34917°N 36.38167°E / 45.34917; 36.38167 Kul Oba Kul-Oba (Ukrainian: Куль-Оба; Russian: Куль-Оба, Crimean Tatar: Kül Oba; meaning "hill of ash" in Crimean Tatar)[citation...
5 KB (532 words) - 14:34, 25 February 2023
The Scythian Snake-Legged Goddess and other artifacts, from Kul-Oba....
278 KB (32,513 words) - 19:53, 13 August 2024
drinking from a single drinking horn (most notably in a gold appliqué from Kul-Oba) have been associated with the Scythian oath of blood brotherhood. The...
19 KB (2,096 words) - 14:27, 10 July 2024
dating from the 5th century BC, now National Museum of Hungary, Budapest Kul Oba in the Crimea dating from the 4th century BC (Hermitage). Another characteristic...
50 KB (5,835 words) - 23:37, 28 July 2024
attire comes from the remains of clothing found in Scythian burial sites. Kul-Oba vase Emerging as a people in the early centuries of the first millennium...
9 KB (986 words) - 08:34, 24 May 2024
dating from the 5th century BC, now National Museum of Hungary, Budapest Kul Oba in the Crimea dating from the 4th century BC (Hermitage). Another characteristic...
11 KB (1,259 words) - 13:49, 8 July 2024
the sons of Targī̆tavah might have decorated an electrum vessel from the Kul-Oba kurgan, where Targī̆tavah is represented wearing a Greek-type diadēma,...
152 KB (20,418 words) - 13:21, 6 August 2024
was felt, sometimes very far away. Thus, gold medallions from a tomb in Kul-Oba (Crimea) and preserved in the Hermitage Museum, reproduce the head of the...
33 KB (4,397 words) - 23:31, 29 May 2024
These Greek-influenced burials were present both in Crimea, such as at Kul-Oba, and in the steppe to the south of the Dnipro, and they contained only...
96 KB (13,192 words) - 04:01, 7 December 2023
Scythian bowmen on gold plaque from Kul Oba kurgan, in Crimea, 4th century BC....
70 KB (8,440 words) - 03:46, 8 July 2024