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Chernyakhov culture

The Chernyakhov culture, Cherniakhiv culture[2][3][4] or Sântana de Mureș—Chernyakhov culture[5][6][7] was an archaeological culture that flourished between the 2nd and 5th centuries CE in a wide area of Eastern Europe, specifically in what is now Ukraine, Romania, Moldova and parts of Belarus. The culture is thought to be the result of a multiethnic cultural mix of the Geto-Dacian, Sarmatian, and Gothic populations of the area.[8] "In the past, the association of this [Chernyakhov] culture with the Goths was highly contentious, but important methodological advances have made it irresistible."[9]

  Wielbark culture in the early 3rd century
  Chernyakhov culture in the early 4th century
  Chernyakhov culture, 4th c.
Invasions of the Roman Empire
Timec. 300–800 or later[1]
PlaceEurope and the Mediterranean region
EventTribes invading the declining Roman Empire

The Chernyakhov culture territorially replaced its predecessor, the Zarubintsy culture. Both cultures were discovered by the Czech-Ukrainian archaeologist, Vikentiy Khvoyka, who conducted numerous excavations around Kyiv and its vicinity. With the invasion of Huns, the culture declined and was replaced with the Penkovka culture (or the culture of the Antes).

Similarities have been noted between the Chernyakhov culture and the Wielbark culture, which was located closer to the Baltic Sea.

Location and nomenclature edit

The Chernyakhov culture encompassed regions of modern Ukraine, Moldova, and Romania.[10] The spelling Chernyakhov is the transliteration from Russian for an archaeological site in the vicinity of Kyiv, modern Ukraine. Other spellings include Cherniakhiv (Ukrainian), Czerniachów (Polish), and several others. The culture has also been named after Sântana de Mureș, a cemetery site in Transylvania, Romania, spelled Sîntana de Mureș before 1993. This site is also known as Marosszentanna, the formerly official Hungarian name under which the first excavations took place.[11] The dual name reflects past preferential use by different schools of history (Romanian and Soviet) to designate the culture.[citation needed]

Origins edit

In the earlier half of the 20th century, scholars spent much energy debating the ethnic affinity of people in the Chernyakhov zone. Soviet scholars, such as Boris Rybakov, saw it as the archaeological reflection of the Proto-Slavs,[12] but western, especially German, historians, and Polish archeologists attributed it to the Goths. According to Kazimierz Godłowski (1979), the origins of Slavic culture should be connected with the areas of the upper Dnieper River basin (the Kyiv culture) while the Chernyakhov culture with the federation of the Goths.[13] However, the remains of archaeologically visible material culture and their link with ethnic identity are not as clear as originally thought.

Today, scholars recognize the Chernyakhov zone as representing a cultural interaction of a diversity of peoples, but predominantly those who already existed in the region,[14] whether it be the Sarmatians,[15] or the Getae-Dacians (some authors believe that the Getae-Dacians played the leading role in the creation of the culture).[16]

Finds edit

Funerary rites edit

Both inhumation and cremation were practiced. The dead were buried with grave goods – pottery, iron implements, bone combs, personal ornaments, although in later periods grave goods decrease. Of the inhumation burials, the dead were usually buried in a north–south axis (with head to north), although a minority are in east–west orientation. Funerary gifts often include fibulae, belt buckles, bone combs, glass drinking vessels and other jewelry. Women's burials in particular shared very close similarities with Wielbark forms - buried with two fibulae, one on each shoulder. Like in the Wielbark culture, Chernyakhov burials usually lack weapons as funerary gifts, except in a few cremation burials reminiscent of Przeworsk influences.[17] Although cremation burials are traditionally associated with Dacian, Germanic and Slavic peoples, and inhumation is suggestive of nomadic practice, careful analysis suggests that the mixed burials were of an earlier period, whilst toward the end there was a trend toward inhumation burials without grave goods. This could be the result of the influences of Christianity, but could just as easily be explained in terms of an evolution of non-Christian beliefs about the afterlife.

Ceramic wares edit

 
Finds from the Budeşti Necropolis in Raionul Criuleni, Moldova, 3rd/4th centuries.

Pottery was predominantly of local production, being both wheel and hand-made. Wheel made pottery predominated, and was made of finer clay. It was reminiscent of earlier Sarmatian types, refined by Roman and La Tene influences. Hand made pottery showed a greater variety in form, and was sometimes decorated with incised linear motifs. In addition, Roman amphorae are also found, suggesting trade contacts with the Roman world. There is also a small, but regular, presence of distinct hand–made pottery typical of that found in western Germanic groups, suggesting the presence of Germanic groups.

