Media in Drambenburg

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Drambenburg has a robust and popular media sector, which includes a rich history of cinema and music.

Television

The biggest television station in Drambenburg is the Drambenburg Rundfunkstation (DRS).

Cinema

Music

Print

Broadcasting

News

Art

Art in Drambenburg has a long, rich, and diverse history. Cave pantings in the Drambenburgian Alps Jeremine-Geralt Caves date back to circa 50,000 BCE, made by early Neaderthal settlers of the peninsula. Often neglected in relation to other nations, such as Avergnon, Drambenburgian wikipedia: visual arts are renowned during the late medieval Renaissance. Drambenburgian art has included many grand contributions broadly to Euronian art. After the development of Romanesque Art in Drambenburg circa 1000 CE, other nations overtook Drambenburg in prominence in the Euronian family of art. It was not until the development of Baroque art in the mid-18th century that Drambenburg again rose to fame for their art. Sculptures and paintings were both commissioned around the world by kings and rulers from Drambenburgian artesians. While Rococo art continued in prominence, visual art on the peninsula continued to decline up to the begining of the Romantic period, where Drambenburgian music was far more widespread than their visual art.

Pre-Historic

The Drambenburgian Alps are full of caves which contain paintings made by Neanderthal and early homosapien settlers of the peninsula. The first excavations began in the 1870s; however, mentions of the paintings can be found throughout Drambenburgian history in literature and histories. The oldest known mention of the paintings was made on several wood carvings in Eldar Futhark, sometime around the 2nd century CE. Latin historian Gaius Tiberius Crestus wrote about the caves in his Historiae Indigenae, attributing them to the Indiginous population of Drambenburg, which is now known to be anachronistic, as the Neanderthals and early homosapien settlers arrived during the late paeleolithic era, several millenia before the Algonquian peoples arrived in Drambenburg.

The cave paintings were made from combinations of different minerals and organic matter. Typical pigments were yellow and red ochre, umber, charcoal, burnt bones, and calcite. The Uranium-Thorium method was employed by researchers to date the cave paintings, putting them around 50,000 BCE. Depictions on the paintings varied vastly. Many contained imagery of hunters corraling Aurochs, using spears and fire. Other paintings contained cave bears, hand stencils, early domesticated equine species, and even wooly mamoths.

Along with paintings discovered in the caves, nearby settlements contained ancient artifacts, notable amongst them were pottery with artwork of daily life in the tribes and statuettes, often depicting women. The clay pottery was determined through radiographic and Carbon-14 dating to be from aproxomately 18,000 BCE. The pottery was most likely made by homosapien hunter-gatherer tribes living in the region that followed the migration of the Euronian Aurochs. Images on the pottery included women carying water from streams, families eating around fires, and wolf pups playing with children, showing early evidence of domestication of wolves.

Ancient

Along with early Algonquian settlers creating some jewelery from seashells and pottery, pre-Drambenburgian Euronians had a lot of artwork.

Early Medieval

Medieval

Renaissance

Baroque

Rococo

Neoclassicism

Romanticism

Modern Art

Contemporary Art