Ancient Scythians had cultural roots in Siberia

A possible sacrificial ritual from around 2,800 years ago suggests mounted herders from Siberia shaped a Eurasian culture thousands of kilometers away.

Oct 8, 2024 - 22:30
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Ancient Scythians had cultural roots in Siberia

A royal tomb points to eastern influences on Eurasia’s Scythian horse riders

A horse mandible and a bronze stirrup in dirt

This horse mandible and a bronze stirrup were unearthed from a 2,800-year-old royal tomb in Siberia. These and other artifacts hint the burial can have included a ritual wherein sacrificed servants and horses were propped up on the tomb as “spectral riders.”

Trevor Wallace

Horse-riding Scythian herders and warriors, who inhabited Central Asia and Eastern Europe around 2,five hundred years ago, can have had cultural roots a couple of thousand kilometers to the east in Siberia, a brand new learn about suggests (SN: 7/27/23).

Remains to be of not lower than one person and 18 horses found atop a roughly 2,800-year-old tomb in southern Siberia may come from a Scythian-style sacrificial ceremony for a king or other elite person interred there, archaeologist Gino Caspari and colleagues report October 7 in Antiquity. Artifacts recovered at the Tunnug 1 burial mound include two bronze belt fittings decorated with stylized animals like those in later Scythian art, horse-riding gear and metal and bone arrowheads.

People at Tunnug 1 belonged to an unidentified herding population, says Caspari, of the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology in Jena, Germany. “Cultural characteristics found at this early burial turned into key to the culture of Scythians tons further west.” That implies that mounted Siberians took only some hundred years to ride west across tons of Asia, influencing Scythians’ artistic and burial practices during the strategy, the researchers say.

Discoveries at the Siberian site may represent remnants of a burial ritual like that described by Greek historian Herodotus for deceased Scythian kings in Eurasia, the researchers say. In Herodotus’ written account, 50 sacrificed servants to the king were mounted on 50 sacrificed horses. The dead were held in place atop the ruler’s burial mound by stakes driven through their bodies, creating a gaggle of “spectral riders.”

Poor preservation of exposed bones at the Siberian site prevents recovery of the unique collection of people and horses on the mound’s upper surface. But remnants of birch stakes quite more than about a the Tunnug 1 bones and artifacts align with a spectral riders scenario, Caspari says.

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