中国西北地区公元前一千年中期女性墓葬中最早的骑马鞍

Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.ara.2023.100451
Patrick Wertmann , Maria Yibulayinmu , Mayke Wagner , Chris Taylor , Samira Müller , Dongliang Xu , Irina Elkina , Christian Leipe , Yonghong Deng , Pavel E. Tarasov
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引用次数: 0

摘要

马鞍的发明极大地改善了骑马,这不仅彻底改变了战争,而且缓解了欧亚大陆的长途快速运动。本文首次对天山东端吐鲁番盆地杨海墓地女死者墓中出土的一件保存完好的软皮鞍进行了详细的结构分析和绝对年代测定。与阿尔泰西北部斯基泰人帕日里克文化遗址Tuekta barrow 1号(公元前430–420年)已知的最古老的马鞍相比,杨海标本的放射性碳年代为公元前727–396年(95.4%的概率范围)是同时代的或可能更古老。马鞍具有至今仍在使用的软鞍结构的基本元素:两块填充的翅膀状兽皮沿着外缘缝合在一起,由中央的海鸥状垫片和透镜状支撑元件隔开,类似于现代马鞍的膝盖和大腿卷。然而,作为一件精湛的皮革和刺绣作品,与公元前5至3世纪的斯基泰人马鞍相比,它没有那么复杂。另一个来自苏贝溪遗址附近的标本,在本研究中也首次进行了详细描述,在形状、大小和结构上与帕兹里克鞍更为相似。在阳海,在整个埋葬时期(约公元前1300年至公元前200年),骑马用具出现在坟墓组合中,尽管只有从约公元前300年开始,数量才更多。同样,在那之前,埋葬马匹也不常见。尽管皮革通常保存得很好,但在阳海只发现了两个马鞍,这使它们成为一个例外,而不是常态,并引发了一个问题,即这些马鞍是否是从北方更专业的马匹饲养者、骑手和鞍匠那里获得的。
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The earliest directly dated saddle for horse-riding from a mid-1st millennium BCE female burial in Northwest China

The invention of the saddle substantially improved horseback-riding, which not only revolutionized warfare, but also eased long-distance speedy movement across Eurasia. Here we present the first detailed construction analysis and absolute age determination of a well-preserved soft leather saddle recovered from the tomb of a female deceased at the Yanghai cemetery site in the Turfan Basin at the eastern end of the Tian Shan mountains. Compared with the oldest known saddle from the Scythian Pazyryk culture site Tuekta barrow no. 1 (430–420 BCE) in north-western Altai, the Yanghai specimen radiocarbon dated to 727–396 BCE (95.4% probability range) is contemporaneous or possibly older. The saddle features the basic elements of soft saddle construction that are still used today: two stuffed, wing-shaped hides sewn together along the outer edges and separated by a central gullet-like spacer and lens-shaped support elements, resembling knee and thigh rolls of modern saddles. Being a masterful piece of leather- and needlework, it is, however, less complex compared to Scythian saddles from the 5th–3rd centuries BCE. Another specimen from nearby Subeixi site, which is also described in detail for the first time in the present study, much closer resembles the Pazyryk saddles in shape, size and structure. In Yanghai, equestrian paraphernalia appear in the grave assemblages during the entire burial period (ca. 1300 BCE to 200 CE), although in higher numbers only from ca. 300 BCE. In the same way, the burial of horses was not common until then. Despite the generally very good preservation of leather, only two saddles were discovered in Yanghai which makes them an exception rather than the norm and raises the question of whether these saddles were acquired from more specialized horse breeders, riders, and saddlers in the North.

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