Image KulturaLuzycka 1.png right 300px thumb The extent of Lusatianculture marked in green Image Archeologia Bielsko kultura u ycka.JPG thumb left Examples of earthenware The Lusatianculture existed in the later Bronze Age and early Iron Age 1300 BC 500 BC in most of Poland , parts of Czech Republic and Slovakia , parts of eastern Germany , and parts of Ukraine . It covers the Periods Montelius III early Lusatianculture to V of the Northern European chronological scheme. The Lusatianculture developed as the preceding Trzciniec culture experienced influences from the middle Bronze Age Tumulus culture Tumulus Bronze Age H gelgr berkultur , essentially incorporating the local communities into the socio political network of Iron Age Europe Dolukhanov 1996 113 . It is contemporaneous with the Urnfield culture found from eastern France , southern Germany and Austria to Hungary and the Nordic Bronze Age in northwestern Germany and Scandinavia . It is followed by the early Iron Age Billendorf culture in the West. In Poland, the Lusatianculture is taken to span part of the Iron Age as well the is only a terminological difference and is succeeded in Montelius VIIbc in northern ranges around mouth of Vistula by the Pomeranian culture spreading south. There were close contacts with the Nordic Bronze Age, and the Scandinavian influence on Pomerania and northern Poland during this period was so considerable that this region is sometimes included in the Nordic Bronze Age culture D browski 1989 73 . Hallstatt culture Hallstatt and La T ne culture La T ne influences are seen particularly in ornaments fibulae, pins and weapons. Burial was by cremation, inhumations are rare. The urn is usually ... links commonscat Lusatianculture http www.dziejba.org Hypothetical reconstruction of a Lusatianculture settlement, raised using only bronze age tools Wola Radziszowska near Cracow Poland Category ... fr Culture lusacienne it Cultura lusaziana ka lt Lu it n kult ra hu Lausitzi kult ra ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Geobox Range name Lausitzer Bergland image Vlci hora.jpg image caption Vl hora Wolfsberg near Rumburk country Germany country1 Czech Republic country2 state Saxony state1 Bohemia parent Western Sudetes geology Granite geology1 period period1 orogeny highest Hrazen Pirsken highest elevation 608 area length length orientation width width orientation map Sudeten.png map caption Divisions of the Sudetes The Lusatian Highlands lang de Lausitzer Bergland , lang cs luknovsk pahorkatina , Upper Sorbian language Upper Sorbian u iske hory is a hill y and low mountain ous region in Germany and the Czech Republic . A western extension of the Sudetes range, it is located on the border of the German state of Saxony Saxon with the Czech Bohemia n region. The Lusatian Highlands is named after the historic region of Upper Lusatia , while the southern Czech portion is also known as the luknov Hook . It is situated between the Elbe Sandstone Mountains in the west and the somewhat higher Lusatian Mountains and the Zittau Hills in the east. The source of the Spree river, which runs through the centre of Berlin , is located near the small town of Ebersbach, G rlitz Ebersbach . The Lusatian Highlands is a famous tourist region shown in several movies. It is known for the beauty of its landscape and its picturesque towns with Baroque architecture Baroque churches and wooden houses. Popular tourist towns in the region are Schirgiswalde , also known as the capital of carnival in Upper Lusatia, luknov with its famous arboretum , and Rumburk with medieval old town centre. Other notable towns include Ebersbach , Gro sch nau , Sohland an der Spree , Kirschau , Crostau , and Wehrsdorf . coord 51 04 30 N 14 16 42 E region DE SN type mountain source kolossus dewiki display title Category Mountain ranges of Germany Category Regions of Saxony Saxony geo stub cs luknovsk pahorkatina da Lausitzer Bergland de Lausitzer Bergland hsb u iske hory nn ... more details
Geobox Range name Lusatian Mountains image Vrchol Lu e v zim .jpg image caption Cross counry skiing route on the main ridge, Lu Lausche on the horizon country Germany country1 Czech Republic country2 state Saxony state1 Bohemia parent Western Sudetes geology Sandstone geology1 Granite period period1 orogeny highest Lu Lausche highest elevation 793 highest lat d 50 highest lat m 50 highest lat s 56 highest lat NS N highest long d 14 highest long m 38 highest long s 49 highest long EW E area length length orientation width width orientation map Sudeten.png map caption Divisions of the Sudetes The Lusatian Mountains lang cs Lu ick hory , lang de Lausitzer Gebirge are a mountain range of the Western Sudetes , located on the southeastern border of Germany with the Czech Republic east of the Elbe river, a continuation