X-Nico

unusual facts about Late Bronze Age



Balksbury

It was a large hillfort first occupied in the Late Bronze Age, and probably had rather a nice view over the confluence of Pillhill brook and the River Anton, below and to the southeast.

Bryges

Based on archaeological evidence, some scholars (e.g., Nicholas Hammond, Eugene N. Borza et al.) argue that the Bryges/Phrygians were members of the Lusatian culture that migrated into the southern Balkans during the Late Bronze Age.


see also

Liburnians

Liburnian domination in the Adriatic Sea; its first phase (9th century BC), because of the aforementioned migrations, did not continue the developments of the Late Bronze Age, except in certain forms.

Mycenaean

Mycenaean Greece, the Greek-speaking regions of the Aegean Sea as of the Late Bronze Age

Nilotic landscape

Excavations at Akrotiri on the island of Thera have preserved a number of frescoes dating to the Late Bronze Age.

The Warbanks

A late Bronze Age sword (now in the Moyse's Hall Museum in Bury St Edmunds) was found on the site of the Warbanks and has been dated as 800-600BC and could give a clue to the age of the banks.