Results 11 to 20 of about 163 (128)
Eastern Traditions and Innovations in Sarmatian Monuments of Second Half of the 2nd – 4th cc. AD
The appearance of the monuments of the late Sarmatian culture has been recorded since the middle of the 2nd century AD on a vast territory from the Southern Urals to the Lower Don.
Mikhail V. Krivosheev
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FIBULES OF ‘ALMGREN-156’ IN THE CHRONOLOGY OF MONUMENTS OF THE MIDDLE KAMA REGION
The article is devoted to the issue of the change of cultures in the Kama region at the turn of the Early Iron Age and the early Middle Ages, and continues the cycle of works on this issue.
Krasnoperov A.A.
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Diagonal Burials as a Marker of Succession of Sarmatian Cultures in the First Centuries AD
The paper is devoted to studying diagonal funerary complexes as markers of Sarmatian cultures succession in the first centuries AD. The research is based on the analysis of the Middle Sarmatian and Late Sarmatian diagonal burial rite and on the ...
Mariya A. Balabanova +1 more
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Assessment of flash flood susceptibility potential in Moldavian Plain (Romania)
Abstract Concentration of time (Tc) is a frequently used parameter in the evaluation of the hydrological response of different sizes hydrographic basin in case of rainfall events. The present study is innovative, because it has created an index that identifies the small‐sized hydrographic basins that are exposed to the risk of flooding.
Marina Iosub +3 more
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Western Elements in the Late Sarmatian Monuments
The Late Sarmatian culture has oriental origin. This culture practically does not have the features of funeral rite, which can be associated with the influence of ancient word. After the middle of the 2nd century AD, imported items of Roman or Provincial-
Mikhail V. Krivosheev
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Bucket-shaped pendants were broadly diffused in various cultural environments from the area comprised between the north-east of the Black Sea and Central Europe. This study attempts, without aiming at being exhaustive, to analyse the objects of this type
Bârcă, Vitalie
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Home thoughts of abroad: Ohthere’s Voyage in its Anglo‐Saxon context
The Old English text known as Ohthere’s Voyage is regarded as a key source for Norwegian history. Consequently, the context of its composition and inclusion in the Old English Orosius has often been overlooked. This article demonstrates that the text cannot be separated from the processes that shaped it during its early transmission.
Ben Allport
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Introduction. The article presents the results of the analysis of mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosome samples obtained from the representatives of Sarmatian populations from the Lower Volga region belonging to all stages of the culture.
Aleksandr S. Pilipenko +6 more
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This article considers the issues of continuity and innovations in the middle and late Sarmatian cultures on the materials of Staritsa burial mound.
Mikhail V. Krivosheev +2 more
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Materials of Burial Mound Ust-Pogozhye
Six burial mounds were excavated near the village of Ust-Pogozhye in the Ilovlinsky District of the Volgograd Region on the Berdiya River (the tributary of the Ilovlya River). There were burials of Yamna culture, Сatacomb culture and Srubna culture which
Vladislav I. Mamontov, Vasiliy V. Mataev
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