La Tène culture
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La Tène culture
Summary
La Tène culture is an archaeological culture[1]. It ranks in the top 2% of archaeological_culture entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,301 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- La Tène culture is credited with the discovery of Bror Emil Hildebrand[3].
- La Tène culture's instance of is recorded as archaeological culture[4].
- La Tène culture's instance of is recorded as culture[5].
- La Tène culture is owned by Ancient Celts[6].
- La Tène is named after La Tène culture[7].
- La Tène culture followed Urnfield culture[8].
- La Tène culture followed Hallstatt culture[9].
- La Tène culture was followed by Przeworsk culture[10].
- La Tène culture was followed by Poienești-Lukașevka Culture[11].
- La Tène culture was followed by Zarubintsy culture[12].
- La Tène culture was followed by Roman Republic[13].
- La Tène culture was followed by Roman Empire[14].
- La Tène culture was followed by Gaul[15].
- La Tène culture was followed by Roman Britain[16].
- La Tène culture was followed by Raetia[17].
- La Tène culture was followed by Hispania[18].
- La Tène culture was followed by Germania[19].
- La Tène culture took place at Central Europe[20].
- La Tène culture took place at Western Europe[21].
- La Tène culture took place at Southern Europe[22].
- La Tène culture is a type of Ancient Celts[23].
- La Tène culture is part of Iron Age[24].
- La Tène culture is part of Ancient Celts[25].
- La Tène culture's Commons category is recorded as La Tène culture[26].
- La Tène culture's said to be the same as is recorded as La Tène period[27].
Body
Definition and Type
Recorded instance of include archaeological culture[4] and culture[5]. La Tène culture is a type of Ancient Celts[23].
Origins
La Tène is named after La Tène culture[7].
Use and Application
Part of include Iron Age[24], an archaeological period[28] and Ancient Celts[25], a historical ethnic group[29].
Why It Matters
La Tène culture ranks in the top 2% of archaeological_culture entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,301 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 27 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[30] It is known by 55 alternative names across languages and contexts.[31]