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Book Synopsis

Džarkutan Nekropole 4A presents a catalogue of the Late Bronze Age necropolis of Džarkutan 4a in Southern Uzbekistan.Excavated in the 1970s, the graveyard contained 719 burials of the 20th-16th c. BC, of the so-called Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex (BMAC). Apart from the site of Gonur, this is the largest scientifically studied prehistoric necropolis of Central Asia. While some material has been discussed in earlier publications, the individual descriptions of the burials and a large part of the inventories are published here for the first time. For some 350 graves, ceramic drawings or photographs were pulled together from archives, museum collections and the excavators'' personal records. About 40% of the material originally excavated - and some 60% of the complete vessels excavated - could be assembled. The catalogue is preceded by a short introduction into the culture, history, and research history of the Late Bronze Age of Central Asia, and followed by a discus

Dzarkutan Nekropole 4a

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    A Paperback by Boriboi Abdullaev

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      View other formats and editions of Dzarkutan Nekropole 4a by Boriboi Abdullaev

      Publisher: Archaeopress
      Publication Date: 1/2/2024
      ISBN13: 9781803277677, 978-1803277677
      ISBN10: 180327767X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Džarkutan Nekropole 4A presents a catalogue of the Late Bronze Age necropolis of Džarkutan 4a in Southern Uzbekistan.Excavated in the 1970s, the graveyard contained 719 burials of the 20th-16th c. BC, of the so-called Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex (BMAC). Apart from the site of Gonur, this is the largest scientifically studied prehistoric necropolis of Central Asia. While some material has been discussed in earlier publications, the individual descriptions of the burials and a large part of the inventories are published here for the first time. For some 350 graves, ceramic drawings or photographs were pulled together from archives, museum collections and the excavators'' personal records. About 40% of the material originally excavated - and some 60% of the complete vessels excavated - could be assembled. The catalogue is preceded by a short introduction into the culture, history, and research history of the Late Bronze Age of Central Asia, and followed by a discus

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