

    Great job 👍🏽

  • @stefanfranke5651
    @stefanfranke565119 күн бұрын

    Great presentation of my favourite prehistoric epoch. I was born and raised in the area where this culture thrived (east saxony near the czech border) and I recognised almost all landscape shots. If you're in the area, don't miss out on visiting the Museum of Prehistory in Halle a. d. Saale where the Nebra Skydisk and many of the mentioned hoard finds are displayed. What the author missed to mention was that a major pillar of wealth for the regional powers came from trading with salt. In Halle were natural salt springs where the brine was processed on a early industrial level. It's even in the name of the city Halle where 'Hal' is a indo-germanic word stem meaning salt and also the river Saale is associated with salt with the 'Sal' stem. You find this word roots in other place names like Hallein or Hallstadt all over central Europe where salt was also sourced since the bronze age.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    19 күн бұрын

    Thank you! Great museum, they do good work. I thought I did mention salt in passing but have talked about this in a few videos now - salt trade in bronze age also thought to increase population growth due to better meat preservation. History of European prehistoric salt production and trade is on the video list. I had about 10 mins of footage from Hallstatt for this video but will save it for a hallstatt and/or salt video.

  • @stefanfranke5651

    @stefanfranke5651

    19 күн бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory Thank you, I very much look forward to this 😃! Perhaps you could also mention the different means of salt production in different locations. In Hallstatt as I remember they mainly mined for stone salt, wheras in Halle they used Briquetage (elongated clay vessels) on open hearths to reduce the naturally occuring salt brine.

  • @ruththinkingoutside.707
    @ruththinkingoutside.70720 күн бұрын

    Today is AWESOME! Dan AND Stefan? It’s like a mini intellectual Xmas 😂 Woo!

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    20 күн бұрын

    Maybe we we should coordinate our releases more often.

  • @ruththinkingoutside.707

    @ruththinkingoutside.707

    20 күн бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory lol.. that’d be great! .. one of those days that you plan on being unavailable elsewhere 😁.. ‘it’s History Sunday ! Of course I’m not attending your function.. the cool history guys on YT are way more interesting by FAR!’ 😜

  • @shanedussault740
    @shanedussault74020 күн бұрын

    Absolutely adore your content and your novels! Any idea when we might get more audio books?

  • @craigvoss1468
    @craigvoss146820 күн бұрын

    Awesome.

  • @pavelkolar9543
    @pavelkolar954320 күн бұрын

    Absolutely stunning document. I'm history lover from Czech republic and i appreciate that. Thank you! 👏

  • @tonymaurice4157
    @tonymaurice415718 күн бұрын

    This channel deserves an Oscar!

  • @shzarmai
    @shzarmai19 күн бұрын

    great video

  • @user-nw5fg2mw8b
    @user-nw5fg2mw8b19 күн бұрын

    Great video thanks interesting wise video info you are amazing story teller and I think everyone agrees and I love science cheers

  • @Krommer1000
    @Krommer100020 күн бұрын

    Just giving you a heads up, I have bell notifications on, and was not made aware of this video by KZread.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    20 күн бұрын

    That's a shame. Thanks for letting me know.

  • @cal2127

    @cal2127

    19 күн бұрын

    youtubes largely becoming hostile to smaller non corporate channels.

  • @LittleDolfie

    @LittleDolfie

    15 күн бұрын

    Same here

  • @LittleDolfie

    @LittleDolfie

    15 күн бұрын

    ​@@DanDavisHistoryDan I wasn't notified as well and I have bell icon on.

  • @alaskabarb8089
    @alaskabarb80892 күн бұрын

    19:00 - Nicely braided wall texture by the artist.

