Àn extraordinary Sarmatian complex in the vicinity of Tiraspol on the left bank of the Lower Dniester
Închide
Conţinutul numărului revistei
Articolul precedent
Articolul urmator
119 0
SM ISO690:2012
SINIKA, Vitalij S., RAZUMOV, Serghei, LYSENKO, Sergey, TELNOV, Nicolai. Àn extraordinary Sarmatian complex in the vicinity of Tiraspol on the left bank of the Lower Dniester. In: Stratum plus, 2015, nr. 4, pp. 101-113. ISSN 1608-9057.
EXPORT metadate:
Google Scholar
Crossref
CERIF

DataCite
Dublin Core
Stratum plus
Numărul 4 / 2015 / ISSN 1608-9057 /ISSNe 1857-3533

Àn extraordinary Sarmatian complex in the vicinity of Tiraspol on the left bank of the Lower Dniester


Pag. 101-113

Sinika Vitalij S.1, Razumov Serghei2, Lysenko Sergey2, Telnov Nicolai3
 
1 T.G. Shevchenko State University of Pridnestrovie, Tiraspol,
2 Institute of Archaeology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine,
3 Institute of Cultural Heritage of the Academy of Sciences of Moldova
 
 
Disponibil în IBN: 20 aprilie 2023


Rezumat

In 2014, on the left bank of the Lower Dniester in the vicinity of Tiraspol a barrow was investigated with a single Sarmatian burial made in the pit. Despite devastation, some expressive grave goods were found ceramic pottery imports (three-handle bowl, "pyxes", fragments of the late Heraclean amphorae), a silver buckle and others. Wheel-made three-handle vessel has no analogies in the Sarmatian burials of the North-Western Black Sea littoral and it is a Carpian import, as well as is another wheel-made vessel with preserved lid and a fragment of a cup's rim. Similar lids are well known on Carpian sites and/or sites of free Dacians on the territory of the Romanian Moldova. Fragments of a late Heraclean amphora were also found in the burial. A silver buckle with all-in-one frame and plate is of particular interest. Similar products until now have not been met in the Sarmatian burials of the North-West Black Sea littoral. The closest analogy to this buckle is known on the necropolis of Kobyakovo settlement on the right bank of the Lower Don. Taking into account the dating of these finds we have enough basis to date the construction of the barrow by the second half of the second century AD. Dimensions of the funerary construction and a set of accompanying inventory indicate that the barrow was built to bury a Sarmatian nobleman. 

Cuvinte-cheie
Carpian ceramic imports, Late Heraclean amphora, Lower Dniester, Sarmatian noblemanly barrow, Second half of 2nd century AD, Silver buckle