
Composite Belt Ornaments with Bear Claw Pieces in Medieval Men’s Costume of the Perm Region, Western Urals
Author(s) -
Н Б Крыласова,
Andrey V. Danich
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
archaeology, ethnology and anthropology of eurasia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1563-0110
pISSN - 1531-832X
DOI - 10.17746/1563-0110.2021.49.1.078-084
Subject(s) - ornaments , bronze , claw , art , archaeology , ancient history , elite , geography , history , engineering , politics , style (visual arts) , mechanical engineering , political science , law
LongstandingexcavationsattheBoyanovoandRozhdestvenskoyemedievalcemeteriesinthePermTerritoryrevealeda new type of belt ornament—pendants with arch-shaped pieces carved from dorsal plates of bear claws. Each piece has two drilled holes in the central third, and they were strung on two cords in a “rope ladder” fashion. Pieces made of bear claws were interchanged with bronze beads or pipes. At the ends of strings, bells or pendants were attached. Such ornaments were worn exclusively by boys and men of all ages (from two to sixty). Silver artifacts and other “elite” items, suggesting that they were markers of high social status, accompanied the ornaments. The use of bear claws might indicate an apotropaic function. The available facts point to the use in funerary costume only, but the difficulty of manufacturing such ornaments obviates the possibility of a one-off use. Previously, such an ornament was found only at Zagarye, a cemetery dating to the final stage of the Lomovatovka culture. The pendants, then, were used during the late 9th to the late 11th centuries.