of the Erzgebirge range west of the Elbe valley. The mountains of the northern German part are also called Zittau Hills . The Lusatians themselves are a western extension of the Sudetes mountain range between Silesia in the north and Bohemia and Moravia in the south, which in the east joins the Carpathian Mountains at the Moravian Gate . The adjacent hilly region to the northwest is called Lausitzer Bergland . File Lausche.jpg thumb left Lu Lausche from the north The highest peak is Lu Lausche 793  m. Other notable peaks include P nkav vrch Finkenkoppe 792  m, Jedlov Tannenberg 774 m, Kl Kleis 760  m, Hvozd Hochwald 750  m and Studenec Kaltenberg 736  m. External links http www.luzicke hory.cz luzang.html Czech site http fotoprazak.net 8 vyber lokality Nemecko lokality Nemecko Luzicke hory.htm Photos of Lusatian Mountains Commons category Lusatian Mountains Mountain ranges of the Czech Republic German Central Uplands Category Sudetes Category Mountain ranges of the Czech Republic Category Mountain ranges of Germany Category Regions of Saxony cs Lu ick hory da Lausitzer Gebirge de Lausitzer Gebirge eo Luzacia montaro fr Monts de ... more details
, Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand I fought against the Protestant Schmalkaldic League , weakened the Lusatian ... now seven cities, as the eastern part of G rlitz, on the east side of the Lusatian Neisse Neisse ... more details
Image Nizina l sko u ycka.png thumb right 200px Silesian Lusiatian Highlands in maps of Poland Silesian Lusatian Lowlands or Silesian Lusatian Uplands , lang pl Nizina l sko u ycka are lowland s located in Silesia , Poland and Germany . Poland geo stub See also Silesian Highlands Silesian Lowlands Silesian Foothills Silesian Moravian Foothills coord missing Poland Category Geography of Silesia pl Nizina l sko u ycka ... more details
Infobox Language name Low Lusatian familycolor Indo European states Germany region Brandenburg , Saxony fam2 Germanic languages Germanic fam3 West Germanic languages West Germanic fam4 High German languages High German fam5 Central German fam6 East Central German iso2 ger Low Lusatian German in German Niederlausitzer Mundart also English Low Lusatian Dialect is a variety of Central German spoken in northern Saxony and southern Brandenburg within the regions of Lower Lusatia Cottbus and the northern part of Upper Lusatia Hoyerswerda . It is well defined from the Low German dialects around and north of Berlin as well as the Saxon dialect group of present day Saxony and the Slavic language of the Sorbs . Both regions were strongly influenced by different dialects, especially after World War II . Refugees from East Prussia and Silesia settled there after their dispossession from former German areas. After the foundation of the German Democratic Republic and an economical development because of a stronger extraction of lignite people from Mecklenburg , Thuringia , Saxony and Saxony Anhalt moved to the Lusatia region to benefit from the development. Due to this influence of other German dialects Low Lusatian never formed a too strong variaton from standard German. For people moving now into this area the dialect is easy to learn and influences their spoken language quite fast. Fact date January 2008 Language Low Lusatian German lacks regional specific words. It contains Syncope phonetics ... German colspan 2 Lower Lusatian German spelling International Phonetic Alphabet IPA spelling IPA ... colspan 2 Lower Lusatian German spelling IPA spelling IPA to rake ha r k e n IPA ha k n haakn IPA ... 2 Standard German colspan 2 Lower Lusatian German spelling IPA spelling IPA table T i sch IPA t ... German colspan 2 Lower Lusatian German spelling IPA spelling IPA it was switched off es wurde abgeschalt ... newspapers written in Low Lusatian German http www.lr online.de Category German language Category Central ... more details
Expand German topic geo date July 2010 Infobox mountain name Mount Scharfenstein Sharp Stone photo Scharfenstein1.jpg photo caption The Scharfenstein Sharp Stone with staircase to the look out elevation m 569.4 elevation ref prominence m prominence ref map location Saxony , flag Germany range lat d 50 lat m 50 lat s 27 lat NS N long d 14 long m 45 long s 29.5 long EW E coordinates type Sandstone first ascent easiest route The Scharfenstein English Sharp Stone is a rock and about 25 metres high, situated in the Lusatian Mountains . It sits on a mountain with an elevation of 569 metres in the Germany German southeastern state of Saxony . Due to its distinctive shape it is also called the Upper Lusatia Upper Lusatian Matterhorn by the locals. The rock can be accessed via ladders and a staircase from the south and is one of the most famous look outs in the Zittau Mountains . View File Ort oybin.JPG thumb left 400px View from the peak of mount Scharfenstein to the town of Oybin and mount Lausche Category Mountains of Saxony Saxony geo stub de Scharfenstein Zittauer Gebirge ... more details
