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oglahty Latitude and Longitude:

53°59′38″N 91°29′22″E / 53.993770°N 91.489391°E / 53.993770; 91.489391
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Oglahty)
Tashtyk culture funeral masks. The masks were often painted. Oglakhty necropolis. Hermitage Museum. [1] [2] [3]

Oglahty (Russian: Оглахты) is a mountain range and a burial complex of Tashtyk culture located 60 km north of Minusinsk, Khakassia, Russia, on the right bank of Yenisei River. Oglahty burials are dated to ca. 1st century BC. The burials were first surveyed in 1903 by A.V. Adrianov. The dryness of the soil and favorable climatic conditions in the burial monument preserved perishable materials including wood, leather, fur, and fabrics. A prominent place among artifacts in the Oglahty complex occupy solid and decorated polychromatic fabrics. They are preserved in the Hermitage Museum of Saint Petersburg.

References

  1. ^ "Siberian Times".
  2. ^ Nusse, Gloria (24 September 2022). Craniofacial Anatomy and Forensic Identification. Academic Press. pp. 16–17. ISBN  978-0-12-809578-2.
  3. ^ Bahn, Paul G. (27 October 2020). Great Sites of the Ancient World. Frances Lincoln. pp. 176–177. ISBN  978-0-7112-5914-0.
  • Adrianov A.V. "Selected notes from diaries of the kurgan excavation in Minusinsk territory", Minusinsk, 1924

53°59′38″N 91°29′22″E / 53.993770°N 91.489391°E / 53.993770; 91.489391



oglahty Latitude and Longitude:

53°59′38″N 91°29′22″E / 53.993770°N 91.489391°E / 53.993770; 91.489391
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Oglahty)
Tashtyk culture funeral masks. The masks were often painted. Oglakhty necropolis. Hermitage Museum. [1] [2] [3]

Oglahty (Russian: Оглахты) is a mountain range and a burial complex of Tashtyk culture located 60 km north of Minusinsk, Khakassia, Russia, on the right bank of Yenisei River. Oglahty burials are dated to ca. 1st century BC. The burials were first surveyed in 1903 by A.V. Adrianov. The dryness of the soil and favorable climatic conditions in the burial monument preserved perishable materials including wood, leather, fur, and fabrics. A prominent place among artifacts in the Oglahty complex occupy solid and decorated polychromatic fabrics. They are preserved in the Hermitage Museum of Saint Petersburg.

References

  1. ^ "Siberian Times".
  2. ^ Nusse, Gloria (24 September 2022). Craniofacial Anatomy and Forensic Identification. Academic Press. pp. 16–17. ISBN  978-0-12-809578-2.
  3. ^ Bahn, Paul G. (27 October 2020). Great Sites of the Ancient World. Frances Lincoln. pp. 176–177. ISBN  978-0-7112-5914-0.
  • Adrianov A.V. "Selected notes from diaries of the kurgan excavation in Minusinsk territory", Minusinsk, 1924

53°59′38″N 91°29′22″E / 53.993770°N 91.489391°E / 53.993770; 91.489391



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