Early Iron Age Pottery Technology of the Kazakh Uplands (Saryarqa)

Introduction. The article introduces the Early Iron Age pottery technology of the Kazakh Uplands (Kaz. Saryarqa ‘Yellow Ridge’). Goals. The study seeks to identify common and specific features inherent to pottery traditions traced in ceramics from settlements and barrows scattered across the Saryar...

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Main Author: Valeriy G. Loman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Российской академии наук, Калмыцкий научный центр 2024-09-01
Series:Oriental Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://kigiran.elpub.ru/jour/article/view/5170
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author Valeriy G. Loman
author_facet Valeriy G. Loman
author_sort Valeriy G. Loman
collection DOAJ
description Introduction. The article introduces the Early Iron Age pottery technology of the Kazakh Uplands (Kaz. Saryarqa ‘Yellow Ridge’). Goals. The study seeks to identify common and specific features inherent to pottery traditions traced in ceramics from settlements and barrows scattered across the Saryarqa. Materials and methods. The work examines sherds from a total of 314 Saka-era vessels (including 291 samples from 6 settlements of Central Kazakhstan and 3 settlements of North Kazakhstan, as well as 23 samples from 9 barrows). In addition, 17 vessels from barrows with ‘moustaches’ (or stone ridges) previously dated to the Early Iron Age have also been investigated. A. Bobrinsky’s method — with the aid of МБС-10 binocular microscope and СНОЛ muffle laboratory furnace — has proven most instrumental in testing the pottery technology. Results and conclusions. The investigated settlements of Central and North Kazakhstan are characterized by that they would mainly select similar raw material — medium-iron clays. However, the pottery paste recipes did differ: in North Kazakhstan, preference was given to medium-size mineral tempers, and to larger ones — in Central Kazakhstan. Furthermore, pottery shaping techniques of Central Kazakhstan were largely dominated by coiling, while in North Kazakhstan they would turn to pinching/patching, and the latter method happens to have been as widespread in ceramic samples from the Saka-era barrows. The wall-to-base sequence prevails in ceramics from both settlements and barrows. Our analysis of related data for barrows with ‘moustaches’ shows the latter’s pottery traditions (preference to clay concentrates, grog, and spiral patching) essentially differ from those traced in regular barrows. This can be explained by that according to recent radiocarbon tests the barrows with ‘moustaches’ date from later periods. In general, the study shows the Early Iron Age population of the Saryarqa was very heterogeneous, and the era was witnessing active mergers of various groups.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2619-0990
2619-1008
language English
publishDate 2024-09-01
publisher Российской академии наук, Калмыцкий научный центр
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spelling doaj-art-4b8e6f5031714e199dd68e92e096a45a2025-02-11T13:11:01ZengРоссийской академии наук, Калмыцкий научный центрOriental Studies2619-09902619-10082024-09-0117135437210.22162/2619-0990-2024-72-2-354-372Early Iron Age Pottery Technology of the Kazakh Uplands (Saryarqa)Valeriy G. Loman0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6951-0509Karaganda Buketov University Introduction. The article introduces the Early Iron Age pottery technology of the Kazakh Uplands (Kaz. Saryarqa ‘Yellow Ridge’). Goals. The study seeks to identify common and specific features inherent to pottery traditions traced in ceramics from settlements and barrows scattered across the Saryarqa. Materials and methods. The work examines sherds from a total of 314 Saka-era vessels (including 291 samples from 6 settlements of Central Kazakhstan and 3 settlements of North Kazakhstan, as well as 23 samples from 9 barrows). In addition, 17 vessels from barrows with ‘moustaches’ (or stone ridges) previously dated to the Early Iron Age have also been investigated. A. Bobrinsky’s method — with the aid of МБС-10 binocular microscope and СНОЛ muffle laboratory furnace — has proven most instrumental in testing the pottery technology. Results and conclusions. The investigated settlements of Central and North Kazakhstan are characterized by that they would mainly select similar raw material — medium-iron clays. However, the pottery paste recipes did differ: in North Kazakhstan, preference was given to medium-size mineral tempers, and to larger ones — in Central Kazakhstan. Furthermore, pottery shaping techniques of Central Kazakhstan were largely dominated by coiling, while in North Kazakhstan they would turn to pinching/patching, and the latter method happens to have been as widespread in ceramic samples from the Saka-era barrows. The wall-to-base sequence prevails in ceramics from both settlements and barrows. Our analysis of related data for barrows with ‘moustaches’ shows the latter’s pottery traditions (preference to clay concentrates, grog, and spiral patching) essentially differ from those traced in regular barrows. This can be explained by that according to recent radiocarbon tests the barrows with ‘moustaches’ date from later periods. In general, the study shows the Early Iron Age population of the Saryarqa was very heterogeneous, and the era was witnessing active mergers of various groups. https://kigiran.elpub.ru/jour/article/view/5170kazakhstankazakh uplandssaryarqaearly iron agesettlementsgrave fieldbarrows with ‘moustaches’ceramicstechnical and technological analysis
spellingShingle Valeriy G. Loman
Early Iron Age Pottery Technology of the Kazakh Uplands (Saryarqa)
Oriental Studies
kazakhstan
kazakh uplands
saryarqa
early iron age
settlements
grave field
barrows with ‘moustaches’
ceramics
technical and technological analysis
title Early Iron Age Pottery Technology of the Kazakh Uplands (Saryarqa)
title_full Early Iron Age Pottery Technology of the Kazakh Uplands (Saryarqa)
title_fullStr Early Iron Age Pottery Technology of the Kazakh Uplands (Saryarqa)
title_full_unstemmed Early Iron Age Pottery Technology of the Kazakh Uplands (Saryarqa)
title_short Early Iron Age Pottery Technology of the Kazakh Uplands (Saryarqa)
title_sort early iron age pottery technology of the kazakh uplands saryarqa
topic kazakhstan
kazakh uplands
saryarqa
early iron age
settlements
grave field
barrows with ‘moustaches’
ceramics
technical and technological analysis
url https://kigiran.elpub.ru/jour/article/view/5170
work_keys_str_mv AT valeriygloman earlyironagepotterytechnologyofthekazakhuplandssaryarqa