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Among all the hoards consisting the ceremonial akinakai, defining swords and daggers of Iranian origin), the assemblage of items discovered in 1882 near the Vettersfelde village (Poland) is the most reliable. Judging by the plots... more
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      Scythian archaeologyAncient Greek and Roman ArtAncient GreeceEarly European Nomads
The book is written by anthropologists, historians, and archaeologists specializing in nomadic studies. All the chapters presented here discuss various aspects of one significant problem: how could small nomadic peoples at the outskirts... more
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      Social TheoryArchaeologyAnthropologySocial Anthropology
There are presented some new and previously unknown findings of akinakai from the territory of the Republic of Moldova in this article. These akinakai belong to Scythian culture and could be attributed to Kelermes type. The chronological... more
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      Eurasian NomadsScythian archaeologyAncient WarfareEarly Iron Age
The paper is an attempt to reveal the structure of the distribution of swords and daggers of Scythian period in Carpathian-Dniester region from the chronological, functional, cultural, landscape and contextual points of view. The Scythian... more
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      Iron Age (Archaeology)Scythian archaeologyAncient WarfareIron Age
Bronze cauldrons of the Scythian time are a rather rare find in the Northern Black Sea region, especially on its western borders. Therefore, those few items found on the territory of the Republic of Moldova occupy a worthy place in the... more
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      Scythian archaeologyEarly Iron AgeHallstattEarly European Nomads
Swords and daggers of the Scythian period, known under the generalizing term such as “akinakai” are characterized by encyclopedias and dictionaries as short swords of the Iranian peoples. Indeed, this definition is relevant for most of... more
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      Eurasian NomadsNomadic PeoplesNomadismScythian archaeology
In the spring of 1972 as a result of construction work in the Pîrjolteni village (Călărași district, Republic of Moldova) was occasionally discovered a cremation with a various grave goods represented by the ceramic items, elements of... more
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      Iron Age (Archaeology)Scythian archaeologyAncient WarfareIron Age
The paper presents a recently discovered silver leg overlays and a fragment of a wooden leg, which belonged to an item of luxury furniture (most probably a throne) of the Achaemenid type in the vicinity of the «royal» Barrow-mound no. 1... more
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      Early European NomadsBarrow ground Filippovka 1
There are known at least 69 swords decorated with precious metals from 52 locations of Eurasia in 8th–4th centuries BC. The ceremonial swords and daggers are usually longer (than ordinary items) and older (than the rest of the grave... more
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      Eurasian NomadsScythian archaeologyEarly European NomadsScythians
The overwhelming majority of finds of ceremonialswords and daggers (i.e. decorated with gold and put in the special context) of the Iranian world are associated with aristocratic burial complexes, including “stray finds”, which, probably,... more
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      Eurasian NomadsScythian archaeologyEarly Iron AgeEarly European Nomads
In 1894, an iron dagger was discovered in the vicinity of Vršac in Serbia and later given to the City Museum. Afterwards, this dagger had been repeatedly entered in various archaeological publications illustrating the different cultural... more
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      Iron Age (Archaeology)Scythian archaeologyEuropean ArchaeologyAncient Warfare
This paper publishes two finds of Early nomadic weaponry in Central Bessarabia — iron pre-Scythian dagger from Braneshti and Scythian akinakes of Kelermes type from Vatich. The analysis of technical features and distribution of types is... more
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      Scythian archaeologyWarfareCultEarly European Nomads