Tagisken
Tagisken
a burial ground on the Tagisken Plateau near the Syr Darya’s ancient bed (the Inkardar’ia) in Kzyl-Orda Oblast, Kazakh SSR. It was discovered in 1959 and excavated between 1960 and 1963 by the Khorezm Expedition of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR. Tagisken consists of two complexes: Northern Tagisken and Southern Tagisken.
Northern Tagisken is a necropolis for tribal chiefs of the ninth and eighth centuries B.C; the burials are in mausoleums of mud brick with added burial facilities for relatives and retinue. The funerary objects included gold and bronze earrings, carnelian beads, bronze arrowheads, and glazed clay pottery, both modeled and cast on a potter’s wheel, with incised geometric designs. The material culture shows traces of the traditions of late Bronze Age local cultures and was apparently linked to the more advanced culture of southern Middle Asia.
Southern Tagisken is a barrow burial ground of Saka tribes of the seventh to the fifth century B.C ; there are surface-level funerary structures and pit graves for both inhumations and cremations. Among the items found in the graves were horse harness sets, bronze arrowheads and mirrors, stone sacrificial altars, long swords in wooden scabbards, and modeled clay pottery. Decorative gold plaques and facings were done in the Scythian animal style, as were bronze articles that were part of equestrian gear. The material culture points to links with the Sauromatians of the southern Ural region, the Saka of the Kazakhstan steppes, and the Scythian-type cultures of Southern Siberia.
REFERENCES
Tolstov, S. P., and M. A. Itina. “Saki nizov’ev Syr-Dar’i (po materialam Tagiskena).” Sovetskaia arkheologiia, 1966, no. 2.Vishnevskaia, O. A., and M. A. Itina. “Rannie saki Priaral’ia.” In the collection Problemy skifskoi arkheologii. Moscow, 1971.
Vishnevskaia, O. A. Kul’tura sakskikh piemen nizov’ev Syrdar’i v VII-V vv. do n.e. Moscow, 1973.
M. A. ITINA