Economy edit

The Chernyakhov people were primarily a settled population involved in cultivation of cereals – especially wheat, barley and millet. Finds of ploughshares, sickles and scythes have been frequent. Cattle breeding was the primary mode of animal husbandry, and the breeding of horses appears to have been restricted to the open steppe. Metalworking skills were widespread throughout the culture, and local smiths produced much of the implements, although there is some evidence of production specialization.

Decline edit

The Chernyakhov culture ends in the 5th century, attributed to the arrival of the Huns.[15] The collapse of the culture is no longer explained in terms of population displacement, although there was an outmigration of Goths. Around 370, a series of events including the presence of Huns at the eastern edge of the culture culminated with the death of Ermanaric, the leader of Gothic confederation, and his successor, Athanaric, found refuge south of Danube along with most of the Gothic population.[18] Rather, more recent theories explain the collapse of the Chernyakhov culture in terms of a disruption of the hierarchical political structure that maintained it. John Mathews suggests that, despite its cultural homogeneity, a sense of ethnic distinction was kept between the disparate peoples. Some of the autochthonous elements persist,[19] and become even more widespread, after the demise of the Gothic elite – a phenomenon associated with the rise and expansion of the early Slavs.

Migration and diffusion theories edit

Migration edit

Whilst acknowledging the mixed origins of the Chernyakhov culture, Peter Heather suggests that the culture is ultimately a reflection of the Goths' domination of the Pontic area. He cites literary sources that attest that the Goths were the centre of political attention at this time.[20] In particular, the culture's development corresponds well with Jordanes' tale of Gothic migration from Gothiscandza to Oium, under the leadership of Filimer. Moreover, he highlights that crucial external influences that catalysed Chernyakhov cultural development derived from the Wielbark culture. Originating in the mid-1st century, it spread from south of the Baltic Sea (from territory around later Pomerania) down the Vistula in the 2nd and 3rd centuries. Wielbark elements are prominent in the Chernyakhov zone, such as typical 'Germanic' pottery, brooch types and female costume, and, in particular, weaponless bi-ritual burials. Although cultures may spread without substantial population movements, Heather draws attention to a decrease in the number of settlements in the original Pomeranian Wielbark heartland as evidence of a significant population movement. Combined with Jordanes' account, Heather concludes that a movement of Goths (and other east Germanic groups such as Heruli and Gepids) "played a major role in the creation of the Cernjachove culture".[21] He clarifies that this movement was not a single, royal-led, migration, but was rather accomplished by a series of small, sometimes mutually antagonistic groups.[22]

Diffusion edit

However, Guy Halsall challenges some of Heather's conclusions. He sees no chronological development from the Wielbark to Chernyakhov culture, given that the latter stage of the Wielbark culture is synchronous with Chernyakhov, and the two regions have minimal territorial overlap. "Although it is often claimed that Cernjachov metalwork derives from Wielbark types, close examination reveals no more than a few types with general similarities to Wielbark types".[23] Michael Kulikowski also challenges the Wielbark connection, highlighting that the greatest reason for Wielbark-Chernyakhov connection derives from a "negative characteristic" (i.e., the absence of weapons in burials), which is less convincing proof than a positive one. He argues that the Chernyakhov culture could just as likely have been an indigenous development of local Pontic, Carpic or Dacian cultures, or a blended culture resulting from Przeworsk and steppe interactions. Furthermore, he altogether denies the existence of Goths prior to the 3rd century. Kulikowski states that no Gothic people, nor even a noble kernel, migrated from Scandinavia or the Baltic. Rather, he suggests that the "Goths" formed in situ. Like the Alemanni or the Franks, the Goths were a "product of the Roman frontier".[24]

Other influences, such as a minority of burials containing weapons, are seen from the Przeworsk and Zarubinec cultures. The latter has been connected with early Slavs.[15]

