Nadezhda A. Leschinskaya*, Igor Y. Pastushenko*
Institute of the History and Culture of the Cis-Ural Peoples at the Udmurt State University, Izhevsk, Russia
* E-mail: arch@mail.ru
Keywords: Kama-Vyatka interfluve, early Middle Ages, archaeological sites and cultures, import, high-tin bronze alloys, metal bowls.
The paper presents the first-ever analysis of bronze bowls and their derivatives which are rare for medieval sites from the Kama and Vyatka basins. It comprises a catalogue of the artifacts, analytic data on their morphology, dating, site location and how they were used within the material and spiritual culture by the Kama region’s population. There are X-ray fluorescence results proving that all the vessels were hot-forged from high-tin bronze cast bars. As to the Kama region, the bowls belong to the category of the early medieval long-distance import which is Central Asian by origin. There was a local tradition to make decorations from the bowls. Topography of the bowls’ finds and accompanying complexes indicate their funeral and sacral purpose, the status of using decorations from the bowls is less significant.
DOI: 10.31857/S086960630003389-6