The appearance of anatomically modern humans in Europe about 35,000 bc was accompanied by major changes in culture and technology. There was a further period of significant change after the last major Pleistocene glaciation, which included the widespread adoption of farming and the establishment of permanent settlements from the 7th millennium bc. These laid the foundation for all future developments of European civilization.
Knowledge of these early periods of the European past is entirely dependent on archaeology. The evidence, which has almost all been collected since the middle of the 19th century, varies greatly from region to region and is limited by what was deposited and by whether what was deposited has survived. The archaeological evidence has also been disturbed by a range of human and natural processes, from glacial activity to farming and modern development. Modern techniques have greatly increased the amount of information available, but many parts of the story of the past may be difficult or impossible to recover, and the evidence that has been revealed needs to be assessed in the light of all these factors.
Dating depends on scientific methods. Cores through deep ocean-floor sediments and the Arctic ice cap have provided a continuous record of climatic conditions for the last one million years, but individual sites cannot easily be matched to it. Radiocarbon dating is effective to 35,000 years ago, and prior to that other scientific methods can be used with varying degrees of precision. Tree rings give precise dates for wood as early as the 5th millennium bc. Detailed typological studies, especially of pottery and stone tools, can be used to establish the relative sequence of material. The dates cited in this section are based on various scientific methods. For the earliest period, to about 35,000 bc, they are derived from absolute determinations by potassium-argon and thorium-uranium dating, together with correlations to the deep-sea and ice-core sequences; for the later period, they are derived primarily from radiocarbon determinations, calibrated where appropriate to give actual calendar years.
Clay-model-of-a-wheeled-cart-from-a-grave-atClay model of a wheeled cart, from a grave at Szigetszentmárton, Hung., end of the 4th …[Credits : © Hungarian National Museum, Budapest; photograph, Kardos Judit]
Calendar-illustration-for-April-from-the-Tres-Riches-Heures-duCalendar illustration for April from the Très Riches Heures du duc de …[Credits : Photos.com/Jupiterimages]
Illumination-from-the-manuscript-of-St-Augustines-City-of-GodIllumination from the manuscript of St. Augustine’s City of God, 1475; in …[Credits : Scala/Art Resource, New York]
Petrarch-engravingPetrarch, engraving.[Credits : © Ancient Art & Architecture Collection]
Voltaire-bronze-by-Jean-Antoine-Houdon-in-the-Hermitage-StVoltaire, bronze by Jean-Antoine Houdon; in the Hermitage, St. …[Credits : Scala/Art Resource, New York]
Jules-Michelet-detail-of-an-oil-painting-by-Thomas-CoutureJules Michelet, detail of an oil painting by Thomas Couture; in the Carnavalet Museum, Paris.[Credits : Giraudon/Art Resource, New York]
Georges-Duby-1988Georges Duby, 1988.[Credits : Patrick Robert—Corbis/Sygma]
Constantine-I-colossal-marble-head-AD-325Constantine I, colossal marble head, c. ad 325.[Credits : The Granger Collection, New York]
Infrastructure and influences of the Roman and Greek civilizations of old can still be seen in the …[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]
Learn some of the peculiarities of the inquisitors’ interrogation book, “Malleus …[Credits : Acquired from Vast Video]
In the years following World War II, Soviet satellite governments sprang up in Eastern Europe and …[Credits : Acquired from Vast Video]
U.S. President Woodrow Wilson was among the statesmen who gathered in France in June 1919 to sign …[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]