The Maikop kurgan (Russian: Майкопский курган), excavated by Nikolay Veselovsky in 1897 near Maikop, Southern Russia, is the eponym of the Early Bronze...
2 KB (212 words) - 14:32, 6 December 2024
Bronze Age Eurasian steppe cultures. The Maikop kurgan dates to the third millennium BC. The Novovelichkovskaya kurgan of c. 2000 BC on the Ponura River, Krasnodar...
28 KB (3,236 words) - 07:54, 8 January 2025
Maykop culture (redirect from Maikop culture)
the Uruk period in Mesopotamia. The finds in the Maikop kurgan (tumulus) and other kurgans of the Maikop Culture are still regarded as unique to this day...
22 KB (2,607 words) - 19:27, 20 October 2024
Russia. Maykop or Maikop may also refer to: Maykop culture, prehistoric culture of the northern Caucasus, ca. 3500 BCE–2500 BCE Maikop kurgan, the eponym for...
411 bytes (83 words) - 17:30, 18 July 2022
notable kurgans that he explored in Southern Russia: Maikop kurgan (which lends its name to the Maikop culture), Kostromskaya (1897), Ulyap kurgans (1898)...
4 KB (370 words) - 04:12, 5 November 2024
The Horse, the Wheel, and Language (redirect from Revised Kurgan theory)
anthropologist David W. Anthony, in which the author describes his "revised Kurgan theory." He explores the origins and spread of the Indo-European languages...
34 KB (4,508 words) - 08:36, 3 January 2025
Proto-Indo-Europeans (section Kurgan/Steppe hypothesis)
hunter-gatherers, in addition to a possible later influence from the language of the Maikop culture to the south (which is hypothesized to have belonged to the North...
54 KB (6,411 words) - 15:16, 23 January 2025
addition to a possible later and lesser influence from the language of the Maikop culture to the south (which is hypothesized to have belonged to the North...
121 KB (14,246 words) - 17:29, 24 January 2025
State Medical University Kurgan State University Kurgan FSB Border Guard Academy Kurgan Maltsev State Agricultural Academy Kurgan State Railway Institute...
37 KB (3,701 words) - 12:36, 25 January 2025
Afrasiab (the oldest part of Samarkand), as well as the Solokha and Maikop kurgans in Southern Russia Viacheslav Petrovich Volgin (1879–1962), historian...
16 KB (1,755 words) - 03:38, 24 November 2024