Genetics edit

In 2019, a genetic study of various cultures of the Eurasian Steppe, including the Chernyakhov culture, was published in Current Biology. Out of 31 ancient individuals tested, three samples from three individuals which the authors identified with "Ukrainian post-Scythian Chernyakhiv culture" were analyzed. They "overlapped with modern Europeans, representing the most "western" range of variation among the groups of this study", with 64.8% of Yamnaya-like ancestry, "lacking the Altaian component entirely" and having "higher proportion" of Central European Middle Neolithic ancestry (35.2%) than historically earlier samples from the region. They suggest the culture was a multi-ethnic mix, but the samples "appear to represent its Gothic component". Their mtDNA haplogroups were H1n6, H1c and T2g1.[25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Allgemein Springer (2006), der auch auf alternative Definitionen außerhalb der communis opinio hinweist. Alle Epochengrenzen sind letztlich nur ein Konstrukt und vor allem durch Konvention begründet. Vgl. auch Stefan Krautschick: Zur Entstehung eines Datums. 375 – Beginn der Völkerwanderung. In: Klio 82, 2000, S. 217–222 sowie Stefan Krautschick: Hunnensturm und Germanenflut: 375 – Beginn der Völkerwanderung? In: Byzantinische Zeitschrift 92, 1999, S. 10–67.
  2. ^ "Entry Display Web Page".
  3. ^ Rudych, Tetiana (2022). "The Population of the Cherniakhiv Culture According to the Materials of the Cherkasy Centre Burial Ground (Craniological Aspect)". Arheologia (1): 86–100. doi:10.15407/arheologia2022.01.086. S2CID 248842142.
  4. ^ "Migration Period between Odra and Vistula - Ostrogoths".
  5. ^ Halsall 2007.
  6. ^ Kulikowski 2007.
  7. ^ Matthews & Heather 1991, p. 47.
  8. ^ Eiddon, Edwards & Heather 1998, p. 488.
  9. ^ Matthews & Heather 1991, pp. 88–92.
  10. ^ Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 104.
  11. ^ Kovács, I. (1912). "A marosszentannai népvándorláskori temetö". Dolgozatok (3): 250 ff.
  12. ^ Barford 2001, p. 40.
  13. ^ Buko 2008, p. 58.
  14. ^ Halsall 2007, p. 132: "The Cernjachov culture is a mixture of all sorts of influences, but most come from existing cultures in the region"
  15. ^ a b c Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 106.
  16. ^ Matthews & Heather 1991, p. 90.
  17. ^ Heather 1998, p. 47.
  18. ^ Opreanu, Coriolan Horațiu (2003). Transilvania la sfârșitul antichității și în perioada migrațiilor [Transylvania at the End of Antiquity and the during the Migration Period]. Nereamia Napocae. pp. 130–131. ISBN 973-7951-12-3.
  19. ^ Matthews & Heather 1991, p. 91: "settlement was continuous from the period of the Sintana de Mures/ Cernjachov Culture right through the Migration Period into the Middle Ages proper"
  20. ^ Matthews & Heather 1991, p. 94.
  21. ^ Heather 1998, pp. 22, 23.
  22. ^ Heather 1998, pp. 43, 44.
  23. ^ Halsall 2007, p. 133.
  24. ^ Kulikowski 2007, pp. 60–68.
  25. ^ Järve 2019.

Sources edit

  • Mallory, James P.; Adams, Douglas Q. (1997), Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture, Taylor & Francis, ISBN 1-884964-98-2
  • Heather, Peter (2006), The Fall of the Roman Empire: A New History of Rome and the Barbarians, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-515954-3
  • Eiddon, Iorwerth; Edwards, Stephen; Heather, Peter (1998), "Goths & Huns", The Late Empire, The Cambridge Ancient History, vol. 13, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-30200-5
  • Barford, Paul M (2001), The Early Slavs: Culture and Society in Early Medieval Eastern Europe, Cornell University Press, ISBN 0-8014-3977-9
  • Halsall, Guy (2007), Barbarian migrations and the Roman West, 376-568, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-43491-1
  • Curta, Florin (2001). The Making of the Slavs: History and Archaeology of the Lower Danube Region, c. 500–700. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139428880.
  • Järve, Mari (July 22, 2019). "Shifts in the Genetic Landscape of the Western Eurasian Steppe Associated with the Beginning and End of the Scythian Dominance". Current Biology. 29 (14): 2430–2441. Bibcode:2019CBio...29E2430J. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2019.06.019. PMID 31303491. Genetic makeup agrees with the Gothic source of post- Scythian Chernyakhiv culture
  • Kossinna, Gustaf (1911). Die Herkunft der Germanen: zur methode der Siedlungsarchäologie (in German). Würzburg: C. Kabitzsch.
  • Matthews, John; Heather, Peter (1991), The Goths in the fourth century, Liverpool University Press, ISBN 0-85323-426-4
  • Heather, Peter J (1998), The Goths, Wiley-Blackwell, ISBN 0-631-20932-8
  • Kulikowski, Michael (2007), Rome's Gothic Wars: from the third century to Alaric, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-84633-2
  • Buko, Andrzej (2008), The Archeology of Early Medieval Poland. Discoveries-Hypotheses-Interpretations, Brill, ISBN 978-90-04-16230-3

