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Resumen de A spectral cavalcade: Early Iron Age horse sacrifice at a royal tomb in southern Siberia

Timur Sadykov, Jegor Blochin, William T.T. Taylor, Daria Fomicheva, Alexei Kasparov, Sergey Khavrin, Anna Malyutina, Sönke Szidat, Gino Caspari

  • Horses began to feature prominently in funerary contexts in southern Siberia in the mid-second millennium BC, yet little is known about the use of these animals prior to the emergence of vibrant horse-riding groups in the first millennium BC. Here, the authors present the results of excavations at the late-ninth-century BC tomb of Tunnug 1 in Tuva, where the deposition of the remains of at least 18 horses and one human is reminiscent of sacrificial spectral riders described in fifth-century Scythian funerary rituals by Herodotus. The discovery of items of tack further reveals connections to the earliest horse cultures of Mongolia.


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