Komarov culture explained

Komarov culture
Map:Komarov culture.jpg
Region:Middle Dniester
Period:Bronze Age
Dates:ca. 1500–1200 BC
Typesite:Komarov
Precededby:Corded Ware culture
Followedby:Chernoles culture

The Komarov culture was a Bronze Age culture which flourished along the middle Dniester from 1500 BC to 1200 BC.

Few settlements from the Komarov culture have been found. One settlement at Komarov, from which the culture is named, contained twenty small single-roomed houses.

The Komarov culture is best known for its inhumation burials. These are set into a stone- or timber-covered grave covered with a tumulus. Cremations and flat grave burials are also known. Decorations found on ceramics, and the presence of stone rings and cromlechs around the base of the tumuli, indicate that a sun cult existed among the Komarov people.

The Komarov culture is believed to have originated within the Corded Ware horizon, with which is shares numerous similarities, including burial rites, ceramics and metallurgical traditions. It is closely related to the Trzciniec culture. The Komarov culture is usually associated with the evolution of the Proto-Slavs or the Thracians.

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