fbpx
Wikipedia

Kokel culture

51°27′29″N 91°06′12″E / 51.458104°N 91.103251°E / 51.458104; 91.103251

Kokel Culture
Geographical rangeSouth Siberia
Dates2nd to 5th century CE
Major sitesTunnug, Shurmak, Syyn-Churek, Katylyg
Preceded byAldy-Bel culture, Pazyryk culture, Tagar culture, Xiongnu Empire
Followed byFirst Turkic Khaganate

The Kokel Culture (1st-5th centuries CE) is a post-Xiongnu culture, from Southern Siberia, in the area of the modern Tuva Republic.[1] This culture is located temporally in the interval between the fall of the Xiongnu Empire (2nd century CE) and the rise of the First Turkic Khaganate (6th century CE).[2] In Russian archaeology, it is considered as belonging to the "Hunno-Sarmatian period" (2nd century BCE and 5th century CE).[3]

The Kokel culture has also been named "Syyn-Churek culture", or "Shurmak culture", based on the names of the sites of various archaeological discoveries.[4]

Carbon dates for the Kokel sites generally range from the 2nd to the 4th centuries CE.[5]

Kokel culture graves (2nd-4th century CE) tend to be found in conjunction with earlier graves of the Early Iron Age (9th century BCE-) Saka cultures, and the later graves of the Turkic period (5th century CE-).[6]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Sadykov et al. 2021.
  2. ^ Sadykov et al. 2021, "From the end of the Xiongnu Empire to the establishment of the first Turkic Khaganate, the territory of Southern Siberia sees the emergence of distinctive local material cultures. The Kokel culture is essentially unknown in the international English-language literature even though archaeological sites pertaining to this material culture are among the most common in Tuva (Southern Siberia).".
  3. ^ Sadykov et al. 2021, "The time between 2nd century BCE and 5th century CE in Central Asia is traditionally referred to in Soviet archaeological literature as the “Hunno-Sarmatian Period".
  4. ^ Sadykov et al. 2021, "These researchers independently named the same assemblage of materials Syyn-Churek culture [2] (based on the name of the excavated site, cf. Fig 1) and Shurmak culture [3] (also based on the site name cf. Fig 1). Stylistic comparisons classified the Kokel culture to belong within the chronological borders of the Hunno-Sarmatian period (2nd century BCE–5th century CE).".
  5. ^ Sadykov et al. 2021, "Until recently, only a few radiocarbon dates were available for Kokel sites. A small series of samples was measured for the Katylyg 5 fortified settlement (Table 1, cf. [16]), with almost all estimates falling between the 2nd–4th centuries CE (2σ).".
  6. ^ Chan et al. 2022, "Structures dated to the medieval period at Tunnug 1, including those attributed to Turkic burial culture, are found south of those of Early Iron Age (9th century BCE) and Kokel (2nd-4th century CE)".

Sources edit

  • Sadykov, Timur; Caspari, Gino; Blochin, Jegor; Lösch, Sandra; Kapinus, Yulija; Milella, Marco (16 July 2021). "The Kokel of Southern Siberia: New data on a post-Xiongnu material culture". PLOS ONE. 16 (7): e0254545. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0254545. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 8284818.
  • Chan, Annie; Sadykov, Timur; Blochin, Jegor; Hajdas, Irka; Caspari, Gino (22 September 2022). "The polymorphism and tradition of funerary practices of medieval Turks in light of new findings from Tuva Republic". PLOS ONE. 17 (9).

