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  1. Timeline. c. 6200 BCE. First copper smelting in Anatolia . 3800 BCE. Earliest bronze working. 3650 BCE. Invention of the wheel. 3500 BCE. Farming has spread across Europe . 3400 BCE. Priests become the rulers of Mesopotamian cities . c. 3000 BCE. First habitation of Epidaurus site. 3000 BCE - 2550 BCE. Troy I - First stone-walled village settlement

  2. Jan 15, 2021 · The so-called Nordic Bronze Age began in around 1,700 BC and lasted up to the emergence of the Iron Age in Scandinavia - 500 BC. The reason why the North European regions - namely Denmark , Sweden , Norway coasts, and Pomerania - were so late to enter the Bronze Age is because they only learned about it through trade, and they weren’t trading ...

  3. The characteristics of, and the dates for, the Early Bronze Age vary regionally in central Europe. Some areas, such as the Saarland, even appear either to have had continuous Neolithic occupation until as late as 1400 bce or to have been uninhabited during the Early Bronze Age.

  4. The Stone Age is the longest time period ranging from 2.5 million years ago until around 5,000 years ago. The Bronze Age began when humans from many countries began creating and using metal....

  5. Sep 28, 2023 · Chronologically, the Bronze Age may be placed between 3000 and 800 BC. However, while some cultures developed technologies for metal working and alloying, others did not work metals, but developed other technological advancements.

  6. Aug 15, 2018 · Updated on August 15, 2018. The Bronze Age is the period of human time between the Stone Age and the Iron Age, terms referring to the material with which tools and weapons were made.

  7. Mar 13, 2021 · The Bronze Age saw the birth of civilization and the development of advanced cultures in Europe, the Near East, and East Asia. Learning Objectives. Compare and contrast the art of the Bronze age found in the Ancient Near East, East Asia, and Western Europe. Key Takeaways. Key Points.

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