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      • Let us note that the "Bell Beakers" not only made pottery vessels shaped vaguely like bells but also tended to put hallmark items with the dead in their burials: stone bracelets, copper daggers, arrowheads and buttons.
      www.haaretz.com/archaeology/2018-02-21/ty-article-magazine/for-whom-the-bell-beaker-tolls-archaeological-mystery-solved/0000017f-df34-d3ff-a7ff-ffb424310000
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  2. The Bell Beaker culture, also known as the Bell Beaker complex or Bell Beaker phenomenon, is an archaeological culture named after the inverted-bell beaker drinking vessel used at the very beginning of the European Bronze Age, arising from around 2800 BC.

  3. Apr 15, 2019 · Towards the end of the Neolithic, in about 2,450BC, the descendants of the first farmers were themselves almost entirely replaced when a new population - called the Bell Beaker people -...

  4. Feb 22, 2018 · Around 4,500 years ago, a new, bell-shaped pottery style appeared in Iberia, in present-day Spain and Portugal. These 'bell-beakers' quickly spread across Europe, reaching Britain fewer than 100 years later.

  5. Apr 15, 2021 · It’s not yet clear-cut if we can speak of the Bell Beaker phenomenon as a genetic entity or just a cultural phenomenon, but in archaeogenetic terms Bell Beaker is often associated with the Dutch Beaker folk who brought steppe ancestry into Britain and Ireland and replaced the previous Neolithic inhabitants as well as their language and culture.

  6. The Bell Beaker culture arrived in Neolithic Britain around 2700-2500 BC. It was long thought that these incomers had intermingled fairly peacefully with the people of the existing Neolithic culture, adopting their henges and their henge-building ways.

  7. Feb 11, 2021 · Bell Beaker groups can be tracked through their use of distinctive Beaker pottery, but this pottery was also often accompanied by new funerary practices and skills such as metalworking, suggesting Beakers reflected a larger overall change in culture, technology, ideology, ritual and belief.

  8. May 17, 2017 · Evolution. Around 4,500 years ago, a mysterious craze for bell-shaped pottery swept across prehistoric Europe. Archaeologists have debated the significance of the pots—artefacts that define the...