External links edit

  • , summary in English translation of a text by Valentin V. Sedov, originally in Russian (V. V. Sedov: "Slavyane v drevnosti", Moscow 1994).

chernyakhov, culture, cherniakhiv, culture, sântana, mureș, archaeological, culture, that, flourished, between, centuries, wide, area, eastern, europe, specifically, what, ukraine, romania, moldova, parts, belarus, culture, thought, result, multiethnic, cultur. The Chernyakhov culture Cherniakhiv culture 2 3 4 or Santana de Mureș Chernyakhov culture 5 6 7 was an archaeological culture that flourished between the 2nd and 5th centuries CE in a wide area of Eastern Europe specifically in what is now Ukraine Romania Moldova and parts of Belarus The culture is thought to be the result of a multiethnic cultural mix of the Geto Dacian Sarmatian and Gothic populations of the area 8 In the past the association of this Chernyakhov culture with the Goths was highly contentious but important methodological advances have made it irresistible 9 Gotaland Gotland Wielbark culture in the early 3rd century Chernyakhov culture in the early 4th century Roman Empire Chernyakhov culture 4th c Invasions of the Roman EmpireTimec 300 800 or later 1 PlaceEurope and the Mediterranean regionEventTribes invading the declining Roman Empire The Chernyakhov culture territorially replaced its predecessor the Zarubintsy culture Both cultures were discovered by the Czech Ukrainian archaeologist Vikentiy Khvoyka who conducted numerous excavations around Kyiv and its vicinity With the invasion of Huns the culture declined and was replaced with the Penkovka culture or the culture of the Antes Similarities have been noted between the Chernyakhov culture and the Wielbark culture which was located closer to the Baltic Sea Contents 1 Location and nomenclature 2 Origins 3 Finds 3 1 Funerary rites 3 2 Ceramic wares 3 3 Economy 3 4 Decline 4 Migration and diffusion theories 4 1 Migration 4 2 Diffusion 5 Genetics 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksLocation and nomenclature editThe Chernyakhov culture encompassed regions of modern Ukraine Moldova and Romania 10 The spelling Chernyakhov is the transliteration from Russian for an archaeological site in the vicinity of Kyiv modern Ukraine Other spellings include Cherniakhiv Ukrainian Czerniachow Polish and several others The culture has also been named after Santana de Mureș a cemetery site in Transylvania Romania spelled Sintana de Mureș before 1993 This site is also known as Marosszentanna the formerly official Hungarian name under which the first excavations took place 11 The dual name reflects past preferential use by different schools of history Romanian and Soviet to designate the culture citation needed Origins editIn the earlier half of the 20th century scholars spent much energy debating the ethnic affinity of people in the Chernyakhov zone Soviet scholars such as Boris Rybakov saw it as the archaeological reflection of the Proto Slavs 12 but western especially German historians and Polish archeologists attributed it to the Goths According to Kazimierz Godlowski 1979 the origins of Slavic culture should be connected with the areas of the upper Dnieper River basin the Kyiv culture while the Chernyakhov culture with the federation of the Goths 13 However the remains of archaeologically visible material culture and their link with ethnic identity are not as clear as originally thought Today scholars recognize the Chernyakhov zone as representing a cultural interaction of a diversity of peoples but predominantly those who already existed in the region 14 whether it be the Sarmatians 15 or the Getae Dacians some authors believe that the Getae Dacians played the leading role in the creation of the culture 16 Finds editFunerary rites edit Both inhumation and cremation were practiced The dead were buried with grave goods pottery iron implements bone combs personal ornaments although in later periods grave goods decrease Of the inhumation burials the dead were usually buried in a north south axis with head to north although a minority are in east west orientation Funerary gifts often include fibulae belt buckles bone combs glass drinking vessels and other jewelry Women s burials in particular shared very close similarities with Wielbark forms buried with two fibulae one on each shoulder Like in the Wielbark culture Chernyakhov burials usually lack weapons as funerary gifts except in a few cremation burials reminiscent of Przeworsk influences 17 Although cremation burials are traditionally associated with Dacian Germanic and Slavic peoples and inhumation is suggestive of nomadic practice careful analysis suggests that the mixed burials were of an earlier period whilst toward the end there was a trend toward inhumation burials without grave goods This could be the result of the influences of Christianity but could just as easily be explained in terms of an evolution of non Christian beliefs