Female burials with weapons in the early nomadic kurgans in the Southern Urals (late 5th to 2nd centuries BC)
Автор: Berseneva N.A.
Журнал: Археология, этнография и антропология Евразии @journal-aeae-ru
Рубрика: Эпоха палеометалла
Статья в выпуске: 1 т.50, 2022 года.
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An attempt is made to classify, analyze, and interpret female burials with weapons in the graves of early nomads in the Southern Urals, dating to late 5th-2nd centuries BC. In the Early Iron Age, this vast region was a center of the nomadic elite. The sample includes 23 graves with 24 buried individuals at well documented cemeteries. Only individuals for whom skeletal sex indicators are available have been included. Criteria and opinions are revised. Weapons in female burials include mostly quiver sets; whereas daggers, swords, and spearheads are rare. The placement of weapons was the same as in male burials: bladed weapons were placed on the right side, with hilts directed to the right hand, whereas quivers were found mostly on the left side. The remaining funerary items were exactly like in other female burials: there were numerous ornaments, bronze mirrors, spindle whorls, and stone altars. Female burials with weapons were found in kurgans regardless of social status. Apparently, those women represented all social strata, from elite to low-ranking nomads. Nothing indicates the existence of female military units, which, however, does not imply that women took no part in armed conflicts or did not use weapons to protect themselves and their homes.
Southern urals, early iron age, early nomads, burial mounds, female burials with weapons, amazons
Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/145146521
IDR: 145146521 | DOI: 10.17746/1563-0102.2022.50.1.099-105