About a fictional society the main article Culture series the main article on cultureCulture for the Wikipedia Cultural Embassy project Wikipedia Culture refimprove date February 2011 The Culture is a fiction ... Banks Banks, Iain M. ref ref A Few Notes on the Culture Iain Banks Banks, Iain M. ref society created ... novels and works of short fiction by him. Overview The Culture is characterized by being a post ... necessary to protect others. Mind The Culture Minds , powerful artificial intelligence s, have ... control. The danger involved in this imaginative step, though, is clear one of the problems with the Culture ... it bluntly, too good. ref name SCLIB The novels of the Culture cycle, therefore, mostly deal with people at the fringes of the Culture diplomats, spies, or mercenaries those who interact with other civilizations, and who do the Culture s dirty work in moving those societies closer to the Culture ideal, sometimes by force. Fictional history In this fictional universe, the Culture exists concurrently with human society on Earth. The time frame for the published Culture stories is from roughly AD 1300 to AD 2100, with Earth being Contact The Culture contacted during the end of the time frame, though the Culture had covertly visited the planet in the 1970s in The State of the Art . The Culture ... into their own hands. In The Player of Games , the Culture is described as having existed as a space faring society for eleven thousand years. Society and culture Capability The Culture is a symbiotic ... out of free choice . As such, the Culture is also a post scarcity society, where technological advances ensure that no one lacks any material goods or services. As a consequence, the Culture has no need ... is still important . Language Marain is the Culture s shared language. Designed by early Minds, the Culture ... written form, Marain is also regarded as an aesthetically pleasing language by the Culture. The symbols ... would in fact be somewhat theoretical to the usual Culture citizen. Marain itself is also ... more details
BC indicating a thriving culture File gyptischer Maler um 1400 v. Chr. 001.jpg thumb Ancient Egypt ian art , 1,400 BC File Mehmooni2.jpg thumb The Persia n Hasht Behesht Hasht Behesht Palace Culture ... 2001 . http www.etymonline.com index.php?term culture Online Etymology Dictionary ref is a term that has ... definitions of culture in Culture A Critical Review of Concepts and Definitions . ref Kroeber, A. L. and C. Kluckhohn, 1952. Culture A Critical Review of Concepts and Definitions. ref However, the word culture is most commonly used in three basic senses Excellence of taste in the fine art s and humanities , also known as high culture An integrated pattern of human knowledge, belief, and behavior ... scientists used the term culture to refer to a universal human capacity. For the German nonpositivist sociologist , Georg Simmel , culture referred to the cultivation of individuals through the agency ... century, culture emerged as a concept central to anthropology , encompassing all human phenomena that are not purely results of human genetics. Specifically, the term culture in American anthropology ... 2010 Early modern discourses The modern term culture has a classical origin. Cicero , in his Tusculan ... . ref name velkley Cite book title Being after Rousseau Philosophy and Culture in Question last Velkley first Richard year 2002 chapter The Tension in the Beautiful On Culture and Civilization in Rousseau .... inconsistent citations ref As described by Velkley ref name velkley blockquote The term culture ... Rousseau s criticism of modernity modern liberalism and Enlightenment . Thus a contrast between culture ... meanings of culture emerge from this period culture as the folk spirit having a unique identity, and culture as cultivation of inwardness or free individuality. The first meaning is predominant in our current use of the term culture, although the second still plays a large role in what we think culture should achieve, namely the full expression of the unique of authentic self. blockquote English ... more details
Expand German Niederlausitzer Landr cken Nature Park date January 2009 File Lausitz A.jpg right 300px File Karte Naturpark Niederlausitzer Landr cken.png right 300px The Lower Lusatian Ridge Nature Park lang de Naturpark Niederlausitzer Landr cken is a nature park and reserve in the state of Brandenburg , Germany . It covers an area of 580 km 224 sq mi . It was established on September 9, 1997. coord 51.7612388889 N 13.8053305556 E source dewiki region DE BB type landmark format dms display title Category Geography of Brandenburg Category Nature parks in Germany Category Protected areas established in 1997 Brandenburg geo stub Europe protected area stub de Naturpark Niederlausitzer Landr cken ... more details
