Koban culture

Ram-headed pendant of the Koban culture

The Koban culture or Kuban culture (c. 1200 to 350 BC),[1] is a late Bronze Age and Iron Age culture of the northern and central Caucasus. It is preceded by the Colchian culture of the western Caucasus and the Kharachoi culture further east.

It is named after the village of Koban, Northern Ossetia, where in 1869 battle-axes, daggers, decorative items and other objects were discovered in a kurgan. Later, further sites were uncovered in the central Caucasus.

  1. ^ Boulygina, Eugenia, et al., (2020). "Mitochondrial and Y-chromosome diversity of the prehistoric Koban culture of the North Caucasus", in: Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, Volume 31, June 2020, 102357, Introduction: "[T]he Koban culture was widespread on both sides of the Great Caucasus Range during the 13th/12th – 4th centuries BC. It is widely known because of its advanced metallurgy as well as developed terraced agriculture (Korobov and Borisov, 2013)."

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