Kohtla-Vanakula武器和工具矿床:爱沙尼亚东北部的一个铁器时代祭祀遗址

Pub Date : 2018-06-01 DOI:10.3176/arch.2018.1.02
E. Oras, A. Kriiska, Andres Kimber, K. Paavel, Taisi Juus
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引用次数: 2

摘要

Kohtla祭祀遗址是一个独特的铁器时代武器和工具的矿床,隐藏在爱沙尼亚东北部的水环境中。它在2013年被一名金属探测器发现,并在2013年和2014年被考古学家彻底研究。这两个季节的田野调查结果是收集了至少400件初始物品中的人工制品及其碎片。因此,Kohtla的发现是爱沙尼亚同类中最大的,也是波罗的海东部第二大的。AMS从与沉积物不同层有关的木炭块,武器底座的木制残骸以及人工制品的年代学表明,沉积物的形成是从普通时代到前维京时代(公元550-800年)的长期使用的结果,而绝大多数物品似乎属于罗马铁器时代(公元50-450年)。在这里,我们详细概述了这一非凡的考古发现,描述了它的背景和内容,并将其与爱沙尼亚和更广泛的波罗的海周围的类似发现联系起来。
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Kohtla-Vanakula Weapons and Tools Deposit: An Iron Age Sacrificial Site in North-East Estonia
Kohtla sacrificial site is a unique deposit of Iron Age weapons and tools concealed in watery context, located in north-eastern Estonia. It was discovered by a metal detectorist in 2013 and thoroughly studied by archaeologists in 2013 and 2014. The two fieldwork seasons resulted in a collection of artefacts and their fragments from the total of at least 400 initial objects. As a result, the Kohtla find is the largest of its kind in Estonia and second largest in the eastern Baltic. AMS dates from the charcoal pieces relating to different layers of the deposit, wooden remains from the sockets of the weapons as well as artefact typochronology indicate that the formation of the deposit was a result of the long-term use of the site from around the turn of common era up to the Pre-Viking Age (550–800 AD), whilst the vast majority of objects seem to belong to the Roman Iron Age (50–450 AD). Here we present the detailed overview of this extraordinary archaeological discovery, describe its context and content, and set it into the broader picture of similar finds both in Estonia and in the wider circum-Baltic context.
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