Salbyk kurgan | |
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![]() Salbykkurgan before excavation, early 20th century | |
Size | 11m high, 500m circumference |
Created | 5th century BCE |
Discovered | 53°53′39″N90°46′26″E / 53.894259°N 90.773752°E /53.894259; 90.773752 |
TheSalbyk kurgan (Bolshoi Salbykskii Kurgan, "Great Salbyk kurgan") is aSaka funerary tumulus (kurgan), belonging to theTagar culture. It is located in the "Valley of the Kings" in the western part of theMinusinsk hollow, 45 kilometers northwest ofAbakan,Khakassia,Russia, and is dated to 500-300 BCE.[2] Other sources date it to the 8th to 6th centuries BCE.[3] The tumulus was 11 meters high, and its circumference about 500 meters. It is the largest tumulus of the Tagar culture.[4] It was a tomb of a noble Saka man, with his slaves and wives.[4] There are about 30 other kurgan tumuli in the "Valley of the Kings", although smaller than the Great Salbyk kurgan.
The tumulus is surrounded by huge Devonian slabs, weighing 50-70 tons, which were brought over about 100 kilometers from the banks of theYenisei River. They are arranged in a square, with horizontal slabs forming a wall enclosure. The megaliths may have had an astronomical role and seem to correspond to the position of the sunrises and sunsets at various times of the year.[5]
The Salbyk kurgan originally had a square pyramidal structure. It was excavated in 1954-56 by removing all the earth of the kurgan, only leaving in place the monumental slabs on the periphery. It was found that it had been looted and stripped bare in Antiquity.[6]
It is 200 km northwest of theArzhan kurgan, and 400 km northeast of thePazyryk kurgans.