Klaipėdos universitetas logo


  • List of journals
  • About Publisher
  • Help
  • Sitemap
Login Register

  1. Home
  2. Journals
  3. AB
  4. Issues
  5. Volume 8 (2007): Weapons, Weaponry and Man (In memoriam Vytautas Kazakevičius)
  6. Armed Men and their Riding Horses as a R ...

Archaeologia Baltica

Submit your article About the journal
  • Article info
  • Related articles
  • More
    Article info Related articles

Armed Men and their Riding Horses as a Reflection of Warriors Hierarchy in Western Lithuania during the Roman Iron Age
Volume 8 (2007): Weapons, Weaponry and Man (In memoriam Vytautas Kazakevičius), pp. 95–116
Audronė Bliujienė   Donatas Butkus  

Authors

 
Placeholder
Pub. online: 9 November 2007      Type: Article      Open accessOpen Access

Received
16 April 2007
Revised
16 July 2007
Published
9 November 2007

Abstract

Three vast areas in northern Europe during the Roman Period are known for their people’s development of a distinctive viewpoint regarding the riding horse that was reflected in sacrificial rites (north Germany; the Jutland Peninsula; Zealand, Funen, other Baltic Sea islands, as well as southern Scandinavia) and burial rites (Dollkeim-Kovrovo, Sudovian, West Lithuanian Stone Circle Grave cultures, and, in part, the Lower Nemunas and Bogaczewo cultures). The custom at the end of the second century and in the third century to bury a riding horse (usually only the horse’s head, head and legs, or individual teeth) with armed men was especially distinct in the West Lithuanian Stone Circle Grave Culture area. This burial rite feature distinguishes the mentioned cultural unit (Aistians) area from the communities of other Balts who lived in current Lithuanian territory. The burial rite features that had developed in the West Lithuanian Stone Circle Grave Culture area illustrate the warriors’ hierarchy and the military’s dependency on the society’s nobility that already existed in the Roman Period. These social structure features link the West Balt communities with the northern Germanic peoples. West Lithuanian Stone Circle Grave Culture was the northernmost barbaricum territory in which riding horses were so often buried with people.

Related articles PDF XML
Related articles PDF XML

Copyright
No copyright data available.

Keywords
men’s graves with horses horsemen warriors’ hierarchy riding gear

Metrics
since February 2021
420

Article info
views

0

Full article
views

245

PDF
downloads

126

XML
downloads

Export citation

Copy and paste formatted citation
Placeholder

Download citation in file


Share


RSS

Powered by PubliMill  •  Privacy policy