Expand German Naturpark Niederlausitzer Heidelandschaft date January 2009 File Karte Naturpark Niederlausitzer Heidelandschaft.png right 300px File Elsterm hlePlessa2.jpg right 300px Watermill in Plessa The Lower Lusatian Heath Nature Park lang de Naturpark Niederlausitzer Heidelandschaft is a nature park and reserve in the state of Brandenburg , Germany . It covers an area of 490 km 189 sq mi . It was established on May 24 1996. In the south, where Brandenburg s oldest landscape is found, the area was formed approximately 180,000 years ago at the end of the ice age , with its glacial valley. Among the ice age deposits are massive coal layers. After extensive mining in the last hundred years, the landscapes has developed a unique and in some parts, a bizarre appearance. In many places are valuable specialized habitats for animals and plants. coord 51.5156055556 N 13.3940388889 E source dewiki region DE BB type landmark format dms display title Category Geography of Brandenburg Category Nature parks in Germany Category Protected areas established in 1996 Brandenburg geo stub Europe protected area stub de Naturpark Niederlausitzer Heidelandschaft ... more details
Iron Age, the Pomeranian culture spread southward, into areas formerly belonging to the LusatiancultureLusatian , Wysoko culture Wysoko and Milograd culture s. In Masovia and Poland this mixture ... of multiple bronze rings are typical examples of metal work. The economy was similar to that of the Lusatianculture. Rye was systematically cultivated for the first time, but still formed a minor component of the cereals. There were fewer hill forts than in the area of the Lusatianculture further west. Southern imports were sparse as well. Related cultures A related culture of the same age was the House Urn culture in central Germany. ref Peter Neal Peregrine, Melvin Ember, Human Relations ..., ISBN 3 8053 2566 5 Tacitus Germania book Germania Pomeranian history dem DEFAULTSORT Pomeranian Culture ... more details
The P chov culture was an archaeological culture named after site of P chov Skalka in Slovakia . Its probable bearer was the Celts Celt Cotini tribe. It existed in northern and central Slovakia although it also plausibly spread to the surrounding regions between the 2nd century BCE and the 1st century CE. The P chov culture developed from the Lusatianculture and it was influenced later by Illyrians Illyrian culture , Celts , and, by the beginning of the Christian era, by Dacians . Settlements were situated on moderate hill sides and near streams. The largest known religious, economic, and political center of the P chov culture was the hill fort of Havr nok , famous for its traces of human sacrifice. As the result of the Dacian and Germanic tribes expansion at the beginning of the Common Era , the P chov culture and its settlements started to decline, as its bearers were assimilated into Dacians and other migrating tribes ref Bolchazy, Caplovic 2006 308 ref . Notes references Sources Bolchazy Ladislaus J., Caplovic Dusan 2006 Illustrated Slovak History A Struggle for Sovereignty in Central Europe, Publisher Bolchazy Carducci Pub, ISBN 10 0865165009, ISBN 13 978 0865165007 DEFAULTSORT Puchov Culture Category Archaeological cultures Category History of Slovakia Euro archaeology stub Slovakia stub cs P chovsk kultura pl Kultura puchowska sk P chovsk kult ra ... more details
The Trzciniec culture was an ancient tradition that subsisted in central Europe. Archeologists speculate its existence to have been between the years 1700 and 1200 BC. Remains of the Trzciniec culture have been found in many Polish regions, including Kujawy , Ma opolska , Mazowsze , South Podlasie , and in western Ukraine . The best known settlements of the Trzciniec culture were in Z ota Pi czowskia, Wi c awice wi tokrzyskie , Goszyce, and west Bondyrz, close to the kurgans of Guciow. Some of these sites include important treasures containing materials such as ornamental gold and silver like in Stawiszyce and Rawa Mazowiecka . The Trzciniec culture developed from three Corded Ware culture corded ware related cultures pl Kultura mierzanowicka Mierzanowicka , pl Kultura strzy owska Strzy owska and pl Kultura iwie ska Iwie ska . These were succeeded by the Lusatianculture , which developed around d . Inhumation and cremation in a flat grave were important features of Trzciniec culture. Cases of inhumation were discovered in Wolica Nowa, in the form of kurgans . Evidence of kurgan inhumation have been found at ubna Jakusy, whereas kurgan cremation has been found at Guci w. Bibliography Prahistoria Ziem