We describe rare toreutic items found in the 1970s, 1990s, and 2010s near the Tomskaya Pisanitsa rock art site—a zoomorphic fi gurine, two anthropomorphic masks, and an ornithomorphic pendant. Parallels among the ritual and funerary artifacts from Southern and Western Siberia are discussed. The fi gurine representing a horse or an onager resembles certain examples of ritual toreutic art of the Tagar and Kizhirovo cultures (500–300 BC). Anthropomorphic masks represent the Tomsk-Narym variant of late Kulaika toreutics (100 BC to 500 AD) but may be as late as the sixth century, being associated with the post-Kulaika early medieval tradition. The ornithomorphic fi gurine, dating to 500–700 AD, belongs to the early medieval trans-cultural tradition that had originated from late Kulaika art. The Tomskaya Pisanitsa site resembles Early Iron Age and early medieval sanctuaries of Western and Southern Siberia with votive hoards of artifacts including toreutic ones. Such sites are part of the Northern Asian tradition of offerings made near rock art galleries. Hypotheses are advanced about the attitudes of the late Kulaika people to rock art sites in the fi rst half of the fi rst millennium AD.
Периодическое издание посвящено охранно-археологической деятельности ИИМК РАН по изучению культурного наследия России. Десятый номер бюллетеня представляет результаты археологических исследований объектов культурного наследия Санкт-Петербурга и его окрестностей, а также других реги онов России, которые были осуществлены Отделом охранной археологии ИИМК РАН в сотрудничестве с другими научными, образовательными и государственными организациями в 2017-2020 гг.Издание предназначено для историков, археологов, государственных служащих, частных пред принимателей и широкого круга читателей, заинтересованных в научной и достоверной информации об истории России и состоянии памятников ее культуры. This periodical is dedicated to the rescuing and archaeological activities of the Institute for the History of Material Culture (IHMC) RAS in studies of the cultural heritage of Russia. The tenth issue of the Bulletin presents the results of archaeological investigations of the cultural heritage of St. Petersburg and its surroundings, as well as other regions of Russian Federation, carried out in 2017-2020 by the Department for Rescue Archaeology of IHMC RAS in collaboration with other scientifi c, educational and public organizations.This publication is intended for historians, archaeologists, government employees, private entrepreneurs and a wide circle of readers interested in reliable scientifi c information on history of Russia and the state of the monuments of its culture.
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