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Metal Jewellery in the Context of a Sanctuary: Interpretation Potential: A Case Study of Eklizi-Burun (Crimean Mountains)

Metal jewellery used as votive offerings is discovered at the “barbarian” mountain sanctuary of Eklizi-Burun (the Crimea) and dating from the 1st to the 3rd centuries AD . Most of these items were probably part of female costume known from funerary contexts in the Central Crimea, which differ both r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ancient civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 2019-12, Vol.25 (2), p.255-307
Main Authors: Lysenko, Aleksandr V., Mordvintseva, Valentina I.
Format: Article
Language:English
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Metal jewellery used as votive offerings is discovered at the “barbarian” mountain sanctuary of Eklizi-Burun (the Crimea) and dating from the 1st to the 3rd centuries AD . Most of these items were probably part of female costume known from funerary contexts in the Central Crimea, which differ both regarding their location (in the Crimean Foothills and on the South-Coast), as well as the specific features of the burial rite (“cremation” vs . “inhumation”). A small part of the jewellery is characteristic only for the cemeteries in the South-Coast area containing burials with remains of cremation. An analysis of the cultural environment, in which the jewellery items deposited in the Eklizi-Burun sanctuary of the Roman period were produced and used, suggests that its worshippers came from communities living on the southern macro-slope of the main ridge of the Crimean Mountains and practised cremation of the dead. Apparently, these people appeared in the Graeco-Roman narrative tradition and local epigraphic documents of the Roman period as “Tauri”, “Scythian-Tauri”, and “Tauro-Scythians” inhabiting “Taurica”. They are presumed to have appeared in the Crimean Mountains in the 2nd and 1st centuries BC (migrating from areas with archaeological cultures influenced by the La Tène culture?) and to have maintained their cultural identity until the beginning of the 5th century AD .
ISSN:0929-077X
1570-0577
DOI:10.1163/15700577-12341352