Grossgartach culture
Characteristics
The Grossgartach culture is characterized by distinctive pottery and stone tools. The ceramic repertoire included bowl-shaped vessels with sharply carinated profiles and lower walls than those of earlier Hinkelstein and Linear Pottery ceramics, as well as footed cup-shaped vessels typical of the Hinkelstein tradition. Shallow bowls and decorated vessels were common, featuring shallow impressions created with spatulas as ornamental techniques. Typical decorative elements included ribbon and garland motifs as well as concave triangles. Undecorated vessels displayed rounded walls, distinguishing them from earlier Hinkelstein production. Quadrilobate-rimmed bowls have also been recovered.Stone tools included D-section adzes, numerous axe blades, and perforated axes. The substantial differences in decorative styles suggest a degree of chronological distance from Hinkelstein ceramics.
The slightly later Planig-Friedberg ceramics —now considered a distinct group—show clear connections to Grossgartach, characterized by sharply carinated vessels almost entirely decorated with incised motifs and quadrilobate-rimmed bowls. This period also marks the origins of multi-naved house foundations with convex lateral walls, representing an evolution from the Late Linear Pottery settlement plans.