  • @dancefeast
    @dancefeast19 күн бұрын

    You ask for comments on the Nebra disk. This comment is about the social nature of ritual of the period, practices that actually had Neolithic origins, but carried over to the Bronze Age due to the nature of the transition, with Neolithic holy sites remaining holy for some centuries in many cases. Ritual sites seem to have been places where people gathered from vast distances, for events taking place at the solstices, and the winter solstice in particular, in spite of the difficulty of winter travel. Travel was by water when possible. A gathering was not always the assemblage of some existing entity such as the land of a high king; rather it was the gathering of many clans or regions (perhaps each clan had a region: Scottish clans did, Scythian clans did not). They participated in the gathering by region, with each region (or clan) having a designated segment of the site. There may have been a high king in some cases, but the clans (or regions) remained important. A holy gathering place was not primarily a residential site, although a few people lived there year round. It was not the high king's great hall. It was not primarily a cemetery. Participants built boothies for the winter gathering. The main ritual activity was a procession. An important person, priest or king or priest-king, arrived (often by water) and went up a processional avenue to a circular site, and then went around it. So outside the outermost ring of posts was the processional circle, and outside that, a barrier between the ritual space and the ordinary space beyond. The ordinary space was divided like the segments of an orange, with each segment belonging to one clan or region. Work to build or improve the site was organized by clan, with each clan being responsible for a section; the splendor of the work was the clan's honor. The processional way came to the circle from the direction of a solstice sunrise or sunset, and the king or priest arrived just as the setting or rising solstice sun shone on his face. On the cart he rode, was a disk, bright on one side and dull on the other, and at the climax the disk was turned around, or they used two disks, for day and night. The Nebra disk is the night disk. The point of all this calendar sky-watching was to determine, or set, on which day of the lunar month did the winter solstice occur. This number was carried back home by the participants, and was necessary for the practical functions of a calendar, that is to make appointments and have people show up on the right day. Without a calendar you can't have scheduled markets or religious festivals, and you don't even know whether the coming year will have 12 lunar months, or 13. Determining the date of the solstice is difficult, and if two places both try, they will often set different dates. A single central site must set the date of the solstice, but only a single number, the day of the lunar month that it fell on, needs to be carried back home by each party, for the whole region to enjoy the benefit of everyone using the same calendar.

  • @Sonieta03.
    @Sonieta03.13 күн бұрын

    Amazing video

  • @erinaltstadt4234
    @erinaltstadt42348 күн бұрын

    Thank you

  • @a.abrine4992
    @a.abrine499218 күн бұрын

    Dear Dan Thank you to exist😊

  • @samsonsoturian6013
    @samsonsoturian601320 күн бұрын

    I'm noting a pattern with these bronze age cultures. They start nomadic with men freely moving to new regions, then by late bronze age they unify into permanent states with immensely wealthy landlord-kings, then it all terminates with cold and dry conditions

  • @grugg5353

    @grugg5353

    20 күн бұрын

    The Longhouse strikes again.

  • @JohnSmith-mi9id
    @JohnSmith-mi9id18 күн бұрын

    Excellent

  • @taybak8446
    @taybak844616 күн бұрын

    This is a quality video.

  • @catherineladd5300
    @catherineladd530020 күн бұрын

    Another excellent video, Dan. As I'm watching these I always experience a peculiar feeling of past recognition--- I have no idea what it is. Like during the video you may say, "well, it could be this or it could be that for the reason why this was done"... and I always have an idea in my head that firmly sides with one of the theories.

  • @theicepickthatkilledtrotsk658
    @theicepickthatkilledtrotsk65820 күн бұрын

    Awesome as aways.

  • @morgan258
    @morgan25818 күн бұрын

    I love you dan, youre videos are so well made. I would read transcripts of your vides to my girlfriend when she couldnt sleep, it was so wholesome.

  • @RaisinBran-ir4iq
    @RaisinBran-ir4iq19 күн бұрын

    Had a DNA test done recently and, despite my family being in America for around 500 years, I'm still 60% English, 20% Scottish, with the rest split between Germanic, the Netherlands, and Scandinavia. Highly recommend getting this done by a reputable organization, as mentioned by Mr. Davis...and no, I had mine done by a different site, so I'm not trolling. 😊

  • @mrbaab5932

    @mrbaab5932

    14 күн бұрын

    Unless your family came from one of the few early Spanish settlements, it is probably 400ish years for UK, France, Netherlands, Sweden settlements.

  • @RaisinBran-ir4iq

    @RaisinBran-ir4iq

    14 күн бұрын

    @@mrbaab5932 Nope. Plymouth colony, 1630, and he came from Wales.

