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It is one of the most important sites of the Nuragic civilization.
The Roman military occupation brought the Nuragic civilization to an end.
The Nuragic civilization survived in the mountainous mainland of the island.
The Nuragic civilization was most likely based on clans.
Religion and military had a strong role in the society, which has led scholars to the hypothesis that the Nuragic civilization was a theocracy.
Today it has come to be the symbol of Sardinia and its distinctive culture, the Nuragic civilization.
According to some scholars the Nuragic civilization and the Torrean civilization were the same.
The Nuragic civilization arose during the Middle Bronze Age.
The same symbolism was later used by the Nuragic civilization with the so-called "Nuragic pietà".
In Sardinia the Nuragic civilization flourishes.
The Nuragic civilization was very deep-rooted but above all articulated; they calculated 54 villages, 30 nuraghes, sepulchres, buildings with a likely sacred destination.
The Greek geographer Strabo confirms the survival of the Nuragic civilization in Roman times.
The so-called "golden age" of the Nuragic civilization (mid-2nd millennium BC) coincided perhaps with the apex of the mining of metals in the island.
The Giants of Monte Prama are ancient stone sculptures created by the Nuragic civilization of Sardinia, Italy.
Among these, particularly relevant is the Bell-beaker culture, preluding the Bonnanaro culture (c. 1800 BC) that would eventually lead to the Nuragic civilization.
In Castello is also the Sardinian Archaeological Museum, the biggest and most important regarding the prehistoric Nuragic civilisation of Sardinia.
This is suggested by their constant presence in the cultic places of Nuragic civilization, from sanctuaries like "Su Romanzesu" in Bitti, to giants' graves.
Their finding proved that the Nuragic civilization had maintained its peculiarities, and introduced new ones across the centuries, well into the Phoenician colonization of most of Sardinia.
The Nuragic civilization was a civilization of Sardinia, lasting from the Bronze Age (18th century BC) to the 2nd century AD.
The villages had no walls, and findings of weapons in the tombs are scarce: the Ozieri civilization was thus perhaps a peaceful one, far different from the later Nuragic civilization.
They are the most impressive expression of the Nuragic civilization and are included in the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites since 1997.
No sign of buildings of the monumental Nuragic civilization, which developed in the Bronze Age and Iron Age in Sardinia, have been found in the city.
The town houses an archaeological museum (Sa Domu Nosta museum) with findings, dating from the Ozieri culture to the Nuragic civilization, to the 14th century AD.
In fact, within the Nuragic civilization craftsmen able to perform perfect stonework were certainly at hand, as demonstrated by the refined sacred wells and giant's graves built in the isodomic technique.
Recent researches (2010) have nevertheless demonstrated that the old idea of a Nuragic civilization collapsing upon the arrival of Phoenicians and their colonization of Sardinia, is completely outdated.