about the afterlife Ceramic wares edit nbsp Finds from the Budesti Necropolis in Raionul Criuleni Moldova 3rd 4th centuries Pottery was predominantly of local production being both wheel and hand made Wheel made pottery predominated and was made of finer clay It was reminiscent of earlier Sarmatian types refined by Roman and La Tene influences Hand made pottery showed a greater variety in form and was sometimes decorated with incised linear motifs In addition Roman amphorae are also found suggesting trade contacts with the Roman world There is also a small but regular presence of distinct hand made pottery typical of that found in western Germanic groups suggesting the presence of Germanic groups Economy edit The Chernyakhov people were primarily a settled population involved in cultivation of cereals especially wheat barley and millet Finds of ploughshares sickles and scythes have been frequent Cattle breeding was the primary mode of animal husbandry and the breeding of horses appears to have been restricted to the open steppe Metalworking skills were widespread throughout the culture and local smiths produced much of the implements although there is some evidence of production specialization Decline edit The Chernyakhov culture ends in the 5th century attributed to the arrival of the Huns 15 The collapse of the culture is no longer explained in terms of population displacement although there was an outmigration of Goths Around 370 a series of events including the presence of Huns at the eastern edge of the culture culminated with the death of Ermanaric the leader of Gothic confederation and his successor Athanaric found refuge south of Danube along with most of the Gothic population 18 Rather more recent theories explain the collapse of the Chernyakhov culture in terms of a disruption of the hierarchical political structure that maintained it John Mathews suggests that despite its cultural homogeneity a sense of ethnic distinction was kept between the disparate peoples Some of the autochthonous elements persist 19 and become even more widespread after the demise of the Gothic elite a phenomenon associated with the rise and expansion of the early Slavs Migration and diffusion theories editMigration edit Whilst acknowledging the mixed origins of the Chernyakhov culture Peter Heather suggests that the culture is ultimately a reflection of the Goths domination of the Pontic area He cites literary sources that attest that the Goths were the centre of political attention at this time 20 In particular the culture s development corresponds well with Jordanes tale of Gothic migration from Gothiscandza to Oium under the leadership of Filimer Moreover he highlights that crucial external influences that catalysed Chernyakhov cultural development derived from the Wielbark culture Originating in the mid 1st century it spread from south of the Baltic Sea from territory around later Pomerania down the Vistula in the 2nd and 3rd centuries Wielbark elements are prominent in the Chernyakhov zone such as typical Germanic pottery brooch types and female costume and in particular weaponless bi ritual burials Although cultures may spread without substantial population movements Heather draws attention to a decrease in the number of settlements in the original Pomeranian Wielbark heartland as evidence of a significant population movement Combined with Jordanes account Heather concludes that a movement of Goths and other east Germanic groups such as Heruli and Gepids played a major role in the creation of the Cernjachove culture 21 He clarifies that this movement was not a single royal led migration but was rather accomplished by a series of small sometimes mutually antagonistic groups 22 Diffusion edit However Guy Halsall challenges some of Heather s conclusions He sees no chronological development from the Wielbark to Chernyakhov culture given that the latter stage of the Wielbark culture is synchronous with Chernyakhov and the two regions have minimal territorial overlap Although it is often claimed that Cernjachov metalwork derives from Wielbark types close examination reveals no more than a few types with general similarities to Wielbark types 23 Michael Kulikowski also challenges the Wielbark connection highlighting that the greatest reason for Wielbark Chernyakhov connection derives from a negative characteristic i e the absence of weapons in burials which is less convincing proof than a positive one He argues that the Chernyakhov culture could just as likely have been an indigenous development of local Pontic Carpic or Dacian cultures or a blended culture resulting from Przeworsk and steppe interactions Furthermore he altogether denies the existence of Goths prior to the 3rd century Kulikowski states that no Gothic people nor even a noble kernel migrated from Scandinavia or the Baltic Rather he suggests that the Goths formed in situ Like the Alemanni or the Franks the Goths were