E.V. Goldina. Beads in the Finno-Ugric Women’s Costume: The Evidence of Tarasovo Cemetery on the Middle Kama (0–500 AD)
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RU

 
 

Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology
of Eurasia

45 (2) 2017

 

DOI: 10.17746/1563-0110.2017.45.2.056-061

Annotation:    

Beads in the Finno-Ugric Women’s Costume:
The Evidence of Tarasovo Cemetery on the Middle Kama (0–500 AD)

E.V. Goldina

Udmurt State University, Universitetskaya 1, Izhevsk, 426000, Russia

Beads are the most frequent finds in 1st–5th century AD female burials at Tarasovo on the Middle Kama, the largest Finno-Ugric cemetery, dating to the Great Barbarian Migration era. Larger beads are common in burials of women aged 17–45, whereas seed beads were typically worn by girls and young women aged 13–29. This was probably because unmarried girls wore beanies embroidered with beads and bronze ornaments. Also, variously sized beads were attached to bands of the headdress, framing its bottom edges in one or more lines. Single beads found near the crania suggest that they were amulets. In one- and several-strand necklaces, beads alternated with bronze ornaments. Necklaces were often parts of gift sets, some of which are completely preserved, including the organic base. Larger beads were used as pendants. Some of them decorated strips, used for appending knives and other utensils to belts. All these ways of using beads are still practiced by Finno-Ugric women in the Ural area.

Keywords: Middle Kama, beads, female costume, headdress, necklace, pendants.