RAS History & PhilologyRussian archeology

  • ISSN (Print) 0869-6063
  • ISSN (Online)3034-5774

LATE NOMADIC RITUAL BURIAL IN STAVROPOL REGION

PII
S0869-60630000402-5-1
DOI
Publication type
Article
Status
Published
Authors
Volume/ Edition
Volume / Issue 2
Pages
147-155
Abstract

The article publishes the unique medieval kurgan burial which was discovered in the Northern Caucasus near the city of Nevinnomyssk (Stavropol Krai). Under the small mound there were two burials from the second half of the 13th – the beginning of the 14th cc. One of the burials contained the skull, with the cervical vertebra, of a young man, and a ram’s carcass without the head. The ritual assemblage was in a pit with wooden blocks and birchbark. The grave goods included a gold earring, a jet bead, a small piece of fl int, iron rings, a buckle, a steel, a socket, arrowheads, etc), and the cannon-bone of another ram. The single known analogy for this “composite” medieval burial of human and animal remains comes from the classical antiquity stratum at Kara-Tobe in the Northwestern Crimea. Even though medieval burials in the steppe zone of Eurasia often contained animal remains, rams are not a frequent fi nd, and are encountered mainly in the Transbaikalia, the Tuva and the Altai. The assemblage is important for the study of the complex spiritual notions and of the ethnic and cultural situation in the steppes of Southeastern Europe during the period of emergence and early development of the Golden Horde.

Keywords
Date of publication
01.04.2010
Number of purchasers
2
Views
645

References

QR
Translate

Индексирование

Scopus

Scopus

Scopus

Crossref

Scopus

Higher Attestation Commission

At the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation

Scopus

Scientific Electronic Library