Abstract

Introduction. The article examines sacrificial complexes within Bronze Age mounds of the Ergeni Upland. The archaeological culture represented by the investigated mounds is characterized by cattle sacrifice where a cow’s head and limbs symbolized a whole carcass of the sacrificial animal. A majority of the complexes contained fragmented or whole incense pots. The goal of the research is to analyze the sacrificial complexes and reveal key features of theirs essential for the reconstruction of Early and Middle Bronze Age cattle sacrifice rites. Results. The paper investigates materials from seven mound groups located in the Ergeni Upland. It concludes that mounds equipped with sacrificial altars constitute 15 % of the total number of mounds (17 of 112) and identifies somewhat basic features of such altars that tend to cluster in two groups: group one is characterized by the use of cattle bones only, and group two adds incense pots to such bones. The work attempts to attribute the presence of sacrificial altars to certain burial patterns within each mound. So, it reveals that sacrificial complexes are most frequently associated with burials of men. Special attention is paid to the presence of cattle skins placed into burials, according to participants of excavations, with animal heads and limbs. Indirect indicators of the presence of cattle skins were traced in two sacrificial altars only. The paper compares outcomes of the research of the Ergeni Upland’s sacrificial complexes to studies of similar structures within East Manych mounds, draws ethnographic and historical evidence related to such sacrificial practices that might have stemmed from the worship of the ox / cow as the primal forefather / foremother, protector of sentient beings, also tied to the fertility cult.

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