- The
Milograd culture (also
spelled Milahrad or Mylohrad, also
known as
Pidhirtsi culture on
Ukrainian territory) is an
archaeological culture, lasting...
- BC at the
start of Eastern-Central Europe's Iron Age; the Proto-Scythian
culture borders the Balto-Slavic
cultures (Lusatian,
Milograd and Chernoles)...
- The
Neuri archaeologically correspond to the
Milograd culture. The
southernmost of part of the
Milograd culture,
which adjoined the
territory of the Scythian...
- today's
western and west-central
Polesia were
inhabited by the
people of the
Milograd culture, the Neuri. In the late
Middle Ages
Polesia became part of the...
-
Slavic people is the
Trzciniec culture from
about 1700 to 1200 BC. The
Milograd culture hypothesis posits that the pre-Proto-Slavs (or Balto-Slavs) originated...
-
south of present-day
Belarus was
inhabited by
tribes belonging to the
Milograd culture (7th–3rd
century BC) and
later Zarubintsy culture. Some considered...
- Belarus,
lived to the
north of the Aroteres. They
corresponded to the
Milograd culture. the
Agathyrsi lived to the west of the
Aroteres and of the Neuri...
- southward, into
areas formerly belonging to the Lusatian, Wysoko- and
Milograd cultures. In
Masovia and Poland, this
mixture led to the
development of...
-
ancestral Baltic tribes and Proto-Baltic language.
Corded Ware
culture Milograd culture Pomeranian culture Western Baltic culture "Культура штрыхаванай...
- with some
historians and
archaeologists tracing it
directly from the
Milograd culture, others, from the
Chernoles culture (the
Scythian farmers of Herodotus)...