a product of the Roman frontier 24 Other influences such as a minority of burials containing weapons are seen from the Przeworsk and Zarubinec cultures The latter has been connected with early Slavs 15 Genetics editIn 2019 a genetic study of various cultures of the Eurasian Steppe including the Chernyakhov culture was published in Current Biology Out of 31 ancient individuals tested three samples from three individuals which the authors identified with Ukrainian post Scythian Chernyakhiv culture were analyzed They overlapped with modern Europeans representing the most western range of variation among the groups of this study with 64 8 of Yamnaya like ancestry lacking the Altaian component entirely and having higher proportion of Central European Middle Neolithic ancestry 35 2 than historically earlier samples from the region They suggest the culture was a multi ethnic mix but the samples appear to represent its Gothic component Their mtDNA haplogroups were H1n6 H1c and T2g1 25 See also editOium Carpathian Tumuli cultureReferences edit Allgemein Springer 2006 der auch auf alternative Definitionen ausserhalb der communis opinio hinweist Alle Epochengrenzen sind letztlich nur ein Konstrukt und vor allem durch Konvention begrundet Vgl auch Stefan Krautschick Zur Entstehung eines Datums 375 Beginn der Volkerwanderung In Klio 82 2000 S 217 222 sowie Stefan Krautschick Hunnensturm und Germanenflut 375 Beginn der Volkerwanderung In Byzantinische Zeitschrift 92 1999 S 10 67 Entry Display Web Page Rudych Tetiana 2022 The Population of the Cherniakhiv Culture According to the Materials of the Cherkasy Centre Burial Ground Craniological Aspect Arheologia 1 86 100 doi 10 15407 arheologia2022 01 086 S2CID 248842142 Migration Period between Odra and Vistula Ostrogoths Halsall 2007 Kulikowski 2007 Matthews amp Heather 1991 p 47 Eiddon Edwards amp Heather 1998 p 488 Matthews amp Heather 1991 pp 88 92 Mallory amp Adams 1997 p 104 Kovacs I 1912 A marosszentannai nepvandorlaskori temeto Dolgozatok 3 250 ff Barford 2001 p 40 Buko 2008 p 58 Halsall 2007 p 132 The Cernjachov culture is a mixture of all sorts of influences but most come from existing cultures in the region a b c Mallory amp Adams 1997 p 106 Matthews amp Heather 1991 p 90 Heather 1998 p 47 Opreanu Coriolan Horațiu 2003 Transilvania la sfarșitul antichității și in perioada migrațiilor Transylvania at the End of Antiquity and the during the Migration Period Nereamia Napocae pp 130 131 ISBN 973 7951 12 3 Matthews amp Heather 1991 p 91 settlement was continuous from the period of the Sintana de Mures Cernjachov Culture right through the Migration Period into the Middle Ages proper Matthews amp Heather 1991 p 94 Heather 1998 pp 22 23 Heather 1998 pp 43 44 Halsall 2007 p 133 Kulikowski 2007 pp 60 68 Jarve 2019 Sources editMallory James P Adams Douglas Q 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Taylor amp Francis ISBN 1 884964 98 2 Heather Peter 2006 The Fall of the Roman Empire A New History of Rome and the Barbarians Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 515954 3 Eiddon Iorwerth Edwards Stephen Heather Peter 1998 Goths amp Huns The Late Empire The Cambridge Ancient History vol 13 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 30200 5 Barford Paul M 2001 The Early Slavs Culture and Society in Early Medieval Eastern Europe Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 3977 9 Halsall Guy 2007 Barbarian migrations and the Roman West 376 568 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 43491 1 Curta Florin 2001 The Making of the Slavs History and Archaeology of the Lower Danube Region c 500 700 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781139428880 Jarve Mari July 22 2019 Shifts in the Genetic Landscape of the Western Eurasian Steppe Associated with the Beginning and End of the Scythian Dominance Current Biology 29 14 2430 2441 Bibcode 2019CBio 29E2430J doi 10 1016 j cub 2019 06 019 PMID 31303491 Genetic makeup agrees with the Gothic source of post Scythian Chernyakhiv culture Kossinna Gustaf 1911 Die Herkunft der Germanen zur methode der Siedlungsarchaologie in German Wurzburg C Kabitzsch Matthews John Heather Peter 1991 The Goths in the fourth century Liverpool University Press ISBN 0 85323 426 4 Heather Peter J 1998 The Goths Wiley Blackwell ISBN 0 631 20932 8 Kulikowski Michael 2007 Rome s Gothic Wars from the third century to Alaric Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 84633 2 Buko Andrzej 2008 The Archeology of Early Medieval Poland Discoveries Hypotheses Interpretations Brill ISBN 978 90 04 16230 3External links editSlavs in Antiquity summary in English translation of a text by Valentin V Sedov originally in Russian V V Sedov Slavyane v drevnosti Moscow 1994 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chernyakhov culture amp oldid 1224409111, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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