What did Mediterraneans mean by this?

What did Mediterraneans mean by this?

>Mediterraneans built stone henge
'Ok'

This is Greece before steppe blood

Steppe mongol blood ruins everything

This, after Britain got conquered by steppe troglodytes they stopped building monumental structures for two millenia, while Greece already had cities and incredibly complex structures before mixing with people who had (mixed) steppe blood

>British
>ancient monuments

Stonehenge, Silbury hill, Maeshowe

>piled up stones
Literal savages

Go fuck yourself you uneducated retard

It's true though

Even the parthenon is piled up stones

but the parthenon is made out of marble, which is an element. Not a stone.

The parthenon is a work of art in service of the gods built around a functioning city in the scale a Celt, Britton or Pict could never accomplish at the time.

Marble isn't an element, you retarded fuck.

Celts had cities

>celts had cities
Try me

marble is the 34th element, user

We wuh Aztecs, guv'nah

Really makes ya think

>~200 houses
>50 people each at a stretch
>10000
whoopdidoo

>a fucking village
I really like the mud huts user

So like Troy?

Not bad

No, not like Troy you imbecile

Heuneburg is older than all those temples, 600 bc biatch

Yes, Troy citadel had 1,000 people according to most not wewuzzing estimates

WOW, A PILE OF STONES!

Clay and chalk to be precise, and its existence implies the presence of an advanced sedentary society

Athens, Larnaca, Thebes 1400bc. Get a hold of your self Charlie.

That type of temple didn't exist before 550 bc, read a book, 600 bc is stretching it a lot, Mycenean architecture was completely different from that.

>Troy citadel had 1000 people
>citadel
>as opposed to the entire city of Troy
Nice try

Still leagues ahead of you *ngloid.

Just like that pic of Heuneburg is just the citadel, honey ;)

Which is mostly copy pasted from Minoan architecture, so thanks for proving my point, I guess?

Sad excuse of both city and citadel.

>shifting the goal posts
Your point was romanticizing heuneburg. But nice try, again.

where was the shitter in this place?

I said it was a city, and a city it was.

>Heuneburg is older than 600 bc
>Heuneburg was founded in the 7th century bc
WOW YOU GOT HIM THERE

That's really really cool bro

>At Knossos we find the earliest known flushing toilet. The toilet was screened off by partitions and was flushed by rain water or by water held in cisterns from conduits built into the wall.

>Not just palaces but ordinary homes were heated with sophisticated hypocaust systems, where heat was conducted under the floor, the earliest known to exist.

Sounds /comfy/

HMmmm

Yet those neolithic farming people got their shit slapped by steppe people on the regular. Really gets the noggin a joggin.

t.finn