Tovsta Mohyla
Tovsta Mohyla (Ukrainian Товста Могила) is an ancient Scythian burial mound or kurgan and treasure discovered in 1971 by the Ukrainian archaeologist Borys Mozolevski. The Tovsta Mohyla burial mound, meaning "fat barrow", is located in southern Ukraine near the city of Pokrov in Dnipro region.[1]
History
The ancient Scythians were a semi-nomadic Proto-Indo-European Iranian-speaking people that lived around the northern area of the Black Sea with the territory that stretched up into the Ural and Altai Mountain region. Their culture is thought to have lasted almost 1000 years, during which time they traded regularly with many Mediterranean and Asian cultures including the ancient Greeks, the ancient Persians and the ancient Chinese.[1]
Classical Scythians dominated the Pontic steppe from about the 7th century BC up until the 3rd century BC.[2]
In Ukraine, whose territory Herodotus described in his story of the Scythians, found perhaps the largest and most significant burial places of that era.
Excavation
A large royal Scythian kurgan of the 4th century BC named Tovsta Mohyla was excavated in 1971 by Borys Mozolevsky. He unearthed two burial vaults of Scythian nobles. The central vault had been looted, but the side vault, dating from the later period, was intact. The central vault contained remains of a Scythian nobleman; the side vault contained five skeletons, with the main ones belonging to a Scythian noblewoman and a child.[3]
The skeletons in the mound were generously covered with gold. Among the weapons, various ornaments, and items of clothing, the Golden Pectoral stood out. The style of the ornament is certainly Greek, although the imagery reflects Scythian interests. The pectoral is made of solid 24 carat gold, with a diameter of 12 inches (30.6 cm) and weighs just over 2.5 pounds (1150 g).[1]
To the east of the central tomb were found two horse graves with the burial of six horses. Their armor is richly decorated with gold, silver, and bronze jewelry. The horses in the afterlife world were to be served by three slain servants.
The noble dead were accompanied to the afterlife world by four slain servants. At the entrances to the grave, there were wheels from disassembled hearses, in a separate utility niche - a bronze cauldron and a frying pan. Above one of the entrance pits, a large set of bronze ornaments from a funeral procession was found. Among them are six openwork bronze tops made of the corral, decorated with stylized images of deer and griffins.[5]
The collection is now housed at the Museum of Historical Treasures of Ukraine in Kyiv.[6]
The finds of the Tovsta Mohyla are another convincing evidence of the high level of the material culture of the whole steppe Scythia.
- Scythian Pectoral (detail 1)
- Scythian Pectoral (detail 2)
- Scythian Pectoral (detail 3)
- Scythian Pectoral (detail 4)
- Scythian Pectoral (detail 5)
- Scythian Pectoral (detail 6)
- Scythian Pectoral (detail 7)
- Scythian Pectoral (detail 8)
Notes
- Kuzych and Bekhtir, "The golden pectoral from Tovsta Mohyla.".
- Cernenko, E. V. (2012). The Scythians 700–300 BC. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1780967738.: "The Scythians lived in the Early Iron Age, and inhabited the northern areas of the Black Sea (Pontic) steppes. Though the 'Scythian period' in the history of Eastern Europe lasted little more than 400 years, from the 7th to the 3rd centuries BC, the impression these horsemen made upon the history of their times was such that a thousand years after they had ceased to exist as a sovereign people, their heartland and the territories which they dominated far beyond it continued to be known as 'greater Scythia'."
- Tovsta Mohyla
- Terminator (2006-08-18), Українська: Золота пектораль. IV століття до н. е. Товста Могила, retrieved 2017-03-06
- 1971 - на Дніпропетровщині виявлено золоту пектораль
- Скіфи (Viii Ст. До Н.Е. – Iii Ст. Н.Е.) - Музей Історичних Коштовностей України
References
- Ingert Kuzych and Volodymyr Bekhtir (November 7, 2009). "The golden pectoral from Tovsta Mohyla". FOCUS ON PHILATELY. The Ukrainian Weekly. Retrieved February 24, 2015.