urnfält
Urnfält, also known as Urnfield culture, refers to a late Bronze Age culture of Central Europe, named for its distinctive burial practice of cremating the dead and interring the ashes in urns. This culture flourished approximately between 1300 and 750 BC, succeeding the Unétice culture and preceding the Hallstatt culture. The Urnfield culture is primarily known through its archaeological remains, which include numerous urnfields—cemeteries where urns containing cremated remains were buried.
The Urnfield culture extended across a vast area, encompassing parts of modern-day Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Czechoslovakia,
Settlements of the Urnfield culture were typically located in defensible positions, such as hilltops or near
The social structure of the Urnfield culture appears to have been hierarchical, with evidence suggesting the
The Urnfield culture eventually evolved into the Hallstatt culture, marking the transition from the Bronze Age