Asylum culture


Range of asylum culture

Asylum Culture - Declining Palaeolithic Culture of Western Europe. Growing up around 11 800-10 000 years ago on the basis of Magdalene cultures, spanning France and part of Spain. Its name is derived from the Mas-d'Azil cave in the northern Pyrenees (France).

In contrast to Magdalenian cultures specialized in reindeer hunts, asylum seekers hunted wild animals (deer, deer, wild boar). Realistic art was also lost, replaced by geometric signs-painted red ocher or rattled stone boulders. Guided asylum monuments include chipboard blades with folded treadmill, short skyscrapers, mainly shells, and flat single- and double-rowed deer antlers. Similar types of stone tools have spread in much of Europe, also taking over areas previously occupied by the people of epigraphic culture. In this context, archaeologists use the term " (in Poland it is the so-called Tarnowian line - from the Tarnow industry in Wielkopolska), which is the result of intensive contacts between the western and Mediterranean regions of Europe with the Danube basin, the Balkans and the Crimea.

The term asylum culture has a number of regional equivalents, such as laboratories and valorgien in southern France. Romanesque in southern Italy (from the Romanella cave), which is now considered the epigraphic end of the culture, is strongly influenced by the influences of Asylum culture (with typical asylum boulders covered with geometric rhythms).

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