kokel, culture, 458104, 103251, 458104, 103251, kokel, culturekokel300xianbeitashtykkokelkhotangaojuturkscham, pasargathymyarjindynastygogu, ryeowesternsatrapsvaka, takaskushano, sasanianslittlekushansxioniteskangjusasanianempireromanempirehunsfunanjushitochar. 51 27 29 N 91 06 12 E 51 458104 N 91 103251 E 51 458104 91 103251 Kokel CultureKokel300XianbeiTashtykKokelKhotanGaojuTurksCHAM PASargatHYMYARJINDYNASTYGOGU RYEOWESTERNSATRAPSVAKA TAKASKUSHANO SASANIANSLITTLEKUSHANSXIONITESKANGJUSASANIANEMPIREROMANEMPIREHUNSFUNANJushiTOCHARIANSTUYUHUNPaleo SiberiansSamoyedsTungusMEROEAKSUM class notpageimage The Kokel Culture and contemporary cultures and polities circa 300 CEGeographical rangeSouth SiberiaDates2nd to 5th century CEMajor sitesTunnug Shurmak Syyn Churek KatylygPreceded byAldy Bel culture Pazyryk culture Tagar culture Xiongnu EmpireFollowed byFirst Turkic KhaganateThe Kokel Culture 1st 5th centuries CE is a post Xiongnu culture from Southern Siberia in the area of the modern Tuva Republic 1 This culture is located temporally in the interval between the fall of the Xiongnu Empire 2nd century CE and the rise of the First Turkic Khaganate 6th century CE 2 In Russian archaeology it is considered as belonging to the Hunno Sarmatian period 2nd century BCE and 5th century CE 3 The Kokel culture has also been named Syyn Churek culture or Shurmak culture based on the names of the sites of various archaeological discoveries 4 Carbon dates for the Kokel sites generally range from the 2nd to the 4th centuries CE 5 Kokel culture graves 2nd 4th century CE tend to be found in conjunction with earlier graves of the Early Iron Age 9th century BCE Saka cultures and the later graves of the Turkic period 5th century CE 6 Sites of the Kokel culture just north of the frontier with Mongolia Kokel Culture cemetery next to the Saka Arzhan tumulus at Tunnug 1 Tuva Republic 1 Kokel culture gold artifacts from Tunnug 1 Arrowheads found in the skeletal remains of people of the Kokel culture Kokel culture iron and ceramic vesselsReferences edit a b Sadykov et al 2021 Sadykov et al 2021 From the end of the Xiongnu Empire to the establishment of the first Turkic Khaganate the territory of Southern Siberia sees the emergence of distinctive local material cultures The Kokel culture is essentially unknown in the international English language literature even though archaeological sites pertaining to this material culture are among the most common in Tuva Southern Siberia Sadykov et al 2021 The time between 2nd century BCE and 5th century CE in Central Asia is traditionally referred to in Soviet archaeological literature as the Hunno Sarmatian Period Sadykov et al 2021 These researchers independently named the same assemblage of materials Syyn Churek culture 2 based on the name of the excavated site cf Fig 1 and Shurmak culture 3 also based on the site name cf Fig 1 Stylistic comparisons classified the Kokel culture to belong within the chronological borders of the Hunno Sarmatian period 2nd century BCE 5th century CE Sadykov et al 2021 Until recently only a few radiocarbon dates were available for Kokel sites A small series of samples was measured for the Katylyg 5 fortified settlement Table 1 cf 16 with almost all estimates falling between the 2nd 4th centuries CE 2s Chan et al 2022 Structures dated to the medieval period at Tunnug 1 including those attributed to Turkic burial culture are found south of those of Early Iron Age 9th century BCE and Kokel 2nd 4th century CE Sources editSadykov Timur Caspari Gino Blochin Jegor Losch Sandra Kapinus Yulija Milella Marco 16 July 2021 The Kokel of Southern Siberia New data on a post Xiongnu material culture PLOS ONE 16 7 e0254545 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0254545 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 8284818 Chan Annie Sadykov Timur Blochin Jegor Hajdas Irka Caspari Gino 22 September 2022 The polymorphism and tradition of funerary practices of medieval Turks in light of new findings from Tuva Republic PLOS ONE 17 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kokel culture amp oldid 1195591783, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.