  • @WalburgisLuppus

    @WalburgisLuppus

    11 күн бұрын

    @@RaisinBran-ir4iq and even before Plymouth there were immigrants from what later on became the German nation who settled in America and helped found or build some significant settlements.

  • @danielrempel9839

    @danielrempel9839

    10 күн бұрын

    Do your math again 2030 would be 400 years

  • @RaisinBran-ir4iq

    @RaisinBran-ir4iq

    10 күн бұрын

    @@danielrempel9839 Oops. Yes, that's true. I guess I was more focused on the places and events. Thanks!

  • @katipohl2431
    @katipohl243119 күн бұрын

    Hi from Germany and thank you for the great video. Once I visited Poemmelte when they were excavating the site.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    19 күн бұрын

    Wow that's cool, you are very fortunate.

  • @jackmorrison5272
    @jackmorrison527219 күн бұрын

    I ❤ all Your content

  • @BenSHammonds
    @BenSHammonds20 күн бұрын

    very enjoyable, I enjoy the genetic testing and science, my own Y haplogroup descends from the early Neolithic Farmer peoples of the G2a type, I would enjoy a program on the LBK culture as well, the one on the Vinca Culture was quite good.

  • @mrbaab5932
    @mrbaab593214 күн бұрын

    I have been to Helmsdeep virtually.

  • @petrapetrakoliou8979
    @petrapetrakoliou897919 күн бұрын

    Interesting to show that the advent of bronze and Unetice go hand in hand, it explains why it is around Bohemia that the culture developed, where copper was easily mined.

  • @annepoitrineau5650
    @annepoitrineau565014 күн бұрын

    Brilliant: lots of maps!

  • @carausiuscaesar5672
    @carausiuscaesar567219 күн бұрын

    Thank you for using BC

  • @ItzJustHistory1916
    @ItzJustHistory191619 күн бұрын

    I’m so grateful to Dan Davis for teaching us about these great ancient European civilizations. I hope some day the history books will start teaching about Bronze Age Europeans the way that Dan does, rather than just treating them as decentralized barbarians who only existed for the purpose of getting the Eastern Mediterranean “real civilizations” their amber and tin

  • @sarahwatts7152
    @sarahwatts715219 күн бұрын

    I'm not very into astronomy, but the aesthetic of the disk has always interested me

  • @karlkarlos3545

    @karlkarlos3545

    19 күн бұрын

    Thanks

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    19 күн бұрын

    Yeah the aesthetic is incredible, it's no wonder people thought it was a fake / hoax.

  • @bogdanoff148
    @bogdanoff14818 күн бұрын

    Can you do a video on the Natufians?

  • @gaslitworldf.melissab2897
    @gaslitworldf.melissab289719 күн бұрын

    I'm just starting Godborn 2 from my amazon account. I'm excited.

  • @KamielDV2
    @KamielDV215 күн бұрын

    Damn, I was not even recommended your latest banger :/. Superb video as per usual though

  • @joaoespecial4168
    @joaoespecial416819 күн бұрын

    Hi Dan. After the Peninsula Campaing in 1814, a lot of british soldiers opted to stay in Portugal. Thats one of my familly origens due to a Brandon surname of one branch. Maybe that also explains those 21% of your Iberian heritage.

  • @meilinchan7314
    @meilinchan7314Күн бұрын

    I created a mod called "Hammurabi" for Rise of Nations where the Unetice culture was playable, I had their UUs speak Esperanto to reflect the possible language they'd have spoken....

  • @rebeccaboudreau7589
    @rebeccaboudreau758919 күн бұрын

    I want that guys tunic 😍

  • @longinzaczek5857
    @longinzaczek58578 күн бұрын

    Great video, probably one of the best summary of Unietice culture. for me it looks like as this culture was one of the roots of Celtic cultures. Maybe southern part of Unietice culture was conquered by Proto-Roman tribes from Panonia (Hungary) who arrived here from north coast of Black Sea, and then this mix od Unietyce people and nomadic conquerors of Prot-Roman origin gave us the Early-Celts. However is hard to guess how Unietyce culture was born. Before this video I thought that presence of Bell-Baker culture in Central Europe was marginal anf Unietyce culture 1) was born from local corded ware cultures / 2) or was some migration of Baden culture / 3) or some migration of early copper metalurgy tribes from North-East Hungary and North Romania (Tisza River region). But maybe the origin is the mix of Bell Baker culture and Corded Ware cultures - as described here.

