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Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia
50 (1) 2022
doi:10.17746/1563-0110.2022.50.1.091-098
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Annotation:
A Group of Large Kurgans in the Suusamyr Valley,
Kyrgyzstan
K.T. Akmatov1, K.S. Tabaldiev1, A. Balarie2, A. Sara?an2, and A.-C. Ardelean2
1Kyrgyz-Turkish Manas University, Chyngyz Aitmatov pr. 56, Bishkek, 720038, Kyrgyz Republic
2National Museum of Banat, Bastionul Maria Theresia, Martin Luther 4, Timi?oara, 300223, Romania
We introduce recently discovered large kurgans of the Saka period in the Suusamyr valley, northern Kyrgyzstan. There are two cemeteries with large mounds, each of which is surrounded by ditches, stone enclosures, and ramparts. Apparently, each kurgan and the constructions around it form a whole burial complex. The kurgans are rounded in plan view, 30-73 m in diameter. Some were possibly square in plan view. West of them, there is a line of enclosures, most of which consist of eight boulders. In terms of nature and form of the constructions around kurgans, the burial complexes fall into six types, each of which is described in detail. Parallels are found among Early Iron Age cemeteries in the Tian Shan, Semirechye, central and eastern Kazakhstan. Common and distinctive features of the Suusamyr group are listed. On the basis of the comparative analysis, the group dates to 800/700-200 BC. We conclude that the kurgans were destined for the Saka elite, and were constructed over several generations. The materials of the study allow us to state that the alpine Suusamyr valley, which is hard to access, was a key political and/or cult center of the Tian Shan in the Saka period.
Keywords: Tian Shan, Suusamyr valley, Early Iron Age, large kurgans, eight-stone enclosures