kurgan

burial mound

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Assorted References

  • burial practices
    • In Slavic religion: Communal banquets and related practices

      …the northwest, the so-called long kurgans (burial mounds), contained cinerary urns buried in the tumulus together and all at one time. Such a practice could occur only as the consequence of collective and simultaneous cremation. There must, therefore, have existed a periodic cremation season or date, as for the opening…

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history of

    • Scythian art
      • Scythian gold belt buckle
        In Scythian art

        …excavations of a number of kurgans throughout Central Asia and elsewhere have uncovered thousands of gold objects (often in a single kurgan), as well as bronze, iron, silver, and electrum artifacts. Those objects demonstrate Scythian knowledge and mastery of metal casting, plastic shaping, joining, decorative, and finishing techniques.

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    • Scythian people
      • Scythian gold belt buckle
        In Scythian

        …Russian and other anthropologists excavating kurgans in such places as Tyva and Kazakhstan.

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      • Scythian gold belt buckle
        In Scythian

        …left elaborate graves—such as the kurgans in the Valley of the Tsars (or Kings) near Arzhan, 40 miles (60 km) from Kyzyl, Tyva—filled with richly worked articles of gold, as well as beads of turquoise, carnelian, and amber, and many other valuable objects. This class of chieftains, the Royal Scyths,…

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    • Steppe cultures
      • Eurasian steppes
        In the Steppe: The great dispersal

        …a very large number of kurgans—i.e., mounds of earth raised atop chieftains’ graves—exist in the Western Steppe attests to the availability of relatively abundant manpower in ancient times, but, again, such monuments were raised by a chieftain’s followers, who were gathered for the purpose from afar and temporarily.

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    • Transcaucasia
      • In history of Transcaucasia

        …thousands of burial mounds, or kurgans, on the steppes of Ciscaucasia. This Kuban culture, which lasted through the Late Bronze Age into Early Iron Age times, was undoubtedly stimulated by contact with the higher civilization of Mesopotamia. The grave furniture of the kurgans, as in the famous royal grave at…

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