Polskich , tom IV pod redakcj W. Hensel W Hensla Wydawnictwo PAN, Ossolineum, Wroc aw, Warszawa, Krak w, Gda sk, 1979. Pradzieje ziem polskich , tom I cz. 2 Epoka Br zu i pocz tki Epoki elaza pod redakcj J. Kmieci ski Kmieci skiego , wyd. PWN Warszawa od 1989 Wielka Historia Polski , tom I Najdawniejsze dzieje ziem polskich do VII w. , Piotr Kaczanowski , Janusz K. Koz owski , wyd. Fogra Krak w 1998 Od neolityzacji do pocz tk w epoki br zu przemiany kulturowe w mi dzyrzeczu Odry i Dniepru VI i II tys. przed Chr. praca zbiorowa pod redakcja Janusz Czebreszuk Janusza Czebreszuka , Mikoly Kryvalcevi a, Przemys awa Makarowicza, Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu ... , PWN, Warszawa 1985 DEFAULTSORT Trzciniec Culture Category Archaeological cultures Category Archaeology ... more details
culture was identified ca 1899 by the Czech Ukrainian archaeologist V. V. Chvojka and is now attested by about 500 sites. The culture was named after finds cremated remains in the village of Zarubintsy, on the Dnieper. Area The Zarubintsy culture was one of the major archaeological culture s which ... the Rivers Desna River Desna and Ros River Ros as well as along the Pripyat river. Chronology The culture ... culture was of mixed origins. Valentin Sedov postulates that the culture arose when the eastern Pomeranian culture tribes the Podkloszove or under a globe burials area moved to the Pripyat and middle Dnieper basin and forged contacts with peoples of the Milograd culture Milograd zone and the Scythian ... objects and personal. Others suggest that it developed from the Pomeranian group of the Lusatianculture Lausitz culture , whilst Chernoles culture influences have also been postulated. Certainly ... of the culture engaged in agriculture, documented by numerous finds of sickles. Pobol suggested that the culture experienced a transition from swidden slash and burn to plough type cultivation ... to Late La Tene type fibulae . Decline The disintegration of the Zarubintsy culture has been ... re arranged into the so called Kiev culture , whilst the westernmost areas were integrated into the Wielbark culture. Ethnic affinity Scholars attempting to locate tribes mentioned by Graeco Roman ... founder ascribed the culture to early Slavs, an impression still shared by many Slavic scholars .... Dolukhanov has advanced that the Zarubintsy culture was a poli ethnic entity which increased cohesion ... culture s importance in the evolution of Slavic stock. Notes reflist 2 Sources and external links J. P. Mallory , Zarubintsy Culture , Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture , Fitzroy Dearborn ... and nomad . Palgrave Macmillan, 2000. ISBN 0 312 21207 0 DEFAULTSORT Zarubintsy Culture Category ... of Indo European Culture Category Iron Age Europe Category Archaeology of Ukraine Category ... more details
Lusatianculture Proto Lusatian and Trzciniec culture . Distribution and local groups The Urnfield ... cinerary urn from Chiusi IX VII century b.C. The eastern European Lusatianculture forms part of the urnfield ... shows strong links to the G va culture , but in the later phases, a strong influence of the Lusatian ..., Vojvodina, Serbia . The LusatiancultureLusatian chariot from Burg Brandenburg , Germany has three ...Image Cultures, 1200 BC.PNG 240px thumb A simplified map, ca 1200 BC , showing the central Urnfield culture red , the northern Urnfield culture orange , the Knoviz culture blue gray , the Lusatianculture pink , the Danubian culture brown , the Terramare culture blue , the Atlantic Bronze Age green and the Nordic Bronze Age yellow . File UrnfieldCulture.jpg 240px thumb Expansion of the Urnfield Culture. Bronze Age 240 The Urnfield culture c. 1300 BC 750 BC was a late Bronze Age culture of central ... s which were then buried in fields. The Urnfield culture followed the Tumulus culture and was succeeded by the Hallstatt culture . Chronology It is believed that in some areas, such as in southwestern ... already contains cremations. As the transition from the middle Bronze Age to the Urnfield culture was gradual, there are questions regarding how to define it. The Urnfield culture covers the phases Hallstatt ... culture Ha C and D of the following Iron Age . This corresponds to the Phases Montelius III IV .... The Urnfield culture is divided into the following sub phases based on M ller Karpe sen. table ... in all, more radiocarbon and dendro dates would be highly desirable. Origin The Urnfield culture grew from the preceding tumulus culture . The transition is gradual, in the pottery as well as the burial ... . Some graves contain a combination of tumulus culture pottery and Urnfield sword s Kressborn, Bodenseekreis or tumulus culture incised pottery together with early Urnfield types Mengen . In the North, the Urnfield culture was only adopted in the HaA2 period. 16 pins deposited in a swamp in Ellmoosen ... more details
