About one of the unique finds of the late pre-Scythian period from the Koban necropolis
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.31489/2024hph3/118-128Keywords:
Vienna Natural History Museum, Caucasian collection, Koban сulture, Koban cemetery, graves, 8th century BC, metalworking, bronze pin, horseman, bowAbstract
The Koban сulture is one of the most prominent cultural phenomena in the Caucasus region. Its materials arekept in many European museums and are the subject of interest of a wide scientific community. The Kobanassemblages stored in the Vienna Natural History Museum are among the most significant museum collec-tions of the Caucasian antiquities in Europe. This collection was acquired in the 19th century by FranzHeger, director of the anthropological and ethnographical department of the Museum, and includesmore than 30 representative burial complexes with highly informative artefacts of the eponymous site Kobannecropolis. These data are not yet known to researchers. The assemblages from Vienna are unique, becausethey belonged to the elite members of the society, whose burials included valuable grave goods and burialcostume elements. This makes the collection in Vienna a key site to be considered for research questions re-lated to the culture and history of the Central Caucasus between the 10th and 5th centuries BC. The followingarticle is devoted to the analysis of one of the most interesting finds from the Koban cemetery — a bronze pindecorated with the cast figure of a horseman discovered in the burial No. 1 (1884)