Results 181 to 190 of about 7,141 (229)
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The Sarmatian Lance and the Sarmatian Horse-Riding Posture

Anthropology & Archeology of Eurasia, 2002
Heavy cavalry formation, introduced by the Sarmatian tribes during the first centuries C.E., can be rightfully considered their most ingenious invention, which subsequently had a great influence on the formation of medieval knighthood (Cardini 1981; Russian translation Cardini 1987).
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SARMATIAN GODDESS WITH TWO HORSES

RSUH/RGGU Bulletin. "Literary Theory. Linguistics. Cultural Studies" Series, 2022
The golden handle of the Early Sarmatian mirror from Mayerovskii III east from Volga River has an image of a goddess and two horses. The details of iconography of this personage and accompanying animals, their analogues in the Scythian and Sarmatian times are analyzed.
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Comprehensive Studies of Sarmatian Pendant Mirrors

Crystallography Reports
This study considers the elemental composition and manufacturing technology of mirrors of the so-called Sarmatian type. The examined mirrors are fortuitous discoveries originating from the territory of the Kerch Peninsula. All three objects are pendant mirrors with radial-beam ornamentation, which appeared at the turn of the 1st and 2nd centuries AD ...
A. V. Antipenko   +8 more
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The myth of the brackish Sarmatian Sea

Terra Nova, 2005
AbstractThe biota of the 1.5 Ma period of the Middle Miocene Sarmatian of the Central Paratethys lack stenohaline components. This was the reason to interpret the Sarmatian stage as transitional between the marine Badenian and the lacustrine Pannonian stages.
Werner E. Piller, Mathias Harzhauser
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The Sarmatians: The Creation of Archaeological Evidence

Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 2013
SummaryAccording to the general modern view the steppes of the northern Black Sea region, from the Danube to the Ural valleys, in the period from the third century BC to the mid‐third century AD, were inhabited by Sarmatian tribes using a burial mound rite.
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The Sarmatians.

Man, 1972
M. Branch, T. Sulimirski
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The Sarmatians

The American Historical Review, 1971
Bernard S. Bachrach, T. Sulimirskin
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Sarmatian

2021
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A Sarmatian Royal Burial at Novocherkassk

Antiquity, 1963
There is a large cemetery of barrows near the town of Novocherkassk, and one of the barrows, locally known as Khokhlach, was partly excavated about a hundred years ago. The finds from this Khokhlach excavation are generally known as ‘the Novocherkassk hoard’.
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New Data on Sarmatian Aglajidae (Gastropoda)

Paleontological Journal, 2023
A V Guzhov
exaly  

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