  • @martinsriber7760
    @martinsriber776019 күн бұрын

    I appreciate your attempt at pronouncing Únětice.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    19 күн бұрын

    I don't generally try to pronounce anything properly, as I'm sure you've noticed

  • @martinsriber7760

    @martinsriber7760

    18 күн бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory And yet you've managed better than most. Talent or luck?

  • @RoyalBaconist
    @RoyalBaconist19 күн бұрын

    Could you do a companion documentaries to this talking about the Tumulus, Urnfield, and Hallstatt cultures?

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    19 күн бұрын

    That's the plan! Might take me a while but they're all on the list.

  • @michaelweedmark2774
    @michaelweedmark277420 күн бұрын

    Really awesome video, I found the part about their warrior's unit composition really interesting. Was wondering though, is there any evidence of archers or other ranged infantry among the warrior males? The Bell Beaker Culture heavily valued archery, and I find the shift to a more melee focused method of combat quite interesting.

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    19 күн бұрын

    No they dropped the bow and dagger combo and used the Corded Ware style melee fighting but swapped stone battle axes for copper and then bronze axes. It's hard to know for sure about these things as they only show up archeologically in the burial traditions or hoards. Maybe they used bows but they weren't seen as part of the warrior identity enough to be included in burials or hoards, you know?

  • @stefanfranke5651

    @stefanfranke5651

    19 күн бұрын

    Sadly bronze age archaeology in the past heavily concentrated on the metallurgical aspect of the material culture. Also way less settlements from Únětice culture are found and studied than those from the predating and following epochs. When I was studying prehistoric archaeology many years ago I was looking for all the (very scarce) material on non-metalic artefacts of that timeframe. There were definetly many archers around at the time but almost all arrow-heads were still made from flint, although they were perfectly able to craft bronze ones (there are a few examples) but they mainly choose not to. Instead they continued Bell Beaker traditions and styles of flint points. As a matter of fact even the Myceneans used flint and obsidian arrowheads until their late phase either out of practical or traditional reasons. Also flint daggers were a thing in lower rank Únětice graves mimicing the more prestigeous bronze ones. Flint tools and implements for every-day-use continued well into the iron age when metal tools finally became affordable even for simple folks. The study and publishing of stone artefacts of the bronze age is sadly a bit neglected by sholarship in relation to the more shiny metal stuff.

  • @stefanfranke5651

    @stefanfranke5651

    19 күн бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory However we have quite a few finds of flint arrow heads combinded with other weapons and every-day-objects from Únětice grave fields (I just checked Kirschner 2013 "Studies on the finds of the Early Bronze Age Aunjetitz (Únetice) culture of Moravia" and Ernée 2011 "Ausgrabung des frühbronzezeitlichen Gräberfelds der Aunjetitzer Kultur von Prag-Miškovice..." just for reference) so it's not entirely true that evidence for range weapons vanishes from the archaeological record in early bronze age. What, in my eyes, can be observed in contrast to the prior Bell Beaker and Corded Ware era is that grave and grave-goods culture becomes extremely diverse during early bronze age, especially if you compare the stereotypical "Big Men" burial-mound funerals to the grave fields of the "commoners". There you get a wide range of grave forms (with or without wood-coffins / stone lining / stone boxes / bones in clay-vessels (pithos-grave) / cremations etc.) with all kinds of grave-good-combinations where you can't pinpoint at a institutionalised warrior elite but you find a widely diversified grave population which may reflect the social and occupational diversification in civil society which took place during that time which I find most fascinating.