map, ca 1200 BC , showing the central Urnfield culture red , the northern Urnfield culture orange , the Knoviz culture blue gray , the Lusatianculture purple , the Danubian culture brown , the Terramare culture blue , the Atlantic Bronze Age green and the Nordic Bronze Age yellow . The occupations ... he attributes to the Villanovan Culture Villanovan culture . List of sites Santa Rosa di Poviglio Fondo ... Genetic history of Italy Prehistoric Italy Villanovan culture Polada culture Ancient peoples of Italy References Reflist Sources cite book last Mallory first J.P. chapter Terramare Culture title Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture publisher Fitzroy Dearborn location Chicago year 1997 authorlink ... Category Copper Age Europe Category Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Category Archaeology ... more details
Culture of Celtic Europe and modern Celtic identity Celtic music Insular art Celtic music Gaelic cultureCulture of Ireland Culture of Scotland Culture of the Isle of Man Culture of Wales Culture of Cornwall Culture of Brittany See also Culture of the United Kingdom Culture of Europe disambig Category Celtic culture ... more details
Historical culture of the Germanic peoples Migration period art Animal style Anglo Saxon culture Contemporary culture of Germanic languages Germanic Europe Dutch culture disambiguation English culture Flemish culture Frisian cultureCulture of German speaking Europe Austrian cultureCulture of Germany German culture Swiss culture Scandinavian culture Danish culture Icelandic culture Norwegian culture Swedish culture See also Germanic folklore disambiguation disambig ... more details
Culture is the set of patterns of human activity within a society or social group and the symbolic structures ... guide to culture TOC limit limit 2 Nature of culture Main article Culture Civilization &ndash ... &ndash Elements of culture The Arts &ndash Fine arts Gastronomy Outline of cooking Cooking &ndash ... Types of cultures Organizational culture &ndash Cultures by aspect Bicycle culture &ndash a culture that supports, encourages, and has high bicycle usage Culture of capitalism Capitalist culture &ndash the culture of a capitalist society Consumer culture &ndash a society based on consumerism High context culture &ndash a culture with the tendency use high context messages, resulting in catering towards in groups Horse culture &ndash a community whose day to day life revolves around the herding and breeding of horses Low context culture &ndash culture with a tendency not to cater towards in groups Rape culture &ndash a culture in which rape and other sexual violence usually against women ..., or encourage sexualized violence Remix culture &ndash a society which allows and encourages derivative work s Participatory culture &ndash a culture in which private persons the public do not act as consumers only, but also as contributors or producers prosumers &ndash Permission culture &ndash a society ... of copyrighted works need to be explicitly leased Primitive culture &ndash a community that lacks major signs of economic development or modernity Cultural cross sections Children s culture &ndash cultural phenomena pertaining to children Children s street culture &ndash cumulative culture created by young children Coffee culture &ndash social atmosphere or series of associated social behaviors that depends heavily upon coffee &ndash , particularly as a social lubricant &ndash Culture of capitalism ... or national capitalist economy on a population DIY culture &ndash refers to a wide range of elements ..., art, and film Dominant culture &ndash the established language, religion, behavior, values, rituals ... more details
Culture Magazine may refer to Culture Magazine UK a British youth lifestyle magazine Culture Magazine US an American cannabis culture magazine disambig ... more details
Asian Culture may refer to Culture of Asia Asian Culture journal , the official journal of the Singapore Society of Asian Studies disambig ... more details
saved book title Culture subtitle cover image Baduy erin014 25.jpg cover color Culture Main article Culture History Cultural history Cultures of the world Cultural region Culture by region Basic concepts Bandwagon effect Counterculture Cross cultural communication Cultural bias Cultural dissonance Sociocultural evolution Cultural evolution Cultural imperialism Culture theory Cultural universal Culture war Demographics Social fact Emotions and culture Ethnic group Ethnocentrism Folk culture Low culture High culture Intercultural competence Organizational culture Popular culture Subculture Urban culture Category Wikipedia books on cultureCulture ... more details