Abstract

AbstractArchaeological evidence and the text of the Strategikon show that it was only in the late sixth century AD that the Roman-Byzantine military adopted the stirrup. It is now widely argued that the Avars, who settled in the Carpathian basin in the sixth century, played a key role in introducing iron stirrups to the Roman-Byzantine world. However, the evidence to support this assertion is limited. Although hundreds of stirrups have been found in Avar graves in the Carpathian basin, very few stirrups of sixth- or seventh-century date are known from the Roman-Byzantine empire - no more than seven - and only two of these are of definitively Avar type. The text of the Strategikon, sometimes argued to support this Avar source, can be interpreted differently, as indeed can the archaeological evidence. While the debate about the Roman-Byzantine adoption of the stirrup has focused mostly on finds from the Balkans, two early stirrups are known from Asia Minor, from Pergamon and Sardis. This paper presents a third, previously unpublished stirrup, from a seventh-century deposit at Aphrodisias in Caria; this is the first stirrup found in Asia Minor from a datable context. Here we present this find and its context, and use it to reconsider the model of solely Avar stirrup transmission that has dominated scholarship to date. So varied are the early stirrups that multiple sources of influence, Avar and other, and even a degree of experimentation, seem more likely to underpin the Roman-Byzantine adoption of this technology.

Highlights

  • The date of the stirrup’s arrival in Western Eurasia, along with its significance in equestrian history, have been hotly debated in recent scholarship

  • Florin Curta’s recent contributions highlight and restate the long-recognised fact that stirrup technology was known to the Avars in the late sixth or early seventh century (Curta 2007; 2013); it is widely, though not universally, accepted that the Roman-Byzantine military adopted the stirrup from the Avars, following the settlement of the latter in the Carpathian basin in the second half of the sixth century

  • The large number of apple-shaped stirrups from the Avar-controlled Carpathian basin dated to AD 600 and the century following demonstrate that the Avars played a key role in bringing this technology to Europe

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Summary

Introduction

The date of the stirrup’s arrival in Western Eurasia, along with its significance in equestrian history, have been hotly debated in recent scholarship. - An iron stirrup from Pergamon, apple-shaped but with a different form of suspension loop to the standard Avar type, from an unknown context and dated to the ‘früh- oder mittelbyzantinisch’ period

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