  • @stefanfranke5651

    @stefanfranke5651

    19 күн бұрын

    @@DanDavisHistory I replied to your comment but allmighty YT in their unfathomable wisdom decided to delete it, although there were no external links or other incriminating stuff in it. So here I try it again: However we have quite a few finds of flint arrow heads combinded with other weapons and every-day-objects from Únětice grave fields (I just checked Kirschner 2013 "Studies on the finds of the Early Bronze Age Aunjetitz (Únetice) culture of Moravia" and Ernée 2011 "Ausgrabung des frühbronzezeitlichen Gräberfelds der Aunjetitzer Kultur von Prag-Miškovice..." just for reference) so it's not entirely true that evidence for range weapons vanishes from the archaeological record in early bronze age. What, in my eyes, can be observed in contrast to the prior Bell Beaker and Corded Ware era is that grave and grave-goods culture becomes extremely diverse during early bronze age, especially if you compare the stereotypical "Big Men" burial-mound funerals to the grave fields of the "commoners". There you get a wide variety of grave forms (with or without wood-coffins, stone lining, stone boxes, bones in clay-vessels (pithos-grave), cremations etc.) with all kinds of grave-good-combinations. So you can't pinpoint at a institutionalised warrior elite anymore but you find a widely diversified grave population which may reflect the social and occupational diversification in civil society which took place during that time. That I find most fascinating.

  • @1_Fish.2_Fish.Red_Fish.
    @1_Fish.2_Fish.Red_Fish.20 күн бұрын

    Couldn’t have thought of anything better to turn on while making breakfast.

  • @jaroslavpenkava
    @jaroslavpenkava7 күн бұрын

    I been born near Unetice. Village north off Prague. It is a lot off staff in the ground. When a new houses been build you can found a lot off ceramics, flint..... copper is not easy to found. In this area peoples lives from neolithic. Older cultures like live on a hills and Unetice is more in valleys.

  • @robertmcgovern8850
    @robertmcgovern885012 күн бұрын

    Among the native tribes of eastern North America -- especially the Iroquois peoples -- there was a long-standing practise of weapons interment to mark the end of a quarrel or blood feud. This happened at the scale of individuals and of nations, and the idiom survives still in American English: "burying the hatchet." Usually it was just one symbolic hatchet (tomahawk), but possibly the gesture was the same. There's a variant of the phrase that goes "...but leave the handle sticking out" which suggests future resumption of hostilities. 😀🪓🪓The Unetice prolly knew where to lay hands on a whole passel of axe heads if they needed them.

  • @alwilliams5177
    @alwilliams51777 күн бұрын

    Always enjoy this channel"s fine content. Highly appreciated. I'm not sure that I would choose the adjective "glorious" to describe being violently stabbed to death. I suspect those who witnessed the death had a wide range of perspectives of the event.

  • @petrapetrakoliou8979
    @petrapetrakoliou897919 күн бұрын

    What innovation in ceramics do you allude to at the end?

  • @DatterAfDanevang
    @DatterAfDanevang6 күн бұрын

    Remember everyone caring for your kin is NEVER a sin ❤

  • @rahjah6958
    @rahjah69588 күн бұрын

    24:32 dunno why but my first thought was some sort of delivery document, or proof of delivery

  • @mariadespina80
    @mariadespina8017 күн бұрын

    In the Bronze Age, the great family of the Getae - from the Thracian family, dominated Europe. All of it. Apart from this primordial European population, there is no other. From this great and primordial Getic race other European nations have derived over time. And other cultures. EX . The Bronze Age in Romania. -Phase A (I) - Early Bronze Age (circa 3,500-2,200 BC) Cucuteni culture - Eneolithic archaeological culture (polished stone and copper age), Baden-Coțofeni culture, "Cernavodă III-Belleraz" culture, Glina culture - the most important culture from Muntenia and Oltenia, Verbicioara "culture", Monteoru A1 culture -Phase B (II) - Middle Bronze Age (circa 2,200 - 1,600/1,500 BC) Ottoman culture, Wietenberg culture, Mureș culture, "Žuto Brdo - Gârla Mare" culture, Monteoru culture, Noua-Sabatinovka-Coslogeni complex -Phase C (III) - Late Bronze Age (circa 1,600/1,500 - 1,100 BC) Glina III, Verbicioara III - cremation practice, Monteoru culture, Noua-Sabatinovk Coslogeni complex. For Gârla Mare" culture, there are absolutely superb ceramics..

  • @Larsanator
    @Larsanator19 күн бұрын

    Does My Heritage sell your info?

  • @DanDavisHistory

    @DanDavisHistory

    19 күн бұрын

    No, check out their privacy policy.