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Welcome back to the Baltic States! In this second video we'll continue looking at prehistoric archaeology sites across the Baltic states and examine how the Balts left their prehistory and paganism behind them and entered into the modern European world with a clash of cultures and armies, both international and domestic. If you want to support this channel, donate to my Patreon: patreon.com/TravelswithanArchaeologist Citations: Vėlius, G. (2003). Kernavė in the context of towns of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Archaeologia Lituana, 4, 161-174. Mägi, M. (2005). Mortuary houses in Iron Age Estonia. Estonian Journal of Archaeology, 9(2), 93-131. Lang, V. (2007). The Bronze and Early Iron Ages in Estonia (p. 298). University of Tartu Press. Valk, H. (2008). The Vikings and the eastern Baltic. In The Viking World (pp. 509-519). Routledge. Allmäea, R., Maldrea, L., & Tomekb, T. (2011). The Salme I ship burial: an osteological view of a unique burial in Northern Europe. Radiocarbon, 68, 97-112. Lang, V. (2011). Traceless death. Missing burials in Bronze and Iron Age Estonia. Eesti Arheoloogia Ajakiri, 15(2), 109-129. Peets, J., Allmäe, R., Maldre, L., Saage, R., Tomek, T., & Lõugas, L. (2012). Research results of the Salme ship burials in 2011–2012. Archaeological fieldwork in Estonia, 2012, 43-60. Laneman, M., & Lang, V. (2013). New Radiocarbon dates for two stonecist graves at Muuksi, Northern Estonia. Estonian Journal of Archaeology, 17(2), 89-122. Kalnins, M. (2015). Latvia: A short history. Oxford University Press. Price, T. D., Peets, J., Allmäe, R., Maldre, L., & Oras, E. (2016). Isotopic provenancing of the Salme ship burials in Pre-Viking Age Estonia. Antiquity, 90(352), 1022-1037. Mägi, M. (2018). Viking Age Cultural Contacts across the Baltic Sea: Behind the Interpretations. In In Austrvegr: The Role of the Eastern Baltic in Viking Age Communication across the Baltic Sea (pp. 1-28). Brill. Mägi, M. (2020). Pre-Viking-Age ship burials at Salme in Estonia: The first eastern Vikings or indications of a shared cultural milieu?. In Vikings Across Boundaries (pp. 80-96). Routledge. Price, T. D., Peets, J., Allmäe, R., Maldre, L., & Price, N. (2020). Human remains, context, and place of origin for the Salme, Estonia, boat burials. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 58, 1-13. Leighton, G. (2021). The Baltic Crusades (1147–1300). In The Routledge Handbook of East Central and Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500-1300 (pp. 393-408). Routledge. Piličiauskas, G., et al. (2021). The earliest evidence for crop cultivation during the Early Bronze Age in the southeastern Baltic. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 36, 102881. Kalinka, M., Eriņš, I., Vaivode, V., Goldbergs, L., Korna, I., Smirnovs, R., & Gorovojs, K. (2023). 3D data life in Cesis medieval castle in Latvia. Minkevičius, K., Vengalis, R., Piličiauskienė, G., Poškienė, J., Pilkauskas, M., & Vėlius, G. (2024). Agricultural development in the southeastern Baltic region from the late Bronze Age to the medieval period: a case study of Kernavė, southeast